In my work with leaders and organizations, I often find the RACI model at the heart of their decision-making processes. And for good reason. RACI (Responsible, Accountable, Consulted, Informed) charts are satisfying to write, and popular in big organizations as they provide an illusion of safety and control.
The problem? They’re entirely disconnected from the realities of modern decision-making.
The RACI model is a hangover from the predictable, command-and-control work environments of yesteryear, when projects used waterfall planning with specific milestones that could be predicted in advance.
In today’s VUCA (Volatility, Uncertainty, Complexity, Ambiguity) world, where solutions are unpredictable and can only be found by rapid testing and experimentation, the inadequacy of RACI charts quickly becomes apparent.
RACI’s shortcomings are rooted in three shaky assumptions:
Before we throw RACIs out altogether, let’s pull the baby from the bathwater. Here are a couple positives we can bring into the future:
A good RACI chart defines where authority lives. That’s a big improvement on many organizations, where decisions languish in a sea of alignment meetings, implicit power and systemic inequity.
By making authority explicit, the decision becomes both inclusive and editable. Inclusivity increases the psychological safety of all team members to make proposals and take actions. Editability makes the distribution of authority responsive to the changing circumstances of the project.
A RACI chart helps stakeholders visualize decision ownership, and adjust it to reduce bottlenecks and increase efficiency.
In the visual below (adapted from work by August co-founder Clay Parker Jones), we can see that situation A is intensely bureaucratic and bottlenecked, with the CEO making decisions she clearly shouldn’t. In situation D, the person closest to the work decides, presumably because they have the most data about the situation and work in a high-trust environment.
In my work with leaders, I ask them to map out where decisions currently live. I then challenge them to pick one area of authority and move it one level closer to the work.
My rule of thumb for this exercise: If the amount of decision-making power you are distributing makes you a little bit uncomfortable, that’s probably the right amount.
RACI’s first downfall is its assumption that employees need clear and detailed directions before they can make any decision.
In fact, a typical RACI chart tells employees that they can only make decisions if they have been told that they can. This places them at the far right of the polarity in the graphic below.
Multiple experiments in removing road markings suggest that in complex situations this assumption is incorrect. Less instruction actually leads to better focus, engagement and judgment.
If we give fewer guidelines and trust employees to use good judgment, they will make wise decisions in the face of ambiguity – and we’ll get better results, faster.
My biggest issue with RACI charts is that they assume that all decisions will be made the same way, i.e. by getting everyone with a “C” or “R” next to their name to say yes.
This is hard! It can require multiple alignment meetings and proposal revisions, and can result in an idea that’s watered down in order to get everyone’s buy-in.
This can be useful in high-validity situations, or for irreversible decisions where perfection is required. But in the vast majority of cases, an agile and adaptable decision is far more valuable than a perfect one.
One approach is to give decision-making power to the team or individual executing the work. This keeps things moving, but can make strategic unity difficult, as individuals lacking a common direction may take lots of action, although towards the wrong goals.
On the other end of the spectrum is autocracy or “top-down” decision making. This approach gives a unified direction, but impedes agility, inclusivity and innovation. Additionally, extreme autocratic leadership can disengage and disincentivize other employees, causing attrition.
There are many other decision-making methods between these two extremes, including democracy, golden vote, and (my preference) consent-based decision making (aka “Safe To Try”), which allows for smart failure and an experimental, test-and-learn approach.
Each decision-making method has its pros and cons. Here are four questions that can help you decide which is the right method for your given situation.
Will one more consultation get us closer to the right answer? Or is it better that we take a progress-over-perfection mindset?
Will the time we lose trying to make a better decision be worth the incremental gains?
What happens if we do nothing for another week? Will we lose ground to established competitors or startups moving with greater speed and agility?
Can we walk this decision back if we realize we’ve gone wrong? Or will we be locked into a decision that causes our business harm?
The work of the modern consultative leader is not necessarily making the decision itself, but deciding who decides, and how they do it. In other words, their role is to design the organization that gets the work done.
This requires a profound mindset shift, and some letting go of the subject-matter expertise that got us to our leadership position in the first place.
But this personal transition is at the heart of organizational change. A RACI mindset will prevent your organization from thriving in a VUCA world. Letting go starts with the individual leader, who must release some control in order to unleash the full potential of her teams.