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The Simple Two-Minute Investment Rule That Can Transform Your Finances
Mint Mumbai
|June 13, 2025
Oft-neglected micro-tasks can snowball into bigger issues and impact long-term returns
David Allen revolutionized productivity with a deceptively simple idea in his bestselling book, Getting Things Done. Among his insights, perhaps the most transformative is the two-minute rule: if something takes less than two minutes to do, do it immediately rather than adding it to your to-do list.
The logic is elegant; the time spent writing it down, remembering it, and eventually doing it far exceeds the time needed to complete the task right away. This principle, born in the world of personal productivity, offers valuable lessons for managing investments. He found that just as unfinished tasks create disproportionate mental overhead, small investment-related tasks left unattended can snowball into outsized financial problems.
Consider a scenario: you receive dividend payments, maturity proceeds, or some lump sum that sits idle in your savings account for months. The two-minute action of transferring these funds into a liquid fund or setting up a Systematic Investment Plan (SIP) helps preserve purchasing power. Yet most investors defer this simple step, watching their money quietly lose value to inflation.
This story is from the June 13, 2025 edition of Mint Mumbai.
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