Tuesday 17 December 2013

Whose Job Is It Anyway?

One of my favourite maxims is "vision without execution is hallucination".  Not sure who coined the phrase but I like it.  It's all very well saying "let's do something" and it's something else to actually get it done, especially if it involves people.

It's helpful to have some "getting stuff done" tools in your toolkit and one tool that I've found helpful in the past is "RACI".

To get from an idea to reality, we need to know who is going to do the work.  This is where RACI comes in.

RACI stands for "Responsible, Accountable, Consulted and Informed".  It's a usually framework to understand the roles of all the actors in a system required to get a task done.

Responsible
The responsible person is the doer.  (Or doers, i.e. those that actually do the work and deliver to the agreed standards, time frames or expectations).

Accountable
The buck stops here.  This person is answerable for the correct and thorough completion of the task.  It can only be be one person.  The accountable person may well delegate their tasks to a responsible person but they cannot delegate their accountability.

Consulted
Their opinion is sought, these are experts whose skills or knowledge can influence the success of the task.  It's a two way communication flow between the Responsible and Consulted parties. It can be more than one person.

Informed
(Or - told). Those who need to know what's going on.  Not necessarily during task, more likely on completion.  It's a one way communication and it's usually many people.

In any project, you write down all of the tasks down as the rows in your matrix.  In the columns, write either names or job titles.  In the grid, type R, A, C or I in each cell. 



If you do this with all of the people involved you can then get consensus on who does what.

It provides a good grounding for the next part of organising - what interactions (e.g. meetings) and documents are required during the project to make sure everyone gets what they need from the others involved.

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