Today’s leadership a-z journey brings us to the letter P for
priorities. Prioritization is a critical skill set for
Strategic Issues Map - photo Britton |
Priority comes from the Latin root of “ prioritas”,“prior”
or former. It can be defined as “ a thing that is regarded as more important
than another.”
Throughout each business day we are prioritizing on
individual and collective/team levels. In today’s post, I wanted to share with
you four prioritization tools you may find useful in your own work and also in working with others.
Tool #1 - The
Urgent/Important Matrix.
Made famous by Steven Covey and his work, the
Urgent/Important Matrix gets us to think about what is really important and
urgent in our work. Where are we spending our time? Are we focusing on things
that are in the crisis zone of urgent and important, or are we able to be
proactive and spend a bulk of our time in the not-urgent and important area of
planning, building business relationships. Many professionals may find
themselves getting bogged down with the urgent and not important tasks - things
like meetings that are not relevant, email, reporting. And of course, the final
part of the matrix is the land of the “time suckers” spending time in the not-
urgent and not important tasks. Some of the topics in the “time sucker”
category include excessive time on social media etc.
Activity: Think back to where you have spent your time over
the last week. What quadrant are you spending the bulk of your time in? What’s
the impact of this?
Resource: Steven Covey - Seven Habits of Highly Effective
People
Prioritization Tool #
2 - Prioritization Matrix
As I was looking around the web for some different
prioritization tools I came across a great one from Workshopbank.com and Nick
Martin called the Prioritization Matrix. Here is a link to the site.
Using post it notes, it gets teams to identify all of the
priorities they have, then rate them regarding their impact and do-ability.
From there each task gets plotted on a large piece of paper which everyone can
see.
What I like about reading this activity is the fact that it
also is very visual, and stimulates dialogue amongst the team members
themselves. An important part of the prioritization process for teams is about
sharing information, and also busting assumptions that might be held. This
seems to have the potential to be a great structure for facilitating that conversation.
Prioritization Tool # 3 - 80/20 Rule
The Pareto principle, most commonly known as the 80/20 rule
is also another useful framework to have in mind when you are considering
prioritization. The 80/20 rule asserts that we get 80% of our results from 20%
of our activities.
Teams can benefit from undertaking some analysis of where
they are getting the bulk of their impact (whether it is sales, key
relationships, customer service etc). Getting clear on these will help us to
prioritize them in the larger scheme of things.
Tool #4 - Strategic Issues Mapping
One of my favorite strategic prioritization tools I bring in
with some of the work I do with teams and organizations is Strategic Issues
Mapping. This too is an exercise to stimulate identification of issues, conversation
and sharing across a team.
Strategic issues mapping (see photo) can be done on multiple
levels. You can start by putting the issue in the center of the circle, and
having each team member brainstorm and write down all the issues/topics/challenges
they can think of related to that topic. Depending on the topic, you may want
to label the surrounding circles according to short term, medium term and long
term issues OR it may make more sense to label the issues according to impact -
local, national, international. One at a time, have people place their post its
in the relevant area. From this you may have dozens of issues.
Depending on
time you can work through all issues, working circle by circle. As one of the
starting points of these more focused explorations of each circle, I hand out
colored dots to each participant and get them to dot the top 2, 3 or more from
their own perspective. This provides the team with a snapshot of where the
collective sees the priorities, which can then feed into more
dialogue,planning, and action.
These are only four prioritization tools out of a myriad of
possibilities. What prioritization tools and methods have you used and would recommend to others? As
always, please feel free to comment below.
With best wishes,
Jennifer
Jennifer Britton, MES, CPT, PCC
Potentials Realized - Leadership and Team Development | Coaching | Retreats
Supporting teams and organizations through enhanced conversation and skills, more focused results to do their best work.
(416)996-TEAM (8326)
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