Prioritization, Strategy, Leadership, Execution Kevin Ertell Prioritization, Strategy, Leadership, Execution Kevin Ertell

The Bucket Method

Failing to prioritize well is one of the greatest disservices leaders can do to their teams. But prioritizing effectively is also one of the hardest things to do. 

Prioritization is the bridge between clarity and capacity. Without a clear focus from leaders, teams drift, resources are wasted, and strategic goals slip through the cracks.

Why Stack Ranking Matters

To effectively allocate resources, you have to do more than identify a list of important initiatives—you need to stack rank them. This means putting your initiatives, projects, or tasks in a clear order of importance where there is only one #1, one #2, and so on. Regardless of any specific methodology you use to help determine importance—whether it’s impact assessments, ROI models, timeline sequencing, or other sophisticated approaches—stack ranking remains critical. It ensures that your team knows exactly where to focus their energy, empowers them to make decisions, and aligns their efforts without constant guidance.

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A Convenient Truth

Convenience. We value it more than I think we sometimes realize. We’re willing to pay more for it, and we’re willing to sacrifice quality in exchange for it. So it stands to reason that delivering convenience for our customers can lead to a pretty profitable equation for retailers.

The threshold for inconvenience continues to get ever lower. We often complain about how many clicks it takes to get to what we’re looking for on a web page. Think about that for a moment. The energy required to cause our index fingers to press a button too many times is irritating. Some might say it’s not the energy, it’s the time. OK, fair enough. Then the “waste of time” threshold starts kicking in when we are forced to wait three to four seconds for a page to load. We’re busy! We haven’t got that kind of time to waste!

But this post isn’t a social commentary. It’s about recognizing an opportunity to serve customers and grow our businesses.

So, how can we focus our businesses on the convenience opportunity?

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The Decision Accelerator

Imagine if every decision you made could make or break your company's future. Every day, employees at all levels are bombarded with decisions that shape the organization's trajectory. Each choice, no matter how seemingly small, has a ripple effect. Are your decisions propelling your company forward, or are they holding you back?

According to McKinsey, companies make tens of thousands of decisions daily, yet only 20% of them are considered high-quality decisions. How can we ensure our decisions are among the high-quality ones? Executing a strategy involves navigating a sea of choices, big and small. Leaders can’t possibly oversee all of them. In fact, most decisions happen far from the executive suite, carried out by people on the front lines. As Matt O’Connell, CEO of Vistaly, told me, “On the ground, it’s the day-to-day, nitty-gritty stuff where you need to make quick decisions. The executives don’t care about the details—they just want the problem solved.”

Making good decisions quickly is critical, but it’s not easy. Decision-making is influenced by a number of factors—ranging from cognitive biases to stress and emotional pressures—that can cloud judgment and lead to inconsistent or rushed choices.

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Shake It Up—but Only If You’re All In: Lessons from the NFL

Imagine you and your competitors all enter a pact: share your biggest revenue streams, pool your marketing, and match payrolls dollar for dollar. Everyone sells the exact same product. You'd think your companies would perform similarly, right?

This is what the NFL tries to achieve—an even playing field, where teams share profits, keep payrolls capped, and have a level shot at success. Yet, what has actually happened? Some teams rise year after year, while others (like my beloved Cleveland Browns) consistently struggle. Why?

Is it just luck? Or are there deeper lessons here—lessons for any business trying to understand the true costs of change?

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Defending the Status Quo Kills Companies

“Defending the status quo is what kills companies.” That insight from Rich Teerlink and Lee Ozley’s More Than a Motorcycle rings just as true now as it did when they wrote it in 2000. They described how Harley-Davidson didn’t wait for a crisis to change—they transformed their culture right after a financial turnaround when the company was being praised for its success. Most would have stayed the course, but Harley knew that holding onto the status quo is the surest way to fail.

In today’s fast-moving world, companies that cling to “what’s always worked” run a serious risk of being overtaken by more nimble, customer-focused competitors. The names of companies that didn’t evolve—Kodak, Blockbuster, Nokia, and much of the music industry—are stark reminders of what happens when businesses fail to adapt to new realities.

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The Social Advantage

When it comes to motivating teams to execute a strategy, financial incentives like bonuses, commissions, and stock options often take center stage. While these rewards are effective, they don’t tell the full story. One of the most powerful, yet often overlooked, motivators in the workplace is social incentives. Recognition, accountability, and the need to belong frequently prove just as effective—if not more—than financial rewards in driving engagement and performance.

Monetary rewards alone rarely keep people motivated day in and day out. What truly drives many of us is a sense of purpose, recognition from our peers, and a personal connection to the work we do. Almost all of us want to feel like we’re part of something bigger and that our contributions matter. In fact, neuroscience shows that when we receive recognition, the brain’s reward centers light up in much the same way as when we receive financial compensation. This means social incentives are wired into us, deeply influencing our behavior at work.

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Stop the Yes Mess

Saying “No” is hard, especially if you’re an optimist like me. It can feel awkward, even risky. Saying “Yes,” on the other hand, feels great—it’s productive, optimistic, full of possibility. So it’s tempting to say “Yes” to everything that seems promising. But here’s the paradox: saying “Yes” to too many things often overwhelms your team, scattering their focus and preventing them from dedicating their best efforts to what truly matters.

Over the years, I’ve discovered that the most powerful tool for success isn’t saying “Yes”—it’s learning to say “No.” For leaders, this is one of the most essential skills to master if you want to maintain focus and drive meaningful results.

I’ve found a simple trick that makes it easier to say “No”

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The Surprising Power of Limits

Let’s face it: nobody likes constraints at first. We all want freedom—more resources, more budget, more tools. But here’s the twist: constraints are actually our friend. Knowing what you can’t do helps you laser-focus on what you can do. Instead of chasing every possibility, you zero in on what really matters.

When a new strategy is on the table, there’s often a push for “more”—more money, more people, more time. But guess what? Adding more tends to makes things messier. More complexity, more decisions, more things to manage. The real magic happens when it’s clear that more isn’t coming. That’s when everyone rolls up their sleeves and figures out how to make it work with what they’ve got.

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Communication, Strategy, Leadership Kevin Ertell Communication, Strategy, Leadership Kevin Ertell

Escape the Curse of Knowledge with the Ladder of Abstraction

One of the most frustrating pitfalls in communication is something known as the Curse of Knowledge. It happens when we're so familiar with a subject that we speak in jargon, acronyms, or insider language—and confuse the heck out of our audience. This is a dangerous trap, particularly when presenting new strategies or analyzing performance. We think we’re being clear, but our audience is left bewildered and unsure of what to do with the information we’re conveying.

The Ladder of Abstraction, a concept coined by linguist S.I. Hayakawa and recently highlighted in an article by Big Think, provides a useful tool to avoid this trap. It helps us shift between high-level, abstract ideas and specific, grounded details that ensure our message is not just heard but understood.

What is the Ladder of Abstraction?

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Metrics, Strategy, Communication, Analytics Kevin Ertell Metrics, Strategy, Communication, Analytics Kevin Ertell

Planting Seeds of Success: Grow Your Business with the Power of KPI Trees

If your organization has a hierarchy then so should your metrics.

KPI Trees are a great way to connect the entire organization to the ultimate success metric while giving people at all levels a clear view of how their work connects to the ultimate success metric and to the work of other teams.

So what the heck is a KPI Tree?

A KPI Tree is a multi-level, mathematically connected view of the building blocks of the business.

I find KPI Trees are a critical way for everyone in the organization to understand how the business actually works. They provide clarity for each person to understand how the work they do drives a higher-level metric. And, conversely, they can see how something they are pushing might detract from a different metric. For example, one team might develop a service program in a retail store that requires a service counter that is fully staffed all day long. However, that dedicated use of labor might cause a Sales Per Labor Hour metrics to go sideways and ultimately negatively impact the profitable growth.

How do you build a KPI Tree?

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Strategy, Leadership, Metrics Kevin Ertell Strategy, Leadership, Metrics Kevin Ertell

The Straight Line to Business Success

Did you know that we humans can’t walk in a straight line without visual cues to keep us focused on our path? Not only can’t we walk straight, we actually walk in circles if we can’t clearly see where we’re going.

It seems we also drive our businesses in circles if we don’t have strong focal points like clearly defined visions, goals and strategies.

It’s easy to see the parallels in our business environments. Without a clear vision of where we’re going, it’s easy veer off course. In the business world, we’re constantly bombarded by internal and external demands for short-term change. Those demands are often driven by overly narrow data analysis (such as daily or even hourly comps), emotional reactions, gut feel, wild ideas, competitive shifts, and more.

So what do we do about it?

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Navigating the Iceberg of Ignorance

I’m ignorant. And so are you. Frankly, we’re all ignorant. It’s not an insult. It’s just an acknowledgment that none of us can be all-knowing.

I recently learned about the concept of the Iceberg of Ignorance, a term popularized by a 1989 study by Sidney Yoshida. Yoshida’s research revealed a startling disparity in awareness of problems within organizations: frontline workers were aware of 100% of the floor problems, supervisors were aware of only 74%, middle managers knew about 9%, and senior executives were aware of a mere 4% of the issues.

While this concept was initially targeted at executives, it’s a universal truth. Any small group, or even individuals, experiences this iceberg effect. The notion that senior executives are the most ignorant of the problems is striking, but let’s be honest: ignorance permeates all levels. Supervisors miss out on what frontline workers know, corporate managers don’t fully grasp the supervisors’ challenges, and even frontline workers don’t everything going in their environments.

But what can we do about it?

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Team Building, Leadership, Hiring Kevin Ertell Team Building, Leadership, Hiring Kevin Ertell

Build to Win: The Three “C”s of Hiring Success

One of the most critical jobs of a people leader is building a high-performing team.

I like to think of it like a General Manager of a sports team who is assembling a group of players who can compete for the championship. It’s important think about how the group as a whole will function together versus focusing on each role in a vacuum where you could end up with a team of superstars (or “A players”) who are individually great but collectively disappointing.

I love this quote from basketball legend Sue Bird:

"I've been on extremely talented teams that just don't click, and I've also been on teams with a little bit less talent, but they clicked, and because they clicked, they did better than other talented teams I've been on."

When hiring to build a winning team, I like to focus on three Cs: Character, Critical thinking, and Chemistry.

Experience is important, but I find it’s far less predictable than those three Cs. More on that in a bit.

But first, let’s explore the Cs.

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Communication, Leadership, Team Building Kevin Ertell Communication, Leadership, Team Building Kevin Ertell

Click Your Way to Success

In my experience, the most important factor for success in business is the ability to interact well with other people. Leadership skills, financial acumen, and technical expertise all matter a lot, but they don’t amount to a hill of beans without solid people skills.

The reality is none of us can be successful completely on our own. We need the help of other people — peers, staff, managers, vendors, or business partners — to successfully accomplish our tasks and goals.

Human relationships are more complicated than Wall Street financial schemes, but we often take interpersonal skills for granted. We rarely study them to the degree we study financial or technical skills. After all, we’ve been talking to people all our lives. We’re experienced. But I’ll argue there are subtleties that make all the difference, and they’re worth studying.

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Analytics, Presentations, Communication Kevin Ertell Analytics, Presentations, Communication Kevin Ertell

How to Achieve FAME in Analysis

In today’s business world, we’re drowning in data. We track nearly everything, constantly analyzing the numbers. Yet, the sheer volume of data can be so overwhelming that it often leads to a shortage of actionable insights.

All that data is worthless—or worse—if we don’t produce thoughtful analysis and carefully craft communication of our findings in ways that enable decision-makers to react to the data rather than try to analyze it themselves.

To navigate the data deluge and extract meaningful insights, I’ve found a framework that consistently produces effective analysis. It’s all about achieving F.A.M.E., baby!

We need to focus on four key attributes: Focused, Actionable, Manageable, and Enlightening.

Here, in my experience, are the keys to achieving FAME in analysis:

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Leadership, Strategy, Innovation Kevin Ertell Leadership, Strategy, Innovation Kevin Ertell

The Immense Value of “Slop” Time

Lately, I’ve been thinking a lot about thinking. We spend such a large portion of our days reacting to issues flying at us from all directions that we can easily lose sight of where we’re headed and why we’re going there. We’re so busy that we don’t have time to think, and failing to allot time to think is ultimately counterproductive. Taking time (and even scheduling time) to reflect on past actions and consider future courses of action is more important than we often realize.

Consider this quote from former Intel exec Dov Frohman in his book Leadership the Hard Way:

“Every leader should routinely keep a substantial portion of his or her time—I would say as much as 50 percent—unscheduled. Until you do so, you will never be able to develop the detachment required to identify long-term threats to the organization or the flexibility to move quickly to take advantage of random opportunities as they emerge. Only when you have substantial ’slop’ in your schedule—unscheduled time—will you have the space to reflect on what you are doing, learn from experience, and recover from your inevitable mistakes. Leaders without such  free time end up tackling issues only when there is an immediate or visible problem.”

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The 4 Keys to a Customer-Centric Culture

What does it really mean to create a customer-centric culture ? We hear companies say it all the time. Almost every claims to have it. But what does it really mean and how do you know if you really have it?

Culture is a powerful and interesting beast. I’ve had the opportunity to observe and operate within many corporate cultures. I’ve learned that corporate cultures cannot just be decreed from the top as cultures get their power from all of the people within them. While CEOs and other leaders can be influential in culture development, they can also be completely enveloped by powerful cultures that are driven from all levels of the organization and formed over many, many years.

That said, I believe there are certain dynamics that drive cultures, and we can influence and shift cultures by focusing on these key areas.

Without further ado, here are what I believe are the four key facets of a truly customer-centric culture:

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Employee Satisfaction Leads to Customer Satisfaction (and Big Profits).

Focusing and delivering on all layers of the Employee Hierarchy of Needs can lead to the type of employee satisfaction that leads to customer satisfaction and big profits (investor satisfaction?). But there’s no question that it takes constant focus and a lot of hard work.

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