Integrate the Eisenhower Matrix (Urgent/Important) directly into your company's core values, as The Investor’s Podcast Network does. This elevates the matrix from a personal productivity hack to an organizational principle, clearly signaling to all employees where to focus their time for maximum impact.
To combat distractions and focus on impactful work, prioritize tasks based on their direct contribution to revenue first, then business efficiency. All other initiatives, including new projects or "shiny objects," must come last.
If a team is constantly struggling with prioritization, the root cause isn't poor task management; it's the absence of a clear, unifying strategy. A strong, insight-based strategy makes prioritization implicit, naturally aligning the organization and reducing distractions.
Create a public document detailing your company's operating principles—from Slack usage to coding standards. This "operating system" makes cultural norms explicit, prevents recurring debates, and allows potential hires to self-select based on alignment, saving time and reducing friction as you scale.
Generic values like "Speed" are meaningless because no one disagrees with them. To make a value impactful, embed its inherent trade-off into the statement, like Facebook's "Move Fast and Break Things." This acknowledges what you are willing to sacrifice, making the value a unique and actionable strategic choice.
CEOs can maintain focus by co-creating a simple one-page strategy with their board. When board members later propose off-strategy ideas, this document becomes a powerful tool to re-center the conversation and ask whether the new idea is important enough to displace an agreed-upon priority.
Instead of vague values, define culture as a concrete set of "if-then" statements that govern reinforcement (e.g., "IF you are on time, THEN you are respected"). This turns an abstract concept into an operational system that can be explicitly taught, managed, and improved across the organization.
To manage three distinct businesses, Haney relies on two core principles. First, an ability to constantly prioritize the single most important task across all domains. Second, a focus on pace and urgency, operating under the mantra that "compression of time equals value."
Leaders often try to "squeeze in" critical strategic work around a flood of meetings and daily demands. This approach is backward. To make meaningful progress, strategic priorities must be the first items blocked out on the calendar. All other, less critical tasks must then be fit into the remaining time, ensuring your schedule reflects your strategy.
A superior prioritization framework calculates your marginal contribution: (Importance * [Success Probability with you - Success Probability without you]) / Time. This means working on a lower-priority project where you can be a hero is often more valuable than being a cog in a well-staffed, top-priority machine.
Goals fail when they're isolated. View your intentions as a nested hierarchy: a present action supports a plan, which serves a goal, which aligns with a priority, which fulfills a core value. This "intention stack" ensures daily work has purpose and follow-through.