Building Trust With Your Team From Day One
Practical strategies to establish credibility and psychological safety when you’re new to a leadership role.
Read ArticleLearn practical frameworks like RACI and Six Thinking Hats to make clearer decisions faster in your team environment.
Making good decisions isn’t magic — it’s a skill you can develop. Whether you’re leading a team of five or fifty, the frameworks you use shape everything that happens next. Bad decisions ripple through projects, drain budgets, and frustrate people. Good ones build momentum.
We’ve worked with hundreds of leaders across Hong Kong’s corporate landscape. The ones who stand out aren’t the smartest in the room. They’re the ones with systems. They’ve got frameworks that keep emotions in check, that surface dissenting opinions, that make sure nobody’s just nodding along. This guide walks you through five of them — each designed for different situations, different team sizes, and different types of problems.
Each framework solves a different problem. Pick the one that fits your situation.
Responsible, Accountable, Consulted, Informed. You map every decision to four roles. It stops the “I thought you were handling this” conversations that eat up weeks. Best for projects with multiple stakeholders.
Six different perspectives — facts, emotions, risks, benefits, creativity, and control. Your team puts on different hats in sequence. It’s weirdly effective because it separates thinking modes instead of letting them fight.
Urgent vs. Important. Four quadrants. It’s simple but it catches decisions that seem urgent but actually don’t matter. Helps teams focus on what moves the needle instead of what just feels loud.
Imagine it’s six months from now and your decision failed spectacularly. What happened? Your team lists every way it could go wrong before you commit. Catches blind spots nobody sees coming.
Define criteria, weight them by importance, score each option. It sounds formal but it removes gut-feeling bias. Works well when you’re choosing between similar options and emotions run high.
RACI is the framework that saved us from endless email chains where nobody knew who was supposed to do what. You’ve probably experienced this: a decision gets made in a meeting, three people think they’re responsible, two people think they were just observers, and suddenly the deadline passes with nothing done.
Here’s how it works. For each decision or task, you assign one person to each role. Responsible is the person actually doing the work. Accountable is the person who answers for the outcome — this should be one person, not two. Consulted are the people you need input from before deciding. Informed are people who just need to know what happened.
The magic part? It’s written down. Not in someone’s head. Not assumed. When you’re a team of 12 deciding on a new vendor, and three people think they’re accountable for it, that framework makes the chaos visible. You can actually have the conversation about who owns what instead of discovering misalignment when something breaks.
We’ve seen teams use RACI for major initiatives, budget approvals, and even weekly planning. The bigger your team and the more dependencies you’ve got, the more it helps.
The framework you choose matters less than actually having one. What matters is that your team knows how you’ll approach decisions. They’re not guessing. They’re not sitting in meetings wondering if their input matters. They know the structure.
Start with one framework that fits your immediate problem. RACI if you’ve got accountability chaos. Six Hats if different perspectives aren’t surfacing. Pre-Mortem if you keep discovering blind spots after launch. Use it for three decisions, then reflect. Does it work for your team? Does it speed things up or slow them down? Adjust.
The leaders we’ve worked with who excel at decisions don’t rely on intuition alone. They’ve got systems. And you can too.
This article provides educational information about decision-making frameworks and leadership approaches. The frameworks described are general models that may be adapted for different organizational contexts. Results and effectiveness depend on proper implementation, team dynamics, and organizational factors specific to your situation. This content isn’t a substitute for professional leadership coaching or organizational development consultation. Consider your unique circumstances and consult with relevant professionals before implementing significant changes to your decision-making processes.