Catalog
method#Product#Delivery#Governance

Impact Filter

A concise decision method for quickly assessing and prioritizing product ideas based on expected impact and clear objectives.

Impact Filter is a focused decision method for quickly assessing product ideas by expected impact and concrete objectives.
Emerging
Medium

Classification

  • Medium
  • Business
  • Organizational
  • Intermediate

Technical context

Product backlog in Jira or similar toolsConfluence / Notion for documenting decisionsExperiment tracking systems (e.g., A/B testing tools)

Principles & goals

Focus on measurable impact rather than activitiesTransparent assumptions and verifiable metricsShort, shared template for rapid decisions
Discovery
Domain, Team

Use cases & scenarios

Compromises

  • Lack of data can lead to wrong prioritizations
  • Overconfidence in impact estimates
  • Stakeholder dominance may bias evaluations
  • Limit the number of ideas considered per session
  • Define clear success criteria and metrics in advance
  • Use short iterations and quickly verify assumptions

I/O & resources

  • List of ideas or requirements
  • Business goals and KPIs
  • Known risks, dependencies, technical estimates
  • Prioritized actions with impact estimations
  • Success metrics and validation plans
  • Documented decision with ownership

Description

Impact Filter is a focused decision method for quickly assessing product ideas by expected impact and concrete objectives. It consolidates value assumptions, success metrics and risks into a short template to derive clear options. Used in product discovery and stakeholder workshops to validate assumptions early. It fosters aligned communication and reduces decision overhead.

  • Faster decisions with clear rationale
  • Improved alignment between product and stakeholders
  • Early identification of risks and metrics

  • Simplifies complex uncertainties; not always sufficient for large strategic decisions
  • Outcome quality depends on quality of assumptions
  • Requires facilitation, otherwise risk of superficial assessment

  • Assumption validation rate

    Percentage of conducted tests that confirm or refute assumed impact.

  • Time-to-Decision

    Average time from proposal to documented decision.

  • Throughput of prioritized items implemented

    Number of prioritized items implemented per time period.

E-commerce checkout improvement

Team used Impact Filter to prioritize checkout optimizations by revenue impact and implementation effort.

Onboarding feature for SaaS

Product team validated assumptions about user flow and selected tests with clear metrics.

Mobile performance improvements

Stakeholder workshop clarified business goals and prioritized actions for rapid user gains.

1

Prepare: define goal, participants and template

2

Briefly present ideas and formulate impact hypotheses

3

Record metrics, risks and effort for each idea

4

Conduct joint evaluation and prioritization

5

Document decision, assign ownership and next steps

⚠️ Technical debt & bottlenecks

  • Incomplete metric instrumentation for validation
  • Stale, no-longer-relevant impact assessments in backlog
  • Documentation gaps in ownership
Unclear metricsLack of data availabilityRole and responsibility uncertainty
  • Using Impact Filter as sole decision authority for strategic direction
  • Omitting metrics and later backfilling without validation
  • Only leaders evaluate, ignoring team perspectives
  • Vaguely formulated impact hypotheses
  • Lack of follow-up after decision
  • Overestimating measurability of short-term effects
Workshop facilitationBasic product strategy and metrics knowledgeAbility to articulate assumptions explicitly
Clear metrics for outcome-driven decisionsTransparent assumptions and traceabilityFast feedback and validation cycles
  • Limited time in workshops
  • Availability of relevant measurement data
  • Stakeholder accessibility and engagement