The Groundwork Method · Operating principles · Updated 2026

Most planners give you pages.
None give you a method.

Groundwork is built on four operating principles, synthesised from the productivity literature that actually works. Cascade. Capture. Constraints. Compound. Once you understand the four, the twenty-eight tools stop looking like a product list and start looking like one connected system.

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Synthesised from
Getting Things Done — David Allen Deep Work — Cal Newport Atomic Habits — James Clear The Ivy Lee Method — 1918 ACT — Steven Hayes Stoicism — Aurelius, Epictetus
Why this exists

You've read the books.
You still don't have a method.

You've read Getting Things Done. You highlighted half of Atomic Habits. You watched the Cal Newport interview. You bought a Filofax. By February you were back to a paper notepad and a calendar full of meetings, doing the same week you did last year.

The problem isn't discipline. The problem is that those books are each a fragment. GTD tells you how to capture but not what to plan. Deep Work tells you how to focus but not what to focus on. Atomic Habits tells you how to repeat behaviours but not which behaviours actually compound. None of them, on its own, gives you a complete operating system for a week.

I built Groundwork because I needed it. Five years of reading the productivity literature, three abandoned planners, and a calendar full of meetings I didn't choose. The Method is what was left after I stripped out everything that didn't survive a hard quarter. It's the system I run my own week with — not a theory.

The pattern
You start January with a list of goals, and by mid-March they've vanished underneath a queue of unread emails and someone else's deadlines.
The principle
Cascade. Every weekly intention is bound to a 90-day goal. Every 90-day goal is bound to your annual blueprint. Goals don't drift — they're held in the structure.
The pattern
You wake up with twelve things on your mind, work all day, and somehow none of them got done. The day was full. The week is empty.
The principle
Capture. Everything goes into a single inbox the moment it appears. Once a week, you process. Your head is for ideas — not for storage.
The pattern
You said yes to seven things this week. You'll deliver three. The rest will be apologies, late-night patches, and the slow erosion of how people see your work.
The principle
Constraints. Three priorities a day. One deep work block. Hard caps on commitment. Fewer things, executed completely — visible from a mile away.
The pattern
You "should" exercise more, save more, read more — and you have shoulded yourself for years without a single number changing.
The principle
Compound. Strength. Sleep. Capital. Family. Tracked with one number per domain. Reviewed weekly. The score goes up, or you find out why.
01
Principle one · The spine

Cascade.
Every action,
tied to a goal.

Most planning fails at the join. You set annual goals in January. You set weekly tasks on Monday. The two have nothing to do with each other. Cascade fixes that — your daily three priorities are downstream of a 90-day goal, which is downstream of an annual blueprint, which is downstream of your stated values. Every action carries a return address.

1
Values sit above everything
Once a year, you state what matters — using ACT's values clarification work. Not goals. Not metrics. The directions. "Be a present father." "Build a body that lasts." "Do work that compounds." These are the source of everything below.
Values Architecture
2
Annual blueprint translates values into domains
Once values are clear, the annual blueprint converts them into four domains — Work, Body, Capital, Relationships — each with a single named outcome for the year. Not twelve resolutions. Four destinations.
Annual Blueprint
3
90-day goals make the blueprint actionable
An annual outcome is too far away to plan against. A quarter is short enough to feel real and long enough for compounding to show. Three goals per quarter. One numeric metric per goal. Every quarter, you debrief — what hit, what missed, what changes.
90-Day Goal Planner90-Day Debrief
4
Weekly intentions inherit from the quarter
Sunday evening, you don't ask "what should I do this week?" — you ask "given my three 90-day goals, what does this week need to deliver?" The Weekly Review sets three weekly intentions, each pointing back at a 90-day goal.
Weekly ReviewWeekly Debrief
5
Daily priorities inherit from the week
Each morning, three priorities — never more — chosen from the week's intentions using Ivy Lee's 1918 method: write them down the night before, work them in order, the rest is noise. By breakfast you know exactly what today is for.
Daily Focus SheetIdeal Week Architecture
Lineage
Cascade synthesises James Clear's "systems over goals" with the OKR tradition (Andy Grove, John Doerr) and ACT values work (Steven Hayes). It exists because every other planner stops at one layer.
Builder's note I rebuilt the cascade three times before this version held. The first two had goals at the top and tasks at the bottom — and nothing held them together. Adding Values above the Annual was the change that made the whole thing work. It's the layer that tells you why a goal matters when motivation runs out in week six.
The OS makes Cascade live The Groundwork OS is the only format where a daily score automatically rolls up to a weekly average, which feeds the 90-day debrief, which informs next year's blueprint. Print is the ritual; the OS is the connective tissue.
See the OS →
02
Principle two · The pressure release

Capture.
Get it out
of your head.

The mind is a poor filing cabinet. Everything you're trying to remember is occupying RAM that you need for thinking. The first rule of any working system is that the moment something appears — a task, an idea, an obligation, a worry — it leaves your head and enters a single trusted inbox you process later. This is the load-bearing idea David Allen built GTD on, and it remains the most underrated productivity move you can make.

1
One inbox. Always open. Frictionless.
Whatever the format — paper Brain Dump page, Notion quick-capture, voice memo, sticky note — you have one place where things land. The friction has to be lower than the friction of remembering. If capture takes ten seconds, you'll do it.
Brain Dump Page
2
Capture liberally; sort weekly
Don't try to triage on capture. The act of capturing is the only thing that has to be cheap. Sorting and deciding happens once a week, in the Weekly Review — when you have the cognitive surplus to actually decide what each item is and where it belongs.
Weekly Review
3
Process to four destinations
In the weekly process, every captured item ends up in exactly one place: Action (something to do — assign a day), Project (multiple actions — break it down), Reference (file it, you'll need it), or Trash (be honest, most things go here). No "maybe" pile. Maybe is where ideas go to rot.
GTD methodology
4
Capture also applies to the body
A workout you didn't log isn't part of your training. A book you didn't note isn't part of your thinking. A balance you didn't track isn't part of your finances. The same Capture principle that empties your head also captures what your life is actually doing — strength sets, sleep hours, balances, reading, mood.
Strength LogSleep & Recovery LogNet Worth TrackerReading Log
Lineage
Capture is GTD's "Mind Like Water" principle, extended from tasks to every domain that compounds. David Allen taught us to empty the head daily; Groundwork extends the same discipline to body, capital, and attention.
03
Principle three · The forcing function

Constraints.
Less, executed
completely.

Most productivity advice tells you to do more. Groundwork tells you to do less, and to finish. The single biggest improvement most people can make to their week is to cut their to-do list in half. Constraints aren't about willpower; they're about removing the option to over-commit. The number is the discipline.

1
The Three-Priority Rule
Three priorities per day. Not five. Not "however many fit." Three. This number isn't arbitrary — it's borrowed from Charles Schwab's 1918 conversation with Ivy Lee, which produced one of the largest documented productivity gains of the twentieth century. If you complete three real things every day, you outperform almost everyone trying to do six.
Daily Focus SheetIvy Lee Method
2
One deep work block, before noon
Cal Newport's research is unambiguous — the work that matters happens in extended, uninterrupted blocks. Groundwork builds one ninety-minute block into every working day, scheduled before noon, phone in another room. It's the only meeting you don't move. Everything else fits around it.
Deep Work Planner
3
The Ideal Week is the budget
Once a quarter, you draw your Ideal Week — what hours go where, in advance. Once it exists, every new commitment has to displace something. You stop saying yes by default and start saying yes by trade. The ideal week is rarely the actual week, but it's the shape you correct toward.
Ideal Week Architecture
4
Friction by design
Capacity is finite. The Groundwork sheets enforce this physically — a Daily Focus Sheet has three priority lines and three only. You can't add a fourth without scribbling. The constraint is built into the page. The page is the discipline.
Lineage
Constraints draws from Cal Newport's Deep Work, Greg McKeown's Essentialism, and the original 1918 Ivy Lee Method — the source document of "do fewer things, in priority order." Productivity isn't volume; it's the consistent execution of small numbers.
Builder's note The hardest discipline in this whole system is the three-priority cap. Every reader I've spoken to wants to add a fourth. I do too. The page refuses you because I refused to let it have a fourth line — once the constraint is physical, the discipline doesn't have to come from willpower. That decision is doing more work than any other in the design.
04
Principle four · The long game

Compound.
The domains that
build over years.

Most productivity systems optimise the day. Groundwork optimises the decade. Four domains compound non-linearly — strength, sleep, capital, and relationships — and each requires a different cadence. You don't make progress in any of them in a week. You make progress in years. Your job is to keep the score honest, week after week, until the curve bends.

1
Body — strength and recovery
One log for training, one for sleep and recovery. Sets and reps for the gym. Hours and quality for sleep. The minimum is one number per session and one number per night. The Atomic Habits insight applies: a 1% gain compounds; a 1% loss does too. You decide which direction the line moves.
Strength LogSleep & Recovery Log
2
Capital — net worth, monthly
One number, once a month, plotted over years. Most people's financial situation isn't a budgeting problem — it's a measurement problem. They don't know the number. The Net Worth Tracker is one line per month: assets minus liabilities, plotted, reviewed in the quarterly debrief.
Net Worth Tracker
3
Relationships — the deliberate ones
The relationships that compound are the ones you tend deliberately. The Fatherhood Planner is the canonical example — but the same logic applies to any relationship you want still standing in twenty years. Named, scheduled, reviewed.
Fatherhood Planner
4
Mind — what you read, what you stack
Reading without notes is entertainment. The Reading & Learning Log captures the books, the takeaways, and the references you'll go back to. The Habit Stack Builder captures the small daily behaviours you're chaining onto existing routines. Both are about deliberate accumulation rather than passive consumption.
Reading & Learning LogHabit Stack Builder
Lineage
Compound draws from James Clear's Atomic Habits, Morgan Housel's The Psychology of Money, and the long literature on consistent practice. The premise is simple: tiny gains, tracked and reviewed, beat sporadic effort over any horizon longer than a quarter.
If you only do one thing

Minimum-viable
Method.

You don't have to start with all four principles. You don't even have to start with all four C's running at once. The fastest way into the Method is the smallest possible version of it — small enough that you cannot fail in week one. Every other layer earns its place by being built on top of a working daily ritual.

Start here · Week one

The Two-Sheet Minimum

Run only two of the twenty-eight tools — and run them every day for seven days, no exceptions:

  1. The Daily Focus Sheet. The night before, write tomorrow's three priorities. The next morning, work the first one before you open email. End of day: score yourself out of three.
  2. The Brain Dump Page. Whenever something occurs to you — task, idea, worry, errand — it goes on the page. You don't sort, you don't decide, you just dump. Sunday evening, you process.

That's it. That's Cascade and Capture and Constraints, all in two sheets. Once those two are running automatically, you add the Weekly Review. Then the 90-Day Planner. Then the Annual Blueprint. The system grows with the habit, not before it.

Get the 7-Day Sprint — free Daily Focus Sheet — £3.99
Honest failure modes

Why most planning
methods fail.

Every productivity system on the market promises to work. Most don't last past March. The patterns are predictable enough that the Method is shaped specifically to defeat them.

How methods usually die
The four failure modes
  • Over-design. Beautiful templates with thirty fields per page. Filling the system becomes the work. Two weeks in, you stop opening it.
  • No connection between layers. Annual goals on one page, weekly tasks on another. Nothing links them. By March, you're working on whatever's loud, not whatever matters.
  • No constraint on commitment. The to-do list grows without limit. You write more than you can do. Every day ends with overflow. Eventually you stop writing.
  • No long-horizon score. No tracking on body, capital, or attention. You feel like you're working hard. You can't prove anything is changing.
How the Method holds
The four counter-moves
  • Three priorities, three lines, no expansion. The page physically refuses bloat. Every Groundwork sheet enforces its own constraint.
  • The Cascade is the spine. Daily inherits from weekly, weekly from quarterly, quarterly from annual. There's no "pick a goal" — the goal is already there.
  • Capture lowers cognitive cost so you stop trying to keep the load in your head. Friction drops; the system stays usable.
  • Compound is tracked weekly, reviewed quarterly, plotted over years. You can see the curve bending — or know it isn't, and intervene.
The Method, in your hands

There's only
one way to test
a method.

Read this page twice. Then put it down and pick the version of the Method that fits where you are. The free Sprint is enough to run for seven days and decide for yourself. The complete bundle is the full Method, in every format, with the OS to run it. There is no third option that works.

— I read every email sent to hello@groundworkos.co. If something in the Method is unclear, broken, or feels wrong against your week, write. I'd rather hear it than not.

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Every product. Every format. The Groundwork OS — the only place all four principles run live and connected.

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The Notion workspace alone — five zones, twelve linked databases, every formula built. The connective tissue that makes Cascade live.

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