Setting Priorities
The ability to look at everything competing for your attention and identify the one or two things that will actually move the business forward — distinguishing between what builds momentum and what just keeps things running so that focus goes where it actually matters.
What it looks like in real life
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Example 1 — Without this skill
A business owner starts every week with a long list of things to do. They work through the list responding to messages, handling admin, fixing small problems, updating things that do not urgently need updating, and attending to whatever feels most pressing at any given moment. At the end of the week everything on the list got touched. Nothing significant moved forward.
The business feels active. Revenue stays flat. The owner is genuinely working hard and genuinely exhausted. But the work being done is maintenance work — the kind that keeps the business running at its current level rather than building it toward the next one. There is no shortage of effort. There is a shortage of direction applied to that effort.
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Example 2 — With this skill
A business owner starts every week by asking one question before looking at the list. What is the one thing that if it gets done this week will mean the week was genuinely productive regardless of everything else. They write that thing down. They protect time for it before anything else claims that time. They do it first.
Everything else on the list still gets done. But it gets done after the thing that actually matters. The week ends with the same amount of work completed and one significant thing moved forward. Over months that difference compounds into visible progress that the first owner cannot understand why they are not experiencing.
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Every business has two categories of work. Work that moves the business forward and work that keeps the business running. Both are necessary. But only one of them builds toward something different from what already exists.
The problem is that the work that keeps things running is urgent and visible. Messages need responding to. Admin needs completing. Problems need solving. That work announces itself constantly. The work that moves things forward is rarely urgent. It can always be pushed to tomorrow. And because it can always be pushed to tomorrow it often never happens at all.
Setting priorities is the skill that ensures the important work gets done before the urgent work consumes everything. Without it the business stays busy indefinitely at the level it is currently at. With it the business has a mechanism for actually moving forward rather than just sustaining.
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You will know this skill is developing when you finish weeks feeling like something meaningful happened rather than just feeling like you survived the week. The feeling of genuine progress rather than just activity is the clearest signal that priorities are being set and protected correctly.
Another signal is when you can say no to things without significant internal conflict. The ability to decline a request, push back a non-urgent task, or remove something from the list because it does not serve the current priority comes from clarity about what the priority actually is. Without that clarity everything feels equally important and nothing can be declined.
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Treating urgency as the same as importance. Urgent things demand attention. Important things deserve attention. They are rarely the same thing. A message that needs a quick response is urgent. Building the system that reduces the volume of those messages is important. Most people spend most of their time on the urgent and very little on the important. Priorities reverse that ratio.
Having too many priorities. A list of ten priorities is not a priority list. It is a task list with aspirations. The discipline of setting priorities requires choosing what matters most and accepting that everything else is secondary for now. Two real priorities are more powerful than ten nominal ones because two can actually be protected. Ten cannot.
Setting priorities but not protecting time for them. Knowing what matters and actually doing it are different things. A priority that is identified on Monday morning and then buried under urgent tasks by Monday afternoon was never really a priority. It was an intention. Priorities require time blocks that are protected from other demands not just acknowledgment that they are important.
Confusing being busy with making progress. Busyness is visible and feels productive. Progress is often invisible in the short term and does not feel like much is happening. The business owner who spends the day responding to messages and fixing small things ends the day feeling like they worked hard. The business owner who spends three hours on the one thing that actually matters ends the day having done less but having moved further forward. These feel very different in the moment and produce very different results over time.
Resetting priorities too often. Every time the priority changes the momentum built toward the previous one resets. Priorities should be set for a meaningful period — a week at minimum, a month or a quarter for larger goals — and held to through the inevitable distractions that will arise. Changing priorities every few days in response to what feels most pressing in the moment is not prioritization. It is reactive scheduling with extra steps.
The Exercise
Write down everything that is currently on your plate. Every project, every task, every thing you feel you should be doing or want to be doing. Do not filter it. Just write it all down.
Now look at the full list and ask one question about each item. If this is the only thing I do this week will the business be meaningfully further forward than it is right now.
Most items will answer no. They are maintenance. They keep things running. They matter but they do not build momentum. Mark those separately.
The items that answer yes are your real priorities. If there are more than two go back through them and ask which two would produce the most meaningful progress if completed this week. Those two are the priorities for the week.
Now look at your schedule for the coming week and identify when specifically you will work on those two things. Not if you find time. When. Block that time before anything else claims it.
At the end of the week review whether those two things got done. If they did the week was productive regardless of everything else. If they did not identify what got in the way and what you would do differently to protect that time next week.
Do this every week. The habit of identifying what actually matters and protecting time for it is the foundation of every other form of business progress.
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