



A prioritization framework that plots tasks on two axes: impact (value created) and effort (resources required). This creates four quadrants: Quick Wins (high impact, low effort), Major Projects (high impact, high effort), Fill-Ins (low impact, low effort), and Thankless Tasks (low impact, high effort).
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Impact-Effort Matrix
The Impact-Effort Matrix (also called Action Priority Matrix) is a prioritization tool that helps determine which tasks deserve attention based on their potential impact versus the effort required to complete them.
Priority: Do First
Examples: Fixing obvious bugs, sending important emails, making key phone calls, quick process improvements
Priority: Schedule & Plan
Examples: Product launches, system implementations, major refactors, strategic partnerships
Priority: Do Later
Examples: Minor admin tasks, routine maintenance, nice-to-have improvements, inbox organization
Priority: Avoid/Eliminate
Examples: Over-engineering solutions, perfectionism on low-value work, maintaining legacy systems, endless research
vs. Eisenhower Matrix: Impact-Effort focuses on value and resources, while Eisenhower uses urgency and importance
vs. Priority Matrix: Similar concept but Impact-Effort specifically quantifies effort investment
Overestimating Impact: Be realistic about actual value created
Underestimating Effort: Account for hidden complexity and dependencies
Ignoring Context: Urgent items may need attention regardless of quadrant
Static Assessment: Impact and effort change—review regularly
For teams, the Impact-Effort Matrix:
The matrix helps shift from reactive to proactive work by making visible which activities create the most value with available resources, enabling strategic rather than opportunistic time investment.
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