Action Items

What action items are, how to write them clearly, the difference between action items and tasks, and how to track them so nothing falls through the cracks.

What Action Items Are

An action item is a specific, assigned task that results from a meeting, conversation, or decision. It is the bridge between talking about work and actually doing it. When someone in a meeting says “we should update the pricing page,” that statement becomes an action item when it gets an owner, a deadline, and a clear description of what “update” means.

Action items are the most common source of new tasks in any organization. Research from Harvard Business Review found that the average professional attends 8 to 12 meetings per week. If each meeting generates 3 to 5 action items, that is 24 to 60 new tasks per week flowing from meetings alone. Without a system to capture, assign, and track these items, they disappear.

What Makes a Good Action Item

A well written action item has four components.

A specific action. The item starts with a verb and describes a concrete deliverable. “Finalize the vendor contract” is specific. “Look into vendors” is vague. The test: could someone else execute this item without asking you what you meant?

An owner. Every action item has exactly one person responsible. “The team” is not an owner. “Sarah” is. When two people share responsibility, neither feels accountable and the item falls between them.

A deadline. A due date creates urgency and allows follow up. “By Friday EOD” is a deadline. “Soon” is not. Without a deadline, action items drift to the bottom of everyone’s list indefinitely.

Enough context. Include the reason for the task and any constraints. “Finalize the vendor contract by Friday because the current contract expires Monday and legal needs 2 business days for review” gives the owner everything they need.

Action Items vs. Tasks vs. To Do List Items

These terms overlap but have different connotations.

Action items specifically originate from meetings, conversations, or decisions. They are tasks that were born in a group context and assigned to an individual.

Tasks are a broader category. Any unit of work is a task regardless of where it originated. Action items are a subset of tasks.

To do list items are tasks that a person has chosen to track on their personal list. Some come from action items. Others are self generated (“buy groceries,” “review pull request”).

The distinction matters because action items carry implicit accountability to the group that created them. Missing a personal to do item affects you. Missing an action item from a team meeting affects the team.

How to Capture Action Items in Meetings

The easiest method is to designate one person as the action item scribe. This person’s job during the meeting is to listen for commitments (“I will,” “let’s,” “we need to,” “can you”) and record each one with the four components: action, owner, deadline, context.

Capture action items in real time, not after the meeting from memory. Studies on meeting recall show that participants forget 50% of meeting content within 24 hours. Action items captured during the meeting are 3x more likely to be completed than those reconstructed afterward.

At the end of every meeting, read the action items aloud. This gives everyone a chance to correct misunderstandings, adjust deadlines, and confirm ownership. A 2 minute recap prevents a week of confusion.

After the meeting, transfer action items into your task management tool. In ClickUp, create a task for each action item with the assignee, due date, and meeting notes linked. Asana and Todoist support similar workflows. The tool matters less than the habit of moving items from meeting notes to tracked tasks within 24 hours.

Tracking Action Items

The simplest tracking method is a shared spreadsheet or document with columns for action, owner, deadline, status, and notes. This works for teams with fewer than 10 weekly action items.

For higher volume, use your task management tool. ClickUp’s List view filtered by a “Meeting Action Item” tag gives you a dedicated action item tracker. Asana’s My Tasks automatically groups assigned items. Some teams use a dedicated meeting notes tool (Notion, Fellow, or ClickUp Docs) that integrates action item creation directly into meeting agendas.

The key metric is completion rate. Track what percentage of action items are completed by their deadline. Healthy teams complete 80% or more. Below 60% indicates a systemic problem: too many items, unrealistic deadlines, unclear ownership, or meetings that generate commitments nobody intends to keep.

Common Mistakes

No owner assigned. “We should” and “someone needs to” are not action items until a specific person accepts responsibility.

Vague descriptions. “Follow up with the client” is vague. “Email the client the revised SOW by Thursday and confirm their approval” is actionable.

No deadline. An action item without a deadline is a wish, not a commitment.

Capturing after the meeting. Waiting until after the meeting to write down action items guarantees that some will be forgotten or misremembered.

Not transferring to a task tool. Action items that live only in meeting notes are invisible to the people responsible for them. Move them into the team’s task management system within 24 hours.

Commonly Confused With

TermKey Difference
Task All action items are tasks, but not all tasks are action items. Action items specifically originate from meetings, conversations, or group decisions.
To Do List Item To do list items are personal tasks from any source. Action items carry accountability to the group that created them.
Meeting Notes → Meeting notes are a record of discussion. Action items are the commitments extracted from that discussion and assigned to individuals.
Create tasks directly from Docs, comments, or meeting notes with one click.
Capture Action Items in ClickUp

Common Questions About Action Items

What is an action item?
An action item is a specific task that comes out of a meeting, conversation, or decision. It has four components: a concrete action (starts with a verb), a single owner (one person responsible), a deadline (specific date), and enough context to execute without follow up questions. It bridges the gap between discussing work and doing work.
How do I write good action items?
Start with a verb. Name one owner. Set a specific deadline. Include enough context so the owner does not need another meeting to understand the task. Bad example: "Follow up with the client." Good example: "Sarah: Email the client the revised SOW by Friday 5pm. Include the updated pricing from the finance review."
How should I track action items?
Transfer action items from meeting notes into your task management tool within 24 hours. In ClickUp, create a task per action item with assignee, due date, and linked meeting notes. Filter by a tag like "meeting action item" for a dedicated tracking view. Track completion rate: healthy teams complete 80% or more by deadline.
What is the difference between action items and meeting notes?
Meeting notes record the full discussion: context, decisions, and topics covered. Action items are the specific commitments extracted from that discussion and assigned to individuals. Meeting notes are for reference. Action items are for execution. Both matter, but action items are what drive work forward after the meeting ends.
How many action items should a meeting produce?
A typical 30 to 60 minute meeting should produce 3 to 5 action items. More than 7 suggests the meeting tried to cover too much or that items are too granular. Fewer than 1 suggests the meeting may not have needed to happen. If a meeting consistently produces zero action items, consider whether it should be an email instead.
What happens when action items do not get completed?
First, check whether the item had all four components (action, owner, deadline, context). Missing any of these is the most common cause of non completion. If the components were clear, the issue is usually competing priorities (the owner is overloaded) or a missing follow up system. Track completion rates over time and address systemic patterns.