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Get Started ≫The 9-box grid is a talent review tool that plots employees on two axes, current performance and future potential, each rated low, medium or high, producing nine cells that inform succession planning and development priorities.
How the grid works
Each person is rated on current performance (against expectations in the present role) and assessed potential (capacity to grow into bigger or different roles), each on a three-point scale. The intersections create the familiar cells: high/high stars earmarked for stretch and succession, high-performance/low-potential deep experts to be retained and honoured rather than promoted sideways into misery, low/low cases requiring an honest conversation, and the corner everyone forgets, high-potential/low-performance, which is usually a person in the wrong role rather than a wrong person.
Where it goes wrong
The performance axis is at least anchored in results; the potential axis is where bias moves in. Unstructured "potential" judgements reliably favour people who resemble their assessors, and a label assigned in one calibration meeting can shadow a career for years. The grid also tempts organisations into secrecy, ratings people are never told about, driving decisions they never understand, which corrodes exactly the trust talent processes are meant to build.
Using it defensibly
Treat the grid as a conversation structure, not a verdict. Define potential behaviourally before the meeting (learning agility, capacity for complexity, leadership evidence), bring data to both axes, including assessment evidence rather than recollection, calibrate across managers to iron out easy and harsh raters, and pair every placement with an action: development, stretch, retention risk plan or role change. A grid that produces actions is a planning tool; one that produces labels is a filing system for bias.
Common questions
Should employees be told their 9-box placement?
Tell people the substance: how their performance is seen, what development is planned, what their path looks like. Whether the cell label itself is shared matters less than there being no hidden verdict driving visible decisions.
Is the 9-box grid outdated?
The grid is only a frame. Filled with unstructured opinion it deserves retirement; filled with real performance data and validated assessment of potential it remains a compact way to run a talent conversation.
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