The 9-box grid is a widely used HR tool that visually maps employee performance and potential. It’s a powerful framework for identifying top talent, structuring development conversations, and making data-informed succession planning decisions.
What is a 9-Box Grid?
The 9-box grid is a 3x3 matrix that plots employees across two axes:
X-axis (horizontal): Performance – measures how well the employee is currently performing in their role.
Y-axis (vertical): Potential – measures the employee’s ability to grow, take on more complex responsibilities, or move into leadership roles.
Each employee is placed in one of the nine boxes based on these two attributes.
Grid Overview & Talent Segments
Here’s a sample breakdown of the 9 boxes:
Axis Definitions
Performance: Often derived from recent performance reviews, KPIs, or manager feedback.
Potential: Typically assessed through leadership competencies, learning agility, and willingness to grow.
9 Talent Segments Explained
Here’s a breakdown of each box and how to manage the employees who fall into them:
1. Top Talent (High Performance, High Potential)
Your rock stars. Keep them engaged by:
Assigning challenging, high-impact tasks.
Providing mentoring and leadership exposure.
Checking in regularly on career satisfaction and growth opportunities.
2. High Potentials (Moderate Performance, High Potential)
These employees are on the rise, but not fully ramped up yet.
Offer stretch projects and training opportunities.
Set clear development goals and timelines.
Consider fast-track career paths with support.
3. Dysfunctional Geniuses (Low Performance, High Potential)
They have promise but aren’t delivering yet.
Clarify expectations and performance metrics.
Offer coaching and frequent feedback.
Set a 6–12 month development plan to gauge progress.
4. High Performers (High Performance, Moderate Potential)
Consistently strong contributors, even if not future leaders.
Show appreciation regularly.
Offer role mastery development opportunities.
Explore lateral growth options or mentoring roles.
5. Core Players (Moderate Performance, Moderate Potential)
Reliable and steady, strong internal talent.
Clarify what great performance looks like.
Encourage new challenges and peer learning.
Provide tailored development plans to unlock potential.
6. Up-or-Out Dilemmas (Low Performance, Moderate Potential)
Some potential, but performance concerns must be addressed.
Create a personal improvement plan.
Monitor progress monthly.
Be clear about what success looks like.
7. Workhorses (High Performance, Low Potential)
Dependable, but not looking to grow or change roles.
Keep them satisfied and appreciated.
Avoid overburdening them with development tasks.
Consider them culture stabilizers.
8. Grinders (Moderate Performance, Low Potential)
Hardworking but with limited growth upside.
Clarify growth opportunities, if any.
Offer realistic development plans.
Monitor progress with encouragement but limited investment.
9. Bad Hires (Low Performance, Low Potential)
This may be a poor role fit.
Identify blockers: skill, motivation, or cultural mismatch?
Offer short-term coaching with clear expectations.
Don’t overextend resources unfairly to others.
Important: Every employee is unique. The 9-box grid is a guide, not a verdict. Context and empathy are essential in interpreting and acting on results.
Best Use Cases for the 9-Box Grid
Succession Planning: The 9-Box Grid helps identify potential leaders and plan for future leadership roles, ensuring a smooth transition and organizational stability.
Employee Development: By pinpointing strengths and areas for improvement, the grid aids in creating tailored development plans, fostering employee growth, and skill enhancement. It is a must-use in every employee development plan.
Career Pathing: The 9-Box Grid can be used to guide discussions about career aspirations and possible trajectories within the organization, aligning individual goals with company needs. This, in turn, results in your employees being aware of the fact that you see a future with them.
Talent Retention: When an employee knows that their organization has something in store for them, or simply sees a long-term future with them, their chances of leaving are decreased heavily. This results in high employee retention rates and low employee attrition rates.
Workforce Planning: Understanding the distribution of talent across the grid allows for strategic decisions regarding hiring, training, and resource allocation, optimizing the overall workforce performance.,
Best Practices for Using the 9-Box Grid
Make it collaborative: Use the grid as a conversation starter between managers, not a judgment tool.
Ensure consistency: Define what “performance” and “potential” mean for your organization and calibrate across teams.
Keep it dynamic: Reassess grid placement regularly as employees grow and business needs change.
Focus on action: Pair each grid placement with a follow-up plan, whether it’s stretch assignments, mentoring, or a structured PIP.
Using the 9-Box Grid in Teamflect
Below are some useful resources to set up a 9-box grid review in Teamflect. Please keep in mind that you can use 9-box grid evaluations inside and outside of review cycles in Teamflect.



