Group Priority Weight

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Group Priority Weight

A group priority weight (GPW) is the importance that you give to a group of things measured against 100 points. In orgamatics, every process belongs to a process family, and every family belongs to a system. Therefore, Org has a process hierarchy. Each process also has a purpose, which we measure through targets. We turn the purpose of every child process into a target for the parent process. In so, the targets of the parent are a summary of the targets of its child processes. We always measure all targets as a percentage against 100 points. A parent thus becomes a priority hub with parent targets. A group priority weight is the weight of a target measured against the weight of the parent target. E.g., if a target of a process has the weight of “.30”, and its parent target has a weight of “.50”, the target priority weight will be 50% of 30%, which is “.15”. In so we can know what the rank of a target is within a process family. Other weights that relate to the group priority weight, are absolute priority weight and priority weight. The aim of a GPW is to increase the efficiency of Org.

 

Author - Derek Hendrikz
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Synonyms: GPW