The ability of the Production Engineer to precisely determine the extent and effect of skin on the productivity of wells is key to optimizing production in wells since skin results in additional pressure drop. The various forms of skin (mechanical skin-formation damage due to drilling and perforation, well deviation skin, partial penetration skin and non-Darcy or rate dependent skin-due to turbulence) are the outcomes of activities and operations in the wellbore such as completion, production, hole geometry effects and sand control operations. Skin due to turbulence is caused by the most natural activity of the reservoir, which is producing or flowing the well at a high rate. As such, a suitable and appropriate method of analyzing its effects on the producing well, and a technique that defines how improvements can be made to reducing turbulence in high rate wells by applying a modification to the Jones inflow model is presented in this paper. This model was selected mainly based on three criteria: physical consistency, availability of information to create the model and the physical interpretation of results obtained. The modification to the model was achieved by relating the concept of nozzle devices in Inflow Control Devices (ICDs) used in open holes, to perforations in wells. The model offers an improvement in completion efficiency (actual performance versus design expectation), as turbulence effect can be determined by the area open to flow. Ultimately, it provides a quick and efficient method of determining turbulence, area open to flow due to turbulence effect, a direction as to what remedial work can be done to reduce rate-dependent skin (turbulence) and also the economic justification of the proposed solution. Hence, this work aims at providing a diagnostic tool, whose economic impact can be justified.