Weekly Planning
Weekly planning is the bridge between your long-term goals and your daily actions. Instead of reacting to whatever shows up each day, you create space to move forward with intention, while also protecting time for rest and life outside of work.
In this guide, we’ll walk you through how to use Griply’s Upcoming view to plan your week effectively. It’s a GTD-inspired approach, adapted to work beautifully with your goals, habits, and calendar.
Why Weekly Planning Matters
Planning your week isn’t just a productivity hack, it’s how you stay connected to what matters most. Without it, it’s easy to:
Get caught up in urgent but unimportant tasks
Neglect long-term goals or personal life areas
Overbook yourself and burn out
Instead, a simple weekly ritual gives you:
A clear overview of what’s coming
A chance to reconnect with your goals
Room for both deep focus and daily life
Peace of mind that nothing is falling through the cracks
When to Plan Your Week
Pick a consistent moment that works for you. Many people choose:
Sunday afternoon: Reflect, reset, and start the week with clarity
Monday morning: A calm start before jumping into work
Tip: Add a recurring task like “Weekly Review & Plan” to your calendar or habits list to build the routine.
Your Weekly Planning Checklist
Here’s a proven structure for your planning session, grounded in GTD principles but tailored for Griply.
1. Reflect on the Past Week
Start by reviewing how things went:
Which tasks and habits did you complete?
Which goals progressed and which didn’t?
Any insights or learnings worth capturing?
You can check the Completed tab and view your Goal progress or Habits overview (via the Insights tab).
If helpful, jot down reflections in a journal or notes section linked to your goal.
2. Check Your Inbox
Open your Inbox in the sidebar and clear it out:
Assign tasks to a goal or life area
Add deadlines or drag into your calendar
Delete anything irrelevant
This clears your mind and gives you a clean slate to plan from.
3. Reconnect with Your Goals
Before filling your calendar, zoom out:
What matters most this week?
Are there goals you’ve been neglecting?
Any habits you want to recommit to?
Browse your Goals and Life Areas to quickly spot what needs attention. Use this to decide your top priorities.
4. Plan the Week Ahead (Upcoming View)
This is where everything comes together.
Open the Upcoming view (left sidebar), which shows your week with a calendar on the left and all tasks on the right. Here’s how to use it effectively:
a. Time Block Your Priorities
Drag tasks into specific time slots on the calendar
Want to schedule a whole goal or life area? Use the list on the right → drag it into the calendar
This helps you carve out real time for deep work, not just a list of things you hope to get done.
b. Add Habits & Events
Toggle Show habits to see your daily routines
Make sure calendar sync is active so meetings and events appear alongside your tasks
Add time for recurring admin or routines (like weekly check-ins, workouts, chores)
c. Leave Room for Flexibility
Don’t overfill every day. Leave white space for unexpected tasks or overflow. If every hour is blocked, the plan will likely break.
d. Watch for Balance
Use filter and view options (top-right of Upcoming view) to assess the balance in your week.
Toggle Goals without deadlines or Empty life areas to reveal neglected areas
Use Tags or the Habits toggle to adjust what’s shown
Click the View Options icon (screenshot placeholder) to show/hide:
Completed tasks
Habits
Calendar events
This lets you tailor your planning view based on what you want to focus on.
5. Clean Up
Wrap up your session by tidying your system:
Reassign or archive outdated tasks
Clear or reschedule anything overdue
Rename messy tags or review unlinked goals
Delete unused recurring tasks
Think of this like digital housekeeping, it keeps your setup clean so you can stay focused.
Make It a Ritual
Weekly planning works best when it feels like a ritual, not a chore.
Ideas to make it enjoyable:
Pair it with a tea or coffee
Sit somewhere quiet
Use personal reflection prompts like:
What would make this week a win?
What do I need more (or less) of?
Pro Tips
Use recurring tasks for weekly chores or routines (e.g. “Plan meals”, “Check finances”)
Use the Today > Upcoming toggle in the task planner to drag tasks forward
Try weekly focus themes (e.g. “Health Week” or “Creative Sprint”)
Combine task view and calendar view to ensure your plan is doable, not just ambitious
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