The What, Why, and How of Project Scoring and Prioritization
                    
                    
                        It's easy to fall down a slippery slope when understanding where to focus your company's resources when 
                        it comes to project selection. Everyone wants to have the "good problem" of having too much work to choose 
                        from. However, an additional issue can arise: how do you know what to prioritize and what to let go of? 
                    
                    
                        The process of project scoring and prioritization is about defining your team's focus. 
                        According to data gathered by Workamajig,
                        a change in project objectives and inadequate vision were the first and fourth top causes of project failure. 
                    
                    
                        A project scoring and prioritization strategy can improve upon these issues. Nevertheless, before you can 
                        optimize this concept, it's crucial to understand what these ideas are about. In the next sections, we will 
                        address what project scoring is, its importance, and how you can implement it.  
                    
                    
                        
                            What are Project Prioritization and Project Scoring?
                        
                    
                    
                        Project prioritization (also known as portfolio management) helps you and your teams to maximize project 
                        utility. The project prioritization process allows you and your teams to rank a project according to its 
                        perceived "value." A specified set of criteria determines this value. 
                    
                    
                        These criteria—and subsequent value—can be different depending on the company. For you, the value may 
                        be about how close this new project aligns with a new initiative your company has put forward. For others, 
                        it could be more about revenue generation. 
                    
                    
                        The goal is to understand the potential value of a proposed project before taking it on to be prioritized 
                        in relation to other assignments. Nevertheless, for prioritization to be successful, project scoring has 
                        to be a significant part of the process. 
                    
                    
                        A scoring model in project management includes the action of assigning a numeric value to a project based on 
                        selected criteria. This step enables you to rank and prioritize projects so you can use a standard system to 
                        organize them. These criteria will likely be related to three categories: 
                    
                    
                        - 
                            Does the project serve a strategic purpose?
                        
- 
                            What monetary value does it provide to the company?
                        
- 
                            How much risk is associated with the project?
                        
                        You may also want to assess things like: do you have enough labor and resources to take on a specific 
                        project and how it fits with the overall brand of your company. Once you have established your specific 
                        criteria, you can then create a scoring model to assess each project and rank them with one another. 
                    
                    
                        Understanding the meaning behind these two processes is critical as it can give you a plan for genuinely 
                        assessing whether you should take a project on or pass on it. Now that you know what these concepts are, 
                        you next need to understand why they are essential and the actual value they bring to your company. 
                    
                    
                        
                            Why Should You Ensure That You Have a Robust Project Scoring and Prioritization Process?
                        
                    
                    
                        Successfully managing projects is all about maintaining a focus on what's important. As you have likely 
                        become well aware, each project comes with its own set of moving parts. 
                    
                    
                        Whether it be ensuring that you have the right amount of labor or the budget to carry it out, it is 
                        crucial that you know what you are getting into. Making project prioritization and scoring a priority 
                        allows you to maintain focus. It also allows you to create a methodology. 
                        According to Wrike,
                        39 percent of company projects don’t stay in scope without one. 
                    
                    
                        Additionally, it also helps you to better make a case for—or against—a project to your company's leadership.
                        Executives and high-level managers want to understand the odds of a successful project and the steps you 
                        would take to prioritize a project over another. Again, these processes allow you to focus on what matters 
                        and do away with what doesn't. 
                    
                    
                        It also enables you to clearly define your goals to determine what true "value" is for your company. 
                        For example, you may have just started a new marketing campaign that emphasizes using a social media 
                        platform like Instagram. You know that this initiative is crucial since it has been the main focus 
                        for your marketing teams. 
                    
                    
                        Let's say that an Influencer approaches you to start a new marketing project in the form of a partnership. 
                        One of the criteria for whether you would want to take this project on will likely depend on what platform 
                        this individual is active on. If they are on Twitter, then this would be outside of your "value" criteria. 
                        Therefore, it's easy to reject this project. 
                    
                    
                        In short, it's critical to have standards, and project prioritization and project scoring enable you 
                        to set parameters and stick to them. 
                    
                    
                        
                            How Do You Successfully Implement Project Prioritization and Scoring?
                        
                    
                    
                        How do you effectively implement these two processes into your 
                        project management workflow? It isn't 
                        as hard as you think. Here are the steps you can take to implement project prioritization and scoring 
                        successfully: 
                    
                    
                        - 
                            Receive input from relative stakeholders -
                            One of the first things you want to do is to hear from your stakeholders. They can help you 
                            understand any new goals, initiatives, or criteria that you should include in assessing the value 
                            of a project. Additionally, you want to ensure that everyone is on the same page. Therefore, set 
                            up meetings with vendors, leadership, and any other constituents to determine what you should be 
                            thinking about when assessing value. 
                            According to Changepoint,
                            80 percent of project management executives don’t know how their projects align with their company’s 
                            business strategy. This process can help to connect your project management objectives to company needs.
                        
- 
                            Set criteria -
                            This is where you will take the input of others and your teams' observations to set up standards 
                            for scoring purposes. Again this criteria should include strategic goals, how likely the project 
                            is to be profitable for you (which may include calculations and projections like NPV), and how 
                            much risk the project will have you taking on. 
                        
- 
                            Determine value -
                            Once the criteria are set, you can then take these attributes and determine the value of current 
                            and future projects.
                        
- 
                            Draw a boundary and prioritize -
                            Now that you have an idea of the value, it's time to take this information and start to create a 
                            boundary line for what you will and won't accept. This is the ultimate goal for project 
                            prioritization and scoring: to quickly and efficiently decide on whether a project is—or isn't—worth 
                            it to you. 
                        
                        
                            Final Thoughts 
                        
                    
                    
                        Project prioritization and scoring are essential to adding efficiency to your project management processes. 
                        The success of your efforts is tied to streamlining critical processes. Having a system already set to 
                        determine if a project is a good idea to take on enables you to quickly and decisively make decisions. 
                    
                    
                        It also allows you to feel confident in the decisions you've made and feel good about presenting projects 
                        to your leadership. Lastly, engaging in the prioritization process gives you a quantifiable reason for 
                        moving forward with a project, allowing you to effectively compare it to other endeavors. 
                    
                    
                        Sources:
                    
                    
                        Complete Collection of Project Management Statistics 2015,
                        https://www.wrike.com/blog/complete-collection-project-management-statistics-2015/
                    
                    
                        Project Management Statistics: 45 Stats You Can't Ignore,
                        https://www.workamajig.com/blog/project-management-statistics
                    
                    
                        Turning Around a Failing PMO,
                        https://www.changepoint.com/blog/posts/turning-around-failing-pmo#:~:text=Almost%2080%25%20of%20project%20management,want%20your%20PMO%20to%20survive.