The Productivity System I Taught to 6,642 Googlers

Jeff Su · 2026-05-21 ·▶ Watch on YouTube ·via captions

A four-step workflow (Capture → Organize → Review → Engage) synthesized from productivity classics and battle-tested across 9 years of internal Google workshops. The system handles all four types of workplace information — tasks, ideas, notes, and media — so nothing slips through the cracks, regardless of which tools you use. ---

Key Concepts

ConceptDefinition
Core WorkflowA four-step cycle (Capture, Organize, Review, Engage) adapted from GTD, *Make Time*, and *Building a Second Brain* for real corporate environments
Four information typesTasks, ideas, notes, and media (digital files) — the system handles all four
Platform agnosticThe workflow logic is tool-independent; the steps don't change whether you use Notion, Todoist, Apple Notes, or Google Workspace
Thoughts vs. NotesInformation you originate yourself = *thoughts*; information from external sources (meetings, videos) = *notes*
Information inboxesTemporary holding areas (e.g., Google Keep with a "thoughts" label) that are regularly processed during review sessions
Quick capture vs. long-term storageDifferent tools serve different purposes — e.g., Google Keep for quick capture, Google Docs for long-term storage

Notes

Why a System Beats Willpower

  • "Our brains are for having ideas, not holding them." — David Allen
  • Relying on motivation is unsustainable; systems produce results even on bad days
  • From *Atomic Habits*: "We do not rise to the level of our goals. We fall to the level of our systems."
  • Short-term discomfort of adopting a routine < ongoing stress of not making progress
  • A workflow doesn't add work — it redirects mental energy already being wasted

Step 1: Capture

  • Get the information out of your head and into an external tool as fast as possible
  • Use whatever is fastest at the moment — a mobile widget, a notes app, a notebook
  • **Key principle**: speed of capture matters most; don't optimize the tool, just use it

Step 2: Organize

  • Apply a lightweight label or tag at the moment of capture — nothing elaborate
  • Goal: make the item findable and processable later, not perfectly filed now
  • Example: tag a Keep note as "thoughts" so it routes to your inbox for later review
  • For tasks: assigning a due date counts as organizing — no further action needed

Step 3: Review

  • The most skipped step — capturing means nothing if you never revisit what you captured
  • Schedule review sessions and protect them like meetings; don't rely on willpower
  • Suggested cadence: three 30-minute blocks daily (morning, after lunch, end of day)
  • During review, process each item:

Step 4: Engage

  • Simply: do the work
  • By this step, everything needed is already in place — time is blocked, context is documented
  • The loop closes when the work is actually executed

End-to-End Example: Task (Pay Raise Negotiation)

    Actionable Takeaways

    1. **Set up a capture tool on your phone's home screen** (widget or shortcut) so capture friction is near zero
    2. **Use two separate tools** for quick capture vs. long-term storage — don't conflate them
    3. **Label captured items immediately** with a simple tag (e.g., "thoughts") so they route to a reviewable inbox
    4. **Schedule three daily review blocks** (morning, midday, EOD) and treat them as non-negotiable calendar events
    5. **Never mark a task complete until it has a concrete next step** — either a calendar block or a documented commitment
    6. **Stop debating tools** — pick something and run the four steps; the workflow is what matters

    Quotes Worth Keeping

    "Our brains are for having ideas, not holding them." — David Allen
    "We do not rise to the level of our goals. We fall to the level of our systems." — James Clear
    The short-term discomfort of adopting a new routine will always be less than the ongoing stress and disappointment of not making progress on my most important goals.