Getting Everyone on the Right Page

Getting Everyone on the Right Page

Have you ever been working with an energized team and found you have too many great ideas to wrap your arms around? Maybe you need to trim down a long list of options and quickly prioritize the most viable and valuable options to the top.

This could happen several different ways:

  • After a round of brainstorming
  • During a SWOT analysis
  • Recording observations from a focus group
  • Collecting ideas for a cause-and-effect diagram
  • Assessing issues noted from customer complaints
  • Reviewing action items from a monthly business review
  • Ranking recommendations from an organizational assessment

And there are dozens of other examples.

You name a team-oriented activity, and there is usually a point where you get a list of “things” that need to be put under control.


Many Tools

toolbox

There are many tools claiming to be the answer:

  • Decision Matrix Analysis
  • Action Priority Matrix
  • Urgent and Important Principle
  • Paired Comparison Analysis
  • Circle of Concern vs. Control
  • Pareto Analysis

These tools, and many others, can work. Unfortunately, many tools seem to slow the team down when you need to make a specific decision about classification or priority.


Setting Priorities

Setting the classification or priority becomes a team decision and opens up endless debate.

For example:

  • Is this item a priority 2 or 3 – and what is priority 3 again?
  • Is this important for a few or everyone – what do we do about that?
  • We need to control another department – let’s say their problem is in our circle of control!
  • Give it a high chance of success – that process has been failing for years, but the times are a changin’
  • Call it a quick fix – it only affects the procedures for 8,000 people in 57 locations
  • Can we talk some more about this “blockchain” thing – everyone says it can solve all issues

You know the drill. It's frustrating for everyone.

There has to be a better way!


Gaining Control

Gaining control requires success at three challenges:

  • Sorting your list from most important to least important
  • Getting everyone to agree on this prioritized list
  • Doing this fast, and on the spot, when creativity is high

For me, one tool has become my favorite for solving these three challenges.

It’s called RightPage and has consistently delivered a sense of accomplishment for teams I have worked with.

A no-charge online version is available from our partners at Six Disciplines. More on that later.

But first, let’s walk through a simple, but very representative, example.


Your Team Must Decide

Think about working on the summer picnic and your team needs to decide something that could turn into a barroom brawl if not managed well.

You must decide on the flavors of ice cream to serve!


Ice Cream Cone

Like everything, you have a constraint. The budget allows for the purchase of 4, and only 4, buckets of ice cream.

At this point, a wise executive would tell the team to decide whatever they want. Then, the executive would leave the room and the mayhem would begin.

You need the team to make a decision and you need everyone to support the decision.

An overused word called consensus comes to mind. But forcing consensus is not something you want to do when an important issue like ice cream is involved.

I propose you need everyone on the same page or the RightPage – the page that lists the 4 flavors.


Read the article in its entirety here. This article was originally published by Mike Loughrin for use by Transformance Advisors Inc. For more information on the author, view his bio here.

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