Issues
This brief provides an overview of our Issues tool, including tips for identifying and resolving ...
Every organization faces challenges, whether they’re obstacles to overcome or opportunities to embrace. At Ninety, we call them Issues. How we identify and address Issues determines how our organization moves forward.
Most Business Operating Systems include a proven framework to do just that. At Ninety, Raise, Discuss, and Resolve (RDR) is our method of tackling Issues, whether they’re Short-Term Issues in our Weekly Team Meetings (WTMs) or Long-Term Issues in our Quarterly Planning Meetings (QPMs).
Solving Issues is a crucial component of these meetings, which makes it all the more important to have a practiced process to guide us through efficient problem-solving as a team.
To set the framework for the RDR process, let’s first identify the four main types of Issues:
Once Issues are on the list, we do a quick keep/kill/combine review as a team. Issues that are essential and relevant, we keep. Issues that are outdated or irrelevant, we kill. And Issues that are closely related, we combine. Once we've completed this review, we rank all remaining Issues.
At Ninety, we use this priority or ranking system to sort Issues:
Once Issues are sorted in order of priority, we work down the list in order of importance. (Of course, if it’s a short list, there’s certainly no harm in powering through them all.)
Ready to resolve? Let’s RDR.
The first step is to raise the Issue. This task falls to the Issue’s owner. While there are different ways to raise an Issue, we like to use the system Who, With, One, What, and Why.
This approach helps the owner and team members deconstruct the Issue and verbally process it in real time.
The meeting Facilitator manages this process to ensure everyone who needs to be involved in the discussion has complete clarity on the Issue.
The second step is to discuss the Issue. Collaborative, solution-focused discussion may feel unnatural at first, but it can be mastered by following these key principles:
The third step is to resolve the Issue. Since it has already been clarified and discussed, resolving — or defining a clear path toward resolution — is often straightforward.
If follow-up is needed, we create a To-Do. If it’s a big Issue, we move it to the Long-Term Issues list to tackle at the next QPM.
The RDR process concludes with the Issue’s owner declaring the Issue resolved.
Our experience suggests it’s helpful to take into consideration both the “thinkers” and the “feelers” in the room. (If you don’t have both in the room, that’s almost always an Issue.) It’s important to consider different perspectives, communication styles, and the manner in which people perceive certain Issues.
We recommend adding Issues to your team’s list as they arise throughout the week. Then, closer to meeting time, look at the list to begin prioritizing them.
Try to stick with the Who, With, One, What, and Why structure to raise an Issue. It’s succinct, saves time, and identifies exactly what’s needed from team members to resolve the Issue at hand.
Raise, Discuss, and Resolve helps teams tackle the obstacles, difficulties, and opportunities we face as an organization. We first prioritize and sort Issues, then resolve them through solution-oriented conversation and collaboration. Our cloud-based platform lets teams document and organize Issues right in the Meetings tool.
RDR takes some practice to master, but once a team finds its rhythm with the process, they’ll resolve Issues efficiently. This helps the team, department, and organization move forward.
What’s next? Visit the 90u Library or try Ninety today.