Tool: Rocks

Briefing Document: Rocks

Executive Summary: Rocks are key, actionable priorities that are achievable within a 90-day window [1, 2]. Setting Rocks is a tool used within the Entrepreneurial Operating System (EOS®) to create focus, alignment, and accountability within an organization [3, 4]. The goal is to have everyone focused in one direction to achieve amazing things [5, 6].

I. Core Principles and Methodologies:

  • 90-Day Deliverables: Rocks must be achievable within a 90-day timeframe [7]. The concept of a “90-Day World” enables a team to maintain focus and reconnect with priorities every 90 days [8, 9].
  • Value Maximization: Each Rock should demonstrably contribute to increasing business value [7].
  • SMART Objectives: Rocks should be Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, and Time-bound [1, 10-12].
  • Limited Number: Individuals outside the leadership team should have one to three Rocks, while leadership team members should have three to seven Rocks [13, 14]. Less is more [9, 15, 16].
  • Prioritization: Rocks represent the big priorities that must get done [6].
  • Connection to Vision: Rocks should be based on the one-year plan, which in turn puts you on track for the three-year picture [8].

II. Implementation and Process:

  • Laundry List: Begin by listing everything that must get done in the business in the next 90 days [17].
  • Keep, Kill, or Combine: Decide whether to keep, kill, or combine each item on the list as a candidate for Company Quarterly Rocks [18, 19].
  • Prioritize: Star the most important candidates until the list is narrowed down to 3-7 Rocks [18].
  • Assign Ownership: Each company Rock must be owned by one person on the leadership team [20].
  • Individual Rocks: Leadership team members carry forward any company Rocks that they own to their individual list of Rocks and then come up with their most important three to seven individual Rocks [21].
  • Rock Sheet: Create a Rock Sheet that displays the organization’s Rocks at the top and each of the leadership team’s individual Rocks below [22, 23].
  • Share with the Organization: Share the company Rocks with the entire organization [24].
  • Departmental Rocks: Each department should set their Rocks as a team [13].
  • Review: Review Rocks in weekly meetings [22, 25]. Each person reports whether their Rock is “on track” or “off track” [25].

III. Potential Obstacles and Mitigation Strategies:

  • Setting the Wrong Rocks: Make sure to spend the necessary time setting the right Rocks and do not rush the process [26].
  • Commitment Fizzle: Be fully committed to Rocks every quarter [14].
  • Too Many Rocks: Don’t give people outside of the leadership team more than three Rocks [14].
  • Mastery Takes Time: It takes two quarters to master Rocks [26].

IV. Benefits of Using Rocks:

  • Focus: Rocks help to focus on the big-picture items [9, 27].
  • Accountability: Rocks create clear accountability [22, 28].
  • Communication: Rocks facilitate communication [27, 28].
  • Traction®: Rocks help to achieve goals and move in a positive direction [29].
  • Organization: Rocks allow people to work toward one-year goals in bite-sized chunks [29].

RYT Podcast is a passion product of Tyler Smith, an EOS® Implementer (more at IssueSolving.com). All Podcasts are derivative works created by AI from publicly available sources. Copyright 2025 All Rights Reserved.

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