Vizzuality Guidelines

Vizzuality playbook in progress

This project is maintained by Vizzuality

Decision Making

Introduction

This is a proposal for a decision making system at Vizzuality. The goal of the proposed changes is to empower individuals to make decisions, because we trust people will make the best decisions.

We arrived at it by reviewing our current decision making processes and identifying their weaknesses. We researched systems used in other organisations to design our own.

General criteria

If you have a decision that affects other people and has a risk attached to it you need to start the decision process by:

Exclusions

Some decisions are legally required to be made by the shareholders of the company and are therefore excluded from this system. Those are any decisions that put the company at risk of bankruptcy / legal issues or affect property right of shareholders.

Examples:

Guidelines

Clear, concise and easily accessible Guidelines are paramount to the efficiency of the decision making process.

Guidelines have a hierarchic form with Purpose at the top. Vision and Strategic Priorities are the next level.

Next, we have broad organisation guidelines, like conflict resolution, resource allocation, information flow, feedback loops and decision making.

Finally, at the base we have functional domain guidelines, e.g. project workflow, quality standards, technical documentation.

decision making guidelines - guidelines-detail

Maintaining good guidelines will allow us in many cases to take decisions independently, taking into consideration their scope and impact.

In absence of a specific guideline we should look for a relevant higher-level guideline. The guidelines themselves can be modified using a collective decision making process, as described later.

Scopes & Risk

Another pillar of the proposed decision-making process are the criteria to apply when classifying the decision and processing it through the proposed framework.

Scopes

The first dimension according to which to classify the decision is its scope, understood as people affected by the decision. We have identified the following scopes:

Risk

The second dimension according to which we can classify a decision is the impact it has on the company. Put simply: “What negative outcome will the decision have for the company if it goes wrong?”

We could consider an number of types of risk associated with decisions:

A risk assessment (high vs low) will help understand how much advice and dissent to encourage in the decision-making process.

Framework

We propose the following framework for making decisions.

decision making framework proposal v2

There are broadly 3 paths a decision can go through:

Decision based on existing guidelines

IN SHORT: If there is a sufficient guideline that covers your proposal, you can make the decision right away.

sufficient ≠ specific

can ≠ have to

The easiest path is where a decision can be taken simply based on existing guidelines. This path will help reduce the current decision overload.

** EXAMPLE PROPOSAL**: To buy new mugs for the office

Decision based on advice process

IN SHORT: If there is no guideline or you choose not to follow it, you have to start the advice process. You can follow the advice.

can ≠ have to

Where an appropriate guideline does not exist or where it exists but the proponent believes it should not be followed, they initiate the advice process.

  1. Express the proposal. Provide justification. Document it. Assess the risk and define the scope (upper-most for high risk).
  2. Conduct due diligence. Are there any known constraints (financial etc)? Are there any contradicting decisions already in place?
  3. Everyone in the advice process can voice their opinion but it does not need to be followed.
  4. Anyone in the advice process can call the need for guideline creation / amendment, and becomes responsible for leading it.
  5. Decision can still be passed while guideline change process takes place. Consider the risk assessment to decide.

EXAMPLE PROPOSAL : To go to a conference X

DECISION I will go to conference X.

IN SHORT: If anyone in the advice process raises the need for creating / amending a guideline, that person has to start a consent process. You can wait for that process to be complete.

can ≠ have to

A process to change guidelines can be started where existing guidelines are deemed insufficient. This is carried out using the consent-based (“no principled objections”) process, loosely based on Holacracy.

  1. Express the proposal. Provide justification. Document it. Assess the risk and define the scope (upper-most for high risk).
  2. Open the proposal to everyone in identified scope for a round of clarifying questions.
  3. Set a time frame for a round of reactions.
  4. A proposal cannot pass if it is blocked. It can pass if people disagree. A block is a principled objection, which needs to be explained and further discussed to either withdraw the proposal or amend it allowing the block to be resolved.

EXAMPLE PROPOSAL: To bring dog into the office

Responsibility

Document your decision process and your intended outcome.

If a decision fails, we don’t start blaming anyone. Instead we use a review process or retrospective to understand what happened, why, and how we can improve next time.

Do a retrospective when the intended outcome was not achieved.

Include the people who were involved in the decision process and the people who were affected by the outcome.

For example, everyone has to say three things that went well, and three things that could be improved next time. Learn from each other.

Online tools to support decision making

To address the issue of lack of transparency in current decision making process, we need a tool / set of tools available to everyone, which will allow us to:

The operation of the decision-making system relies on guidelines and processes coming from other systems. This allows the decision making flow to remain simple and not necessarily concerned by potential issues arising from misuse, for example: