Kano Model Prioritization
Product development and task prioritization framework that categorizes features and tasks based on customer satisfaction impact to guide resource allocation and time management decisions.
About this tool
Overview
The Kano Model is a prioritization framework developed by Professor Noriaki Kano that categorizes features, tasks, or initiatives based on their impact on customer or user satisfaction. While originally created for product development, it's highly effective for personal time management and task prioritization.
The Five Categories
1. Basic Needs (Must-Haves)
- Expected features/tasks
- Absence causes dissatisfaction
- Presence doesn't increase satisfaction
- Time Management: Non-negotiable responsibilities (paying bills, meeting deadlines)
2. Performance Needs (Satisfiers)
- Linear satisfaction relationship
- More = better
- Absence causes dissatisfaction
- Time Management: Quality work, skill improvement, relationship maintenance
3. Excitement Needs (Delighters)
- Unexpected features that delight
- Absence doesn't cause dissatisfaction
- Presence creates high satisfaction
- Time Management: Innovation, creative projects, going above and beyond
4. Indifferent
- No impact on satisfaction either way
- Time Management: Busy work, low-value tasks to eliminate
5. Reverse
- Presence causes dissatisfaction
- Time Management: Time wasters, bad habits, unnecessary meetings
Application to Time Management
Task Categorization
Basic (Must Do First)
- Meeting critical deadlines
- Essential communications
- Non-negotiable commitments
- Health and safety basics
Performance (Invest Time)
- Skill development
- Quality work on important projects
- Relationship building
- Strategic planning
Excitement (When Time Permits)
- Learning new skills beyond job requirements
- Innovative side projects
- Exceptional service/output
- Creative experiments
Indifferent (Minimize or Delegate)
- Unnecessary documentation
- Optional reporting
- Low-value meetings
- Busy work
Reverse (Eliminate)
- Time-wasting habits
- Unproductive meetings
- Excessive social media
- Interruption-heavy work patterns
Prioritization Process
- List all tasks/activities
- Categorize each using Kano framework
- Allocate time accordingly:
- Basic: Minimum time to meet standards
- Performance: Bulk of focused time
- Excitement: Discretionary time when basics covered
- Indifferent: Minimize/eliminate
- Reverse: Eliminate entirely
Benefits
- Clear distinction between necessary and optional
- Prevents over-investment in basics
- Identifies high-impact opportunities (excitement)
- Reveals activities to eliminate (reverse, indifferent)
- Balances maintenance with innovation
Example Application
Software Developer's Weekly Time Allocation
- Basic (30%): Bug fixes, code reviews, team meetings
- Performance (50%): Feature development, architecture improvement, documentation
- Excitement (15%): New technology exploration, tool automation, mentoring
- Indifferent (5%): Status reports (automate or minimize)
- Reverse (0%): Eliminate unnecessary stand-ups, reduce interruptions
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