Value per Constrained Resource Hour
Value per constrained resource hour is the single number that ranks work by what it returns on your scarcest resource. It is the measure that turns "everything is important" into a defensible order of priority.
Every portfolio has a constraint: a specific team, skill set or asset that limits how much the organisation can actually deliver, no matter how much other capacity is available. Work that does not touch the constraint can be scheduled freely. Work that does touch it is competing for the most valuable hours in the business. Value per constrained resource hour prices that competition.
How it works
The idea is borrowed from the economics of any bottlenecked system: when one resource limits throughput, the right thing to maximise is not output per project or utilisation per person, but value produced per hour of the constraint's time.
For a given piece of work, you take the economic value it produces and divide it by the hours of constrained resource it consumes. A high number means the work returns a lot for every scarce hour it uses. A low number means it is an expensive way to spend the constraint, however attractive the project looks in isolation.
Why it changes decisions
Conventional prioritisation ranks projects by their total value or their strategic score. That systematically over-rates large projects that are heavy users of the constraint, and under-rates small pieces of work that release or feed the constraint cheaply.
Ranking by value per constrained resource hour flips several intuitions. A modest project that barely touches the bottleneck can outrank a flagship programme that monopolises it. Getting the right work to the constraint sooner can be worth more than starting the highest-value project first. It is the measure that makes sequencing an economic decision rather than a political one, and it sits at the centre of running a portfolio at the top of the Flow Economics Maturity Model.
