Not sure if such a structured approach is really necessary. It might be useful to read a few papers and student textbooks so you get an overview and have enough shallow knowledge to be able to compile a list with basic sub-topics which need to be included. So you start with the broad subject area and then narrow down in the course of your literature review.
I wrote my literature review differently though: I went to an academic database (keyword search), printed out about 100 articles which appeared to be remotely related with the broad area of my thesis; then I put these sources in Endnote and just started writing. In the beginning, this approach was a bit chaotic as I hadn't read the articles yet, but after a while you will get an overview and can fill in the missing pieces. Obviously, different people have different approaches, so I guess it's up to your personal style.