| name | action-item-organizer |
| description | Systematic framework for extracting actionable items from documents and organizing them into prioritized, trackable checklists. Use when converting reports, meeting notes, audits, or any document with embedded action items into structured TODO lists. |
| author | Joseph OBrien |
| status | unpublished |
| updated | 2025-12-23 |
| version | 1.0.1 |
| tag | skill |
| type | skill |
Action Item Organizer
This skill provides a systematic framework for extracting actionable items from unstructured documents and transforming them into well-organized, prioritized, trackable checklists in markdown format.
When to Use This Skill
- Converting code review reports into TODO lists
- Extracting action items from meeting notes
- Organizing audit findings into remediation checklists
- Breaking down project planning documents into task lists
- Structuring issue reports into actionable work items
- Creating trackable checklists from any document containing embedded action items
- Organizing team backlogs by priority
- Creating sprint planning checklists
Core Principles
1. Extraction with Context Preservation
Action items must be extracted with sufficient context so that anyone reading the checklist understands:
- What needs to be done
- Why it matters
- Where it applies (files, systems, components)
- Who is responsible
- When it should be completed (priority and estimates)
2. Priority-Based Organization
Use a clear priority framework to organize items by urgency and impact:
- P0 / Blockers: Critical issues that prevent progress, deployment, or merge
- P1 / High Priority: Significant quality, security, or correctness concerns requiring prompt attention
- P2 / Medium Priority: Important improvements and refactorings that enhance the system
- P3 / Low Priority: Future optimizations, minor suggestions, and nice-to-have enhancements
Within each priority level, group related items logically (e.g., security items together, performance items together).
3. Nested Structure for Complex Tasks
Break down complex action items into hierarchical checklists:
- Parent items represent the main task or goal
- Child items represent specific steps or sub-tasks
- Grandchild items represent detailed implementation steps
This creates a clear execution path and allows for granular progress tracking.
4. Traceability and Metadata
Maintain links between action items and their sources:
- File paths and line numbers
- Issue or tracking IDs
- Owner or responsible team
- Time estimates
- Original context from source document
This enables bidirectional traceability and informed prioritization.
Extraction Workflow
Step 1: Document Analysis
- Read the complete source document
- Identify sections containing actionable content:
- "Action Items", "Todo List", "Recommendations"
- "Issues", "Findings", "Follow-ups"
- "Next Steps", "Tasks", "Requirements"
- Understand the document structure and conventions
Step 2: Action Item Identification
Extract items that are:
- Actionable: Specific tasks that can be completed
- Testable: Clear completion criteria
- Assigned or assignable: Can be owned by a person or team
- Contextual: Include enough detail to understand the task
Skip items that are:
- Purely informational (unless they imply action)
- Already completed
- Vague or unclear without additional context
Step 3: Metadata Extraction
For each action item, extract:
Required Metadata:
- Task description
- Priority level
Optional Metadata (extract if available):
- File paths and line numbers
- Owner/responsible party
- Time estimate
- Issue/tracking numbers
- Category or domain (security, performance, etc.)
- Implementation steps or sub-tasks
Step 4: Priority Classification
Assign each item to a priority level based on:
P0 Criteria:
- Blocks deployment or merge
- Critical security vulnerability
- Data loss or corruption risk
- System availability impact
- Compliance violation
P1 Criteria:
- Significant security concern
- Major performance impact
- Correctness issues affecting functionality
- Important architectural problems
- High technical debt
P2 Criteria:
- Code quality improvements
- Moderate refactoring needs
- Test coverage gaps
- Documentation needs
- Minor performance optimizations
P3 Criteria:
- Code style and consistency
- Future enhancements
- Nice-to-have features
- Minor optimizations
- Exploratory tasks
Step 5: Hierarchical Organization
Structure items using nested checklists:
- [ ] **Category: Main task description** (#tracking-id)
- [ ] Sub-task 1
- [ ] Sub-task 2
- [ ] Detailed implementation step
- **File**: `path/to/file.ext:lines`
- **Owner**: Team/Person
- **Estimate**: Time estimate
- **Context**: Why this matters and what it achieves
Step 6: Summary Generation
For each priority section, calculate:
- Total number of items
- Total estimated hours (if available)
- Completion percentage (if tracking existing checklist)
Step 7: Output Formatting
Create a structured markdown document with:
- Header: Title, generation metadata, source reference
- Overview: Total items and time across all priorities
- Priority Sections: P0, P1, P2, P3 with summaries
- Completion Tracking: Progress metrics at the bottom
Checklist Format Standards
Basic Checkbox Item
- [ ] Task description
Item with Metadata
- [ ] **Category: Task description** (#123)
- **File**: `src/file.js:45-67`
- **Owner**: Backend Team
- **Estimate**: 3 hours
- **Context**: Explanation of why this matters
Nested Sub-tasks
- [ ] **Security: Implement authentication** (#456)
- [ ] Add session validation
- [ ] Implement rate limiting
- [ ] Add authorization checks
- **File**: `api/auth.ts`
- **Owner**: Security Team
- **Estimate**: 8 hours
Section Summary
## P0 - Blockers (Must Fix Before Merge)
**Summary**: 5 items | 12 hours estimated
- [ ] Item 1...
- [ ] Item 2...
Complete Output Template
# TODO List
> Generated from: [source-document.md]
> Date: YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS
> Total Items: X | Total Estimated Hours: Y
## P0 - Blockers (Must Fix Before Merge)
**Summary**: N items | M hours estimated
- [ ] **Category: Task description** (#id)
- [ ] Sub-task
- **File**: `path/file.ext:lines`
- **Owner**: Team
- **Estimate**: X hours
- **Context**: Why this matters
## P1 - High Priority
**Summary**: N items | M hours estimated
[items...]
## P2 - Medium Priority
**Summary**: N items | M hours estimated
[items...]
## P3 - Low Priority / Future
**Summary**: N items | M hours estimated
[items...]
---
## Completion Tracking
- P0 Blockers: 0/N completed (0%)
- P1 High Priority: 0/M completed (0%)
- P2 Medium Priority: 0/K completed (0%)
- P3 Low Priority: 0/J completed (0%)
**Overall Progress**: 0/X tasks completed (0%)
Best Practices
Context Preservation
- Include enough detail that readers understand WHY each task matters
- Preserve the original rationale and justification
- Link to related issues or documentation
- Capture the impact of not completing the task
Logical Grouping
- Group related items within priority levels
- Use category prefixes (Security, Performance, Testing, etc.)
- Keep dependent tasks near each other
- Consider execution order in grouping
Actionability
- Each checkbox should be a clear, completable action
- Avoid vague tasks like "improve performance"
- Use specific verbs: implement, add, remove, refactor, fix
- Include success criteria when helpful
Traceability
- Always link back to source files and line numbers
- Include issue or tracking IDs
- Reference original documentation
- Enable bidirectional navigation
Completeness
- Verify all action items from source are included
- Preserve nested relationships
- Don't lose metadata in extraction
- Handle edge cases explicitly
Handling Edge Cases
Missing Priority
- Place in "Uncategorized" section at bottom
- Flag for review and prioritization
- Use context clues to infer if possible
Missing Metadata
- Use "TBD" markers for missing estimates
- Note "File: TBD" to prompt investigation
- Flag items with insufficient context
Conflicting Priorities
- Defer to explicit priority markers in source
- Consider impact and urgency
- Document rationale for priority assignment
Existing TODO Files
- Confirm before overwriting
- Consider timestamped filenames
- Merge with existing if appropriate
Multiple Sources
- Process each independently
- Or consolidate into single list with source markers
- Deduplicate when appropriate
Anti-Patterns to Avoid
Losing Context
Bad: - [ ] Fix bug
Good: - [ ] **Bug Fix: Handle null response in user fetch** (#789)
Flat Structure
Bad: Ten separate items for one complex task Good: One parent with nested sub-tasks
Missing Traceability
Bad: No file paths or line numbers Good: Always include location metadata
Vague Tasks
Bad: - [ ] Improve performance
Good: - [ ] **Performance: Add caching to user query** - reduces DB calls from 100/req to 1/req
Priority Inflation
Bad: Everything is P0 Good: Reserve P0 for true blockers
Examples
Example 1: Code Review Report to TODO
Input: Code review report with security findings
Output:
# TODO List
> Generated from: CODE_REVIEW_REPORT.md
> Date: 2025-12-09 10:30:00
> Total Items: 8 | Total Estimated Hours: 23
## P0 - Blockers (Must Fix Before Merge)
**Summary**: 2 items | 5 hours estimated
- [ ] **Security: Add authentication to token endpoint** (#1)
- [ ] Implement getServerSession check
- [ ] Add authorization verification
- [ ] Add rate limiting (10 req/min per IP)
- **File**: `app/api/livekit/token/route.ts:15-30`
- **Owner**: Backend Team
- **Estimate**: 4 hours
- **Context**: Public endpoint exposed without auth allows unauthorized access
- [ ] **Security: Remove hardcoded credentials** (#2)
- [ ] Remove fallback values from environment reads
- [ ] Add explicit validation for required credentials
- [ ] Fail fast if credentials missing at startup
- **File**: `experiments/livekit/src/index.ts:182-183`
- **Owner**: Backend Team
- **Estimate**: 1 hour
- **Context**: Hardcoded fallbacks create security risk in production
Example 2: Meeting Notes to Action Items
Input: Team meeting notes with scattered action items
Output:
# Action Items - Q4 Planning Meeting
> Generated from: team-meeting-2025-12-09.md
> Date: 2025-12-09 14:00:00
> Total Items: 12 | Total Estimated Hours: 45
## P1 - High Priority
**Summary**: 5 items | 20 hours estimated
- [ ] **Architecture: Design new API gateway** (#45)
- [ ] Research existing solutions (Kong, Tyk, AWS API Gateway)
- [ ] Document requirements and constraints
- [ ] Create comparison matrix
- [ ] Present findings to team
- **Owner**: Sarah
- **Estimate**: 8 hours
- **Context**: Current gateway hitting scale limits at 1000 req/s
- [ ] **Documentation: Update onboarding guide** (#46)
- [ ] Add sections on local development setup
- [ ] Document deployment process
- [ ] Add troubleshooting guide
- **Owner**: Mike
- **Estimate**: 4 hours
- **Context**: New engineers spending 2 days on setup
Reference Files
For detailed guidance on specific aspects of action item organization:
references/priority-framework.md: Comprehensive priority classification criteria with domain-specific examplesreferences/metadata-extraction-patterns.md: Detailed patterns for extracting different types of metadata from various document formatsreferences/TODO_LIST.template.md: TODO list template with priority-based organization (P0-P3), blocked tasks, and completion tracking
Load these references when you need deeper guidance on priority decisions or metadata extraction strategies.
Related Workflows
- Code review processes
- Sprint planning
- Issue triage
- Project management
- Audit remediation
- Meeting facilitation
- Documentation review