9-boxes
As a CTO (Chief Technology Officer), the 9-Box Model can be a powerful tool for assessing and managing your technical team, ensuring you have the right talent to drive innovation, stability, and long-term growth. Here's how to apply it from a technology leadership perspective.
How the 9-Box Model Works
The model evaluates employees across two dimensions:
- Performance – Measures an employee’s current contributions, achievements, and results.
- Potential – Assesses an employee’s ability to grow into future leadership roles or take on more responsibility.
Each employee is placed into one of the nine boxes, categorized as follows:
Low Potential | Medium Potential | High Potential | |
---|---|---|---|
High Performance | High Performer (Valued contributor, but limited growth) | Strong Performer (Develop for leadership) | Top Talent (Ready for promotion) |
Medium Performance | Skilled but Stagnant (Needs motivation) | Core Employee (Stable and reliable) | Emerging Leader (Needs support to grow) |
Low Performance | Low Performer (May not be a good fit) | Underperformer with Some Potential (Needs improvement) | High Potential but Inconsistent (Coachable but struggling) |
How to Use the 9-Box Model
- Identify high-potential employees: Those in the top-right boxes should be nurtured for leadership.
- Provide targeted development: Employees in the middle should receive coaching and skill-building opportunities.
- Address performance issues: Those in the bottom row may need additional support, reassignment, or in some cases, exit strategies.