Why Leadership Teams Need Fewer Priorities, Not More
by
David Edwards
November 10, 2025


by
David Edwards
Katie Parrott is a staff writer and AI editorial lead at Every. She writes Working Overtime, a column about how technology reshapes work, and builds AI-powered systems for the Every editorial team.
Last updated:
November 10, 2025
Most leadership teams understand the concept of focus, yet very few genuinely practice it. It’s common to see organizations commit to broad portfolios of initiatives, each labeled as “critical” or “high priority.” In theory, this creates ambition and momentum. In practice, it creates confusion and fragmented execution.
A professional services firm we worked with provides a clear example. During our initial review, the leadership team presented a list of 26 “top priorities” for the quarter. When asked to identify the three most important initiatives, the team struggled. Every priority had a rationale behind it, and each department believed their initiatives were essential. The result was predictable: execution slowed, teams felt overwhelmed, and the leadership team experienced increasing anxiety about progress.
The core issue was not effort or competence—it was the absence of meaningful prioritization.
Key takeaways
Prioritization reduces anxiety, not ambition.
Focus is created through elimination, not addition.
Teams can deliver three priorities extremely well—not 26.
The biggest gains come from deciding what not to do.
We began by redefining what a “priority” meant. A true priority requires clear ownership, measurable outcomes, and visible trade-offs. If an initiative does not demand trade-offs, it is not a priority—it is a preference.
The leadership team then went through a structured prioritization exercise. Each initiative was evaluated by impact, feasibility, and alignment with organizational goals. More importantly, we examined capacity—something rarely accounted for in most planning discussions. Once capacity was understood, it became clear that delivering 26 initiatives was unrealistic.
We reduced the list to three core priorities, each supported by a small set of contributing initiatives. The team initially expressed concern that deprioritizing work would slow progress. Instead, the opposite occurred. Execution became smoother, communication became clearer, and weekly leadership meetings shifted from status updates to meaningful strategic discussions.
Teams reported lower stress levels, greater clarity, and a stronger sense of direction. The leadership team, now aligned around a focused agenda, spent more time addressing root issues and less time managing competing priorities.
The lesson is straightforward: organizations do not struggle because they lack enough priorities—they struggle because they have too many. Focus is not the byproduct of discipline but of structure. When leaders design systems that enforce prioritization, they create environments where teams can deliver consistently and confidently.
In fast-moving organizations, focus becomes a competitive advantage. Leaders who choose fewer priorities create the conditions for deeper execution and more sustainable progress.
Insights
Read more articles
Questions & answers



