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The ONLY 3 Frameworks You Need (Forget the Other 44)
Every PM has 47 prioritization frameworks saved somewhere. How many do you actually use? I analyzed 320+ successful PMs. They use 3 frameworks. Always the same 3.
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Steve Saper
Founder & CEO of PM33. Building the agentic-PM platform and writing about how product management is being remade in the AI era.

The ONLY 3 Frameworks You Need (Forget the Other 44)
(Continuing from Parts 1-3: What gets you promoted, what keeps you stuck, the rule top PMs follow)
Every PM has 47 prioritization frameworks saved somewhere. How many do you actually use? Maybe 1-2. Maybe none.
I analyzed 320+ successful PMs. They use 3 frameworks. Always the same 3.
The Problem with Framework Overload
We collect frameworks like Pokémon:
- RICE, WSJF, ICE, Kano, MoSCoW, Value vs. Effort, Opportunity Solution Trees, Jobs to Be Done, Cost of Delay...
But having 47 frameworks is the same as having zero. You end up paralyzed by choice.
The truth: Different decisions need different frameworks. Top PMs use the right framework for each type of decision.
Framework #1: For BIG Decisions
When to use:
- Quarterly planning
- Annual strategy
- Choosing which big bet to make
Framework: Opportunity Solution Trees
Time investment: 2-4 hours per quarter
How it works:
- Start with your business outcome (what you're trying to achieve)
- Map all the opportunities that could drive that outcome
- Pick ONE opportunity to bet on for the quarter
Why this works for big decisions:
- Forces you to connect work to business outcomes
- Makes trade-offs explicit
- Prevents hedging (from Part 2)
Example:
- Business outcome: Increase revenue by 30%
- Opportunities: Improve conversion, increase pricing, expand to new market, add premium tier
- Pick ONE: Add premium tier (highest potential impact)
Framework #2: For SPRINT Planning
When to use:
- Sprint planning
- Monthly planning cycles
- Prioritizing a backlog of 20-50 items
Framework: Value vs. Effort (2x2 matrix)
Time investment: 60-90 minutes per sprint
How it works:
- Draw a 2x2 matrix on a whiteboard (Value on Y-axis, Effort on X-axis)
- Team places each feature on the matrix
- Do high value / low effort first (quick wins)
- Debate high value / high effort (big bets)
- Skip low value items entirely
Why this works for sprint planning:
- Fast (entire team can do this in 90 minutes)
- Visual (everyone sees the trade-offs)
- Builds team alignment
Pro tip: Don't overthink the placement. Rough is good enough. The discussion is more valuable than precision.
Framework #3: For DAILY Decisions
When to use:
- Daily trade-offs
- Bug vs. feature decisions
- Quick prioritization calls
Framework: RICE Simplified (mental model, not spreadsheet)
Time investment: 2-5 minutes per decision
How it works:
- Mentally compare Reach, Impact, and Effort
- Make a decision in 3 minutes
- Move on
Example:
- Bug: Affects 500 users, medium impact, takes 2 days
- Feature: Affects 10K users, high impact, takes 3 days
- Decision: Ship feature first (10x the reach for 1.5x the effort)
Why this works for daily decisions:
- No spreadsheet needed
- Fast enough to not slow you down
- Good enough for small decisions
Why This 3-Framework System Works
Different decisions need different frameworks:
| Decision Type | Framework | Why |
|---|---|---|
| BIG (quarterly) | Opportunity Solution Trees | Connects to business outcomes |
| SPRINT (monthly) | Value vs. Effort 2x2 | Fast team alignment |
| DAILY (ad-hoc) | RICE Simplified | Quick mental model |
Use the right tool for the right job. Don't use a quarterly planning framework for a daily bug vs. feature decision.
What About the Other 44 Frameworks?
They're situational. Use them ONLY when you need them:
- Kano Model: When you need to understand delight vs. satisfaction
- Cost of Delay: When timing is critical (regulatory deadline, competitor threat)
- ICE Score: When you have 100+ small experiments to prioritize
- WSJF: When you're in a SAFe environment (enterprise context)
But master these 3 first. They cover 95% of your decisions.
How to Start This Week
Step 1: Pick Your 3
Write down:
- BIG decisions → Opportunity Solution Trees
- SPRINT decisions → Value vs. Effort 2x2
- DAILY decisions → RICE Simplified
Step 2: Try Each One ONCE
This week, use each framework once:
- Use Opportunity Solution Trees for a big upcoming decision
- Run Value vs. Effort in your next sprint planning
- Use RICE Simplified for your next bug vs. feature trade-off
Step 3: Make It Automatic (30 Days)
Practice for 30 days. After that, you'll automatically know which framework to use.
Common Mistakes
Mistake #1: Using the wrong framework for the wrong decision
- Don't use Opportunity Solution Trees for daily decisions (too slow)
- Don't use RICE for quarterly planning (too tactical)
Mistake #2: Making frameworks too complex
- Don't create 10-column spreadsheets for Value vs. Effort
- Don't spend 4 hours calculating precise RICE scores
- Rough is good enough
Mistake #3: Following frameworks religiously
- Frameworks are tools, not rules
- Use them to inform decisions, not make decisions
- Your judgment still matters
How This Helps Your Career
From Part 1, remember: Leadership looks for 3 things:
- Can you explain WHY?
- Can you lead without power?
- Can you talk about money?
These 3 frameworks help with all of that:
- Opportunity Solution Trees forces you to explain WHY (connects to business outcomes)
- Value vs. Effort builds team alignment (leading without power)
- RICE connects features to reach and impact (business results)
Coming Next: Part 5 (Final)
The 5 inflection points you can predict in your PM career. The exact moments when everything changes - and how to prepare BEFORE they break you.
Question for the community: Which of these 3 frameworks do you already use? And which one are you going to try first?