🌐 DE

Task Splitter

Break big tasks into small, actionable steps

OpenAI API key is required for AI auto-split. Your key is stored only in your browser and never sent to our servers. Get API Key

📝

Enter a big task and break it into steps

RATGEBER

Mehr erfahren

01

Why Break Big Tasks Into Small Ones

Big tasks are overwhelming and hard to start. Vague goals like "write a thesis" or "complete a project" make the brain avoid them. In contrast, concrete small tasks like "write the first paragraph of the intro" or "collect 3 data points" are more than 10x more likely to get done. Research shows that breaking tasks into 5-15 minute units increases completion rates by 80%. It is especially effective for people with ADHD.

02

Advantages of AI Task Splitting

Using AI (ChatGPT, Claude, etc.) enables systematic task breakdown in seconds. Enter a big goal and the AI proposes detailed steps in logical order, even estimating duration and priority. The AI turns parts you would miss when planning alone into a checklist, and it is very useful when fast execution matters more than a perfect plan. Just copy the generated list and paste it into your to-do app.

03

Principles of Effective Task Splitting

Effective task splitting follows the SMART principle: Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, and Time-bound. Be clear like "solve 10 math problems (30 min)" or "memorize 20 English words (15 min)" rather than just "study." Each step should be completable within 15-30 minutes; if larger, split it again.

04

Setting Priorities

After splitting tasks, set priorities by importance and urgency. Use the Eisenhower Matrix and start with what is important and urgent. Do not try to do everything; remember the Pareto principle that 20% of core tasks produce 80% of results. Scheduling the hardest task in the morning lets you tackle it while willpower is high. Starting with easy tasks tends to push important work to later.

05

Tracking Progress

Checking off each small step releases dopamine. This small sense of achievement builds momentum into the next task. Completing 3 of 10 gives clear feedback of "30% done," which is important for maintaining motivation. Visual progress indicators (progress bars, checklists) help the brain gauge distance to the goal, lowering the probability of giving up.

06

Tips for Failure-Proof Task Splitting

The main reason task splitting fails is trying to make a too-perfect plan. Start with an 80% plan and adjust as you execute. Adding 10-20% buffer time to each step handles unexpected situations. Set the first step as an ultra-simple task completable within 5 minutes to minimize the barrier to starting. Once you start, inertia makes it easy to continue. Finally, pick only 3 core tasks per day to focus on.