17 May 26

The Workflow Scorecard: A New Way to Prioritize Where to Focus Your AI and Transformation Efforts

Stephanie Denino (Head of Advisory, FOUNT)

A workflow scorecard helps leaders prioritize where to act first by turning worker feedback into comparable workflow data. It shows which workflows have the most friction, why they are struggling, who owns the fixes, and whether interventions improve the work over time.

7 min read

Most leaders already sense that friction exists in their organization. The hard problem is prioritization: across dozens of workflows and hundreds of potential improvement opportunities, where do you focus first?

The workflow scorecard is how we answer that question.

The idea is straightforward. For every workflow you want to understand, say handling a customer escalation, onboarding a new hire, or prioritizing an engineering backlog, you collect structured feedback from the workers running it: how much time the workflow takes, how much effort it demands relative to the outcome, where things get stuck, and what is helping.

That data feeds a scorecard for each workflow: a quantified picture of where the workflow stands across dimensions like time spent, friction level, tool effectiveness, and clarity of process. Every workflow gets a score, and because the methodology is consistent, workflows can be compared directly.

That is where the prioritization power comes from. Instead of relying on the loudest voice in the room or the most recent anecdote, you have evidence that one workflow carries high friction and high strategic importance and should come first, while another carries moderate friction but low impact and can wait.

The scorecard also tells you why a workflow is struggling, not just that it is. Root causes surface in the data, whether the issue is a tool that does not work as needed, an unclear process, an under-resourced role, or a data gap that creates constant rework. Each root cause routes to a different owner: the AI team, IT, Ops, or HR. That replaces siloed dashboards where each function sees a different slice of the same underlying problem.

And because the scorecard is based on worker feedback that can be collected repeatedly, it becomes a tracking mechanism over time. Intervene on a workflow, remeasure six weeks later, and see whether the score improved. That is your evidence the intervention worked, and your signal to scale it.

Most organizations make transformation investments without this kind of feedback loop. They deploy and wait for lagging indicators to confirm what they suspect. The workflow scorecard makes the feedback loop continuous.

7 min read

Most leaders already sense that friction exists in their organization. The hard problem is prioritization: across dozens of workflows and hundreds of potential improvement opportunities, where do you focus first?

The workflow scorecard is how we answer that question.

The idea is straightforward. For every workflow you want to understand, say handling a customer escalation, onboarding a new hire, or prioritizing an engineering backlog, you collect structured feedback from the workers running it: how much time the workflow takes, how much effort it demands relative to the outcome, where things get stuck, and what is helping.

That data feeds a scorecard for each workflow: a quantified picture of where the workflow stands across dimensions like time spent, friction level, tool effectiveness, and clarity of process. Every workflow gets a score, and because the methodology is consistent, workflows can be compared directly.

That is where the prioritization power comes from. Instead of relying on the loudest voice in the room or the most recent anecdote, you have evidence that one workflow carries high friction and high strategic importance and should come first, while another carries moderate friction but low impact and can wait.

The scorecard also tells you why a workflow is struggling, not just that it is. Root causes surface in the data, whether the issue is a tool that does not work as needed, an unclear process, an under-resourced role, or a data gap that creates constant rework. Each root cause routes to a different owner: the AI team, IT, Ops, or HR. That replaces siloed dashboards where each function sees a different slice of the same underlying problem.

And because the scorecard is based on worker feedback that can be collected repeatedly, it becomes a tracking mechanism over time. Intervene on a workflow, remeasure six weeks later, and see whether the score improved. That is your evidence the intervention worked, and your signal to scale it.

Most organizations make transformation investments without this kind of feedback loop. They deploy and wait for lagging indicators to confirm what they suspect. The workflow scorecard makes the feedback loop continuous.

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