Uncapped Notes Ep 67 - TFP - 9/25

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📰 Today's Edition: The Eisenhower Matrix

Sometimes, running a startup feels like juggling flaming torches while riding a unicycle.

Everything seems urgent. Everything feels important.

And somehow, you're still answering customer service emails at midnight, and checking google analytics during a Zoom call.

Sound familiar? We've all been there, too.

So let’s talk about a game-changing tool to help prioritize your workload (and hopefully knock a few things off your to-do list).

It's called the Eisenhower Matrix (named after the U.S. president), and it's about to become your new best friend.

What Exactly Is This Matrix Thing?

The Eisenhower Matrix is a chart. It splits everything on your to-do list into four simple boxes based on two questions:

  • Is this urgent? (Does it need to happen RIGHT NOW?)

  • Is this important? (Will this move my business forward?)

Here's how it breaks down:

The Four Quadrants

  1. Urgent + Important → Do it now

  2. Not Urgent + But Important → Schedule it

  3. Urgent + Not Important → Delegate it

  4. Not Urgent + Not Important → Delete it

What Goes Where?

Quadrant 1: Urgent + Important

This is crisis mode. Your server just crashed, a key customer is furious, or you've got a deadline breathing down your neck.

These things happen, but if you're living here 24/7, something's wrong with your system.

Example: Your website goes down during a big product launch.

Quadrant 2: Not Urgent + Important

This is a magical quadrant.

These are the tasks that don't scream for attention but will actually grow your business. Most founders completely ignore this quadrant, and that's why they're always putting out fires.

Examples:

  • Creating email templates for common customer questions

  • Setting up monitoring systems before your server crashes

  • Building processes so you can delegate tasks later

  • Strategic planning for next quarter

  • Writing job descriptions

  • Interviewing potential candidates

Quadrant 3: Urgent + Not Important

This quadrant is a trap.

These are tasks that feel urgent but don't actually move your business forward. They're often other people's priorities masquerading as your own.

Examples: 

  • A customer emails you directly with a simple billing question that your support team could handle.

  • Taking a coffee meeting with another founder or VC who is irrelevant to your space

  • Going to tons of meetups with other founders

  • Talking to that M&A prospective on the phone when you're just starting

Quadrant 4: Not Urgent + Not Important

This is the stuff you should just delete.

That random sales email about a tool you'll never need? Gone.

That "networking opportunity" that's really just someone trying to sell you something? Uhhhhhh buh-bye.

Example: Cold emails for products you definitely don't need.

Quadrant 2 Is Your New Obsession

Quadrant 2 is preventative medicine for your business.

When you invest time in "not urgent but important" tasks, you're basically building a force field against future fires.

Remember that server crash example? If you had spent time setting up monitoring tools and alerts (Quadrant 2 work), you might have caught the problem before it became a crisis.

Instead of frantically fixing a broken server during a product launch that you spent 2 months planning, you could have addressed a warning sign before it turned into the reason your product launch failed.

The goal isn't to never have emergencies… but to have fewer of them.

Escaping the Inbox Nightmare

An overflowing inbox is my literal nightmare.

If you're getting hundreds of emails a day and feel like you're drowning, you're not alone.

One founder we know was getting 300 emails daily and felt like he couldn't focus on anything that actually mattered.

His solution? He hired a virtual assistant to triage his inbox. The VA filters out the junk (Quadrant 4), handles simple requests (Quadrant 3), and flags the emails that actually need his attention. Suddenly, he had space to work on growing his business instead of just managing it.

Don't have budget for a VA yet? Start small. Set up email filters. Create canned responses for common questions. Block out specific times for email instead of checking it every five minutes. These are all Quadrant 2 activities that will pay dividends later.

Your Action Plan

Ready to give this a shot? Here's your homework:

  1. Track your time for three days. Don't change anything, just write down what you're doing and when.

  2. Sort each activity into one of the four quadrants. Be honest here.

  3. Look at the results. Are you spending most of your time in Quadrant 1 (putting out fires)? Are you ignoring Quadrant 2 completely?

  4. Pick one Quadrant 2 task you've been putting off and schedule time for it this week. Maybe it's creating that standard operating procedure, setting up those analytics dashboards, or finally documenting that process you do manually every week.

  5. Find one thing to eliminate from Quadrants 3 and 4. What can you say no to? What can you delegate?

Change Your Brain

The Eisenhower Matrix isn't just another productivity hack, it's a mindset shift.

Instead of reacting to whatever screams loudest, you start proactively building a business that runs smoother and scales better.

Your future self (the one who's not answering customer service emails at midnight) will thank you.

Now stop reading productivity articles and go build something amazing. But first, maybe set up that monitoring system you've been meaning to install... 😉

Matrix-ing my way through life,

Dunky from Hustle Fund

🎥 Watch This

Most founder pitch decks make one big mistake: terrible slide titles. A skimmable deck needs strong titles, and they can make all the difference. We break down what a good pitch deck title looks like.

We explain more in this episode of Uncapped Notes.