2026-06-15 · 6 min
Why a weekly view beats daily todo lists
You don't have a productivity problem - you have a planning horizon problem.
It''s Monday morning. You open your todo app. 47 tasks stare back. You start at the top, get derailed by one urgent email, jump to a task you didn''t plan, finish at 4pm having shipped... not much.
Sound familiar? You''re not lazy. You''re using the wrong planning horizon.
The daily todo list is a productivity trap
It optimizes for one day at a time, which sounds focused but is actually crippling. Four reasons it fails:
- No context. You don''t know if today''s "review proposal" is the third or thirtieth thing on your plate this week. So you either over-commit or under-commit.
- Whiplash. Tuesday''s list bears no relationship to Monday''s. There''s no narrative arc to your week.
- Anxiety baked in. A 47-item daily list isn''t a plan - it''s a panic attack pretending to be productive.
- No bird''s-eye view. When your boss asks "can you take on this new project?", you have no way to answer honestly.
This is why apps like Todoist, Things, TickTick - all daily-list-centric - leave smart people feeling perpetually behind. They''re optimizing for the wrong unit of time.
The week is the natural planning unit
Not the day. Not the month. The week.
- Most projects span 3-5 days. A daily view chops them into incoherent slices.
- You have predictable energy patterns within a week (Monday meetings, Wednesday flow, Friday admin).
- Most commitments come in week-sized chunks - "I''ll have it by EOW", "let''s sync next week".
- You can SEE a week on one screen. A month is too much. A day is too little.
This is exactly what Taskoku does: five weekday columns plus a dedicated weekend space. You drop tasks where they belong. You drag them when reality changes.
Try it for one week
If you''re drowning in daily lists, try the weekly view for one week. Drop your tasks into 5 columns + weekend. See what happens when you stop pretending Monday and Tuesday are independent universes.
Try it free during MVP
Reading won't plan your week. WabiTask will.
Three minutes to sign up. Five minutes to plan the week. The rest of the time goes to actually doing the work.
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