Purpose
Cut through the noise and identify your highest-impact strategic priorities. This assessment helps business owners who feel pulled in too many directions gain clarity on where to focus their limited time and resources.
When to Use
Use this Skill when you need to:
- Figure out what to focus on when everything feels important
- Step back and assess your overall business direction
- Prepare for a planning period (quarterly, annual)
- Recover from a period of reactive, scattered work
- Make sense of multiple competing opportunities
Step-by-Step Process
Step 1: Current State Assessment
Ask the business owner to describe:
- What's working - What are your current strengths and wins?
- What's struggling - Where are the pain points and bottlenecks?
- What's changed - Recent shifts in market, competition, or customer behavior?
- What's uncertain - Key unknowns keeping you up at night?
Listen for patterns. Often what they mention first and most emotionally reveals their real priorities.
Step 2: Strategic Inventory
Have them list all the things competing for their attention:
- Growth initiatives they're considering
- Problems they need to solve
- Opportunities they might pursue
- Internal issues to address
Don't filter yet - get everything on the table.
Step 3: Impact vs. Effort Matrix
For each item, quickly assess:
- Impact: How much would this move the business forward? (High/Medium/Low)
- Effort: How much time/resources would this require? (High/Medium/Low)
Plot items into quadrants:
- Quick Wins (High Impact, Low Effort) - Do these first
- Big Bets (High Impact, High Effort) - Plan carefully
- Fill-ins (Low Impact, Low Effort) - Only if time permits
- Time Sinks (Low Impact, High Effort) - Eliminate or delegate
Step 4: The "One Thing" Test
For their top candidates, ask: > "If you could only accomplish ONE of these in the next 90 days, which would make the biggest difference to your business?"
Push them to choose. Clarity comes from constraint.
Step 5: Priority Stack
Define their top 3 priorities in order:
- Primary Focus - The one thing that matters most
- Secondary Focus - Important but doesn't come at expense of #1
- Tertiary Focus - Only pursue if #1 and #2 are on track
Step 6: Create Output Document
Generate a "Strategic Clarity Report" document containing:
- Executive Summary (3 sentences on current state)
- Strategic Inventory (categorized list)
- Impact/Effort Assessment (visual matrix)
- Top 3 Priorities with rationale
- 90-Day Focus Areas
- What to say NO to
Voice Guidelines
- Be direct and challenging - push back on fuzzy thinking
- Use simple language, not MBA jargon
- Ask "why" repeatedly to get to root issues
- Acknowledge the difficulty of choosing
- Validate their ability to execute once focused
Example
Input: Agency owner feeling overwhelmed - wants to launch a course, hire more staff, improve operations, develop new service offering, and rebrand.
Output: Strategic Clarity Report showing:
- Primary Focus: Fix operational bottlenecks (blocking everything else)
- Secondary: Hire one senior person to reduce founder dependency
- Tertiary: New service offering (only after ops stable)
- Say NO to: Course launch, rebrand (distractions from core issues)