|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
"Without the chance to meaningfully participate in steering one's own destiny, without the opportunity to gain the sincere respect of one's own peers, without an honest stake in making the community more successful through one's own work and ideas, employability can quickly decay into generic training programs or bogus choices..." --"Beyond Empowerment: Building a Company of Citizens" by Brook Manville, Josiah Ober, page 52, Harvard Business Review January 2003.
Today, businesses are dealing with massive change issues spearheaded by new strategic initiatives around technology. So much is possible! We can demographically get into our customer's heads, craft alliances that accentuate our creativity and negotiating skills, ask employees to deliver projects and new products in high-speed time frames, target audiences we never were able to reach before. But we're in more turmoil now than we've ever been.
Because of the economy, the ability for technology to make our established job functions more powerful, and the new demands on integrity issues we're targeting at Board levels due to Enron and WorldCom, we're facing a confusion we've not had to deal with before now:
- we find ourselves having to develop new strategies and behaviors that we didn't need to consider before, just to survive;
- our customers are more demanding than they've ever been and recognize that they hold all the cards;
- our products fall within the realm of commoditization and are difficult to separate from the pack, even though they are superb and unique;
- we face a world of almost unimaginable choice, making our products vie with competition we don't know how to contend with given the contracted time-to-market that's now possible;
- we've had to repeatedly rethink our brand, reposition our products, reorganize our employees just to stay alive;
- we've had to reconfigure the compensation packages ? including bonuses, commissions, and benefits ? to reflect the new types of business we're now handling.
We're getting agile and pro-active, creative and efficient. But we've neglected one piece of the puzzle. The most important piece. The piece without which we'd have no need for product or brand or compensation.
We've neglected the responsible, respectful care of our people.
PEOPLE
I believe that the word for this decade is Collaboration. People being with People. People deciding with People. People discussing, disagreeing, creating, aligning, resisting, fighting - all the things that flawed, unique individuals do together when asked to join each other toward a unified goal, for 40 or 60 hours a week.
Problem is, we're don't know how to do that well. We know how to do the strategizing and initiatives, the tactics and the implementations. But once we get to the Being rather than the Doing, we are stuck.
In terms familiar to sales people, we are very busy going from a traditional environment of telling people what we're doing and what is expected of them, to the consultative approach of asking people what they want to do ? and then telling them what is expected of them.
We don't seem to have the skills to facilitate collaborative discussions in which people can figure out what they really need and how they should operate with others given their own unique values and beliefs, fears, needs, and requirements. We don't know how to keep people motivated so when we ask them to change jobs or work assignments, they will remain happy and productive. And we certainly don't know how to offer people a forum in which to create their own job, given the complex circumstances we're operating under.
We just don't know how to do the Being.
But if your best people don't see themselves as doing important work, if they don't have choices that fill them with self-respect and leadership potential and creativity, they will leave. What you'll have left is the people that don't care what they do, and are working with you just to earn their check, put in their hours, and go home.
JOBS ? WHAT WE DO AND WHY CHANGE IS HARD
Let's look at how people choose and remain in their jobs:
1. they excel at the required tasks;
2. they have a history of doing the work you're asking them to do;
3. they enjoy their work;
4. they get a personal ego-satisfaction from doing their job well;
5. they have helped create the culture they are working within, and are comfortable with their tasks, their peers, and their social position;
6. they are respected by their peers;
7. they expect a certain amount of success from completing their job competently.
When people are told to do a different job, to accept and operate some technology that you've decided to sanction, they are no longer doing the specific job they hired on for. Add this to their inability to have a say in the governance or in the choices or in the implementation style, and you've got people with an attitude.
Several years ago, I did a job for a well-known windshield replacement company. The sales manager felt his group could be more efficient if they called their prospects semi monthly instead of visiting them monthly to give them donuts (That's right. Donuts.). He believed that by asking them Facilitative questions, like, "How do you choose which company to work with? And what would we need to do in order to earn a bigger piece of your business?" he could improve revenue.
Revenue began increasing immediately, with commensurate increases in pay for the reps. As for the change in customer contact, those customers that wanted donuts got them delivered; those that wanted visits got them every other month, with bi-weekly phone calls. Customers were asked for their favorite choices, and accommodated according to a collaboration between the company's initiatives and the customer's requests.
And the sales reps all put in their notices on the same day. They gave the management an ultimatum: put us back into the field or we'll quit.
The problem? They had hired on to be field reps, and now they saw themselves as telephone reps. They LIKED seeing prospects daily and delivering donuts, even if they only saw 25 people a week versus the hundreds that they spoke with on the phone. They LIKED being in their cars in traffic 8 hours a day. They HATED being at a desk, on the phone, making 40 calls a day. That's not what they took their jobs to do.
So the company fired the manager that brought me in, hired a supervisor who liked donuts, and put the sales reps back into their cars.
No one had asked the reps what they wanted to do. No one helped the reps align their criteria around what was best for the clients or the company. No one collaborated with the reps to discover some sort of win-win outcome that would meet the goals of the company and the reps and the client and the management.
WHAT COMES FIRST? PEOPLE? OR INITIATIVES?
Managers understand that without people there's no company. Figuring out how to support the people in a way that keeps them delighted and creative is the larger problem.
We tell ourselves we are thinking about our people: we might meet with them to tell them what we're doing; we might ask for their input before we do what we're going to do anyway. But how often do we wait to do what we think we need to do in order to include them in a decision, or change our decision because of the input?
I recently interviewed the CEO and President of The Container Store, Kip Tindell, and asked him how he gets decisions made in his company:
"Decisions don't need to happen right away. As you shed more and more light on something it becomes more and more clear. If there is minority disagreement, we're delighted to stop, research more, and shed more and more light, and sometimes there's a good reason for it because there is stuff we've not seen and the minority is right. Much of time we can achieve immediate unanimity and those decisions are rarely wrong.
"But dissention is a signal to recognize that something is wrong. More time is needed to find out what's wrong if a couple of very bright knowledgeable people find something missing. We go for unanimity. Otherwise we might junk the whole idea."
Kip goes to his entire management team to get buy in. Difficult to do? Maybe. But what are the consequences?
Before I go into how to create a collaborative environment, I want to take a look at what I consider to be the biggest offender of the non-collaboration arena ? technology.
TECHNOLOGY IMPLEMENTATION
In our business worlds today, we spend a huge amount of human and resource capital on implementing technology. Generally, a decision to bring the technology aboard gets made at some lofty level, then some group (Change Management teams, Decision teams, Implementation teams) makes it happen. Their job function is to get the folks involved with the new implementation to be happy about doing jobs they weren't hired to do.
Oh, the new technology system is better for the company ? necessary, even. It's probably good for the customers also. But I've not heard of many companies that believe it's their responsibility to keep their employees happy while implementing the technology, to hear their needs, their ideas, their fears; to teach them how to work with collaboratively with all the other groups and teams whose jobs will be effected by the technology; to change direction or initiatives because some of the folks are unhappy or need more time or want to make changes.
Specifically we forget that the techies and management and users all need to collaborate ? and none of the groups has a similar job description or set of goals or vocabulary. We all know of several well-documented situations in which large companies lost millions because they didn't know how to have the technical people collaborate with the management people.
Technical folks, management people, and users all have different goals, outcomes, functions, capabilities, jobs ? and we're asking them to work together without making them one work unit, without teaching them how to have a unified vocabulary and mission, without helping them add new criteria to their job descriptions so they want to get up each morning and do their best.
Years ago we used operate with customers solely through our need to sell product: we created a product, then pushed it out into the marketplace with no market testing, no focus groups, no consumer feedback, no questionnaires or market analysis or beta tests. Since those na?ve days, we've learned that we need to take customers into consideration from even before the inception of an idea is complete.
Why are we not offering that same respect to our employees?
The problem lie with the managers. They are given a job to do ? say, 'do great customer service,' or 'touch customers X times a month,' or 'get into our customer's heads,' ? and they don't include 'employee happiness' or 'employee buy-in' or 'employee input' into the equation. They only see the end-result without any humans involved.
I recently spoke with a national sales manager from a large office supply company. He seemed to have all the bases covered: his national team was using a CRM package for when customers called in; he emailed his customers and prospects with new offerings a deals twice a month; and he sent out catalogues weekly.
'But how are you touching your customers?' I asked.
'What do you mean? I just told you.'
'Right. Um, how are you personally connecting with them?'
'I still don't understand the question. We're doing a fabulous job touching them weekly, not to mention regularly adding new prospects with the demographic studies we're doing and the e-mail information we're collecting.'
For him, touching and connecting was via technology. And according to his HR manager, not only was he not personally connecting with customers, he was implementing change without buy-in from the national reps. She told me there were internal problems as a result of this man's attitude, and good people were quitting. For him, it was all tactics and strategies and initiatives.
Imagine if we had the tools to create one big team with all the groups involved, and had them design their own implementation plan that would make everyone happy! Imagine if we knew how to collaborate, so the answers we need for success came out of the community? What are we doing instead? And what is the cost? How many of our best people are leaving because they are unhappy?
COLLABORATION
I believe it's possible to collaborate in such a way that the whole becomes greater than the sum of its parts.
Here are the steps I believe we need to take to have all people involved decide to collaborate, to change, to implement.
Phase 1. uncovering needs.
1. Have a meeting with all involved ? ALL involved ? and voice the proposed implementation/change.
2. Get feedback (verbal, written, email) during and following the meeting.
3. Create several groups that each include the full array of job descriptions, so each group would have, say, 3 technical people, 3 managers, and 3 users.
4. Have the groups spend 2 days together coming up with lists of feelings, fears, needs, annoyances, opposition, demands ? whatever human beings need to go through when faced with immanent change. Audio or video tape these meetings.
Phase 2. airing issues.
5. Take one person from each work group in the representative teams (i.e. one user, one manager, one tech expert) and create a larger central team that will speak for the ideas and feelings of the original group.
6. Collect all of the thoughts and needs of the smaller groups and put them in writing. Send out this collection to the entire collaborating body and have each member involved comment and respond with ideas.
7. Have the central team take the feedback and send it back out to the whole group. This includes dissention, so all people continue to be heard.
Phase 3. deciding.
8. Use the data from the feedback and publish a questionnaire (the Buying Decision Funnel works great for this) to the community and help them discover what needs to happen so they can accomplish the company goals while continuing to be motivated and willing to work hard to make the change happen.
9. Publish the responses to the questionnaire. Follow it up with ideas from the originating groups as to what the company needs to do to make this happen.
Phase 4. implementing.
10. Upper management must respond to the results of the questionnaires and decisions and go through their own process so they can make whatever changes necessary to comply with their agendas and initiatives. They must then give their feedback back to the people.
11. The original groups must follow the progress of the company actions, and meet regularly to keep a running tab on the progress and how people are faring. Change what needs to get changed the moment it needs to change, by using the original groups to gain consensus and give feedback.
12. This is an iterative process until there is enough agreement so all can do the work and stay motivated.
This entire process will take months, of course. It also assumes trust in process, in the people, and in the outcome? the outcome will probably have a similar outcome but with different behaviors than originally envisaged. It's highly likely there will be a richer set of initiatives and strategies as a result of all the new ideas that will emerge.
Imagine trusting your employees to be the arbiters of change. What are the costs if you don't?
Sharon Drew Morgen is the author of NYTimes Best seller Selling with Integrity. She speaks, teaches and consults globally around her new sales model, Buying Facilitation.
http://www.newsalesparadigm.com
http://www.sharondrewmorgen.com
512-457-0246
Morgen Facilitations, Inc.
Austin, TX
Employers have become so concerned about seeming "unfair" or worse becoming the victims of lawsuits by unhappy ex-employees that they've stopped requiring minimum standards of employees. This can only lead to poor individual... Read More
Mistake #1: Going with the flowInexperienced interviewers sometimes fall into the trap of letting the interview become "free form", spending different amounts of time on different questions, basing follow-up questions on on how... Read More
Whether you are a consultant, coach, business owner, doctor, professional, corporate elite or student, whatever your profession is, moving towards your dream requires taking courageous steps. Making long-lasting changes requires us to create... Read More
I've seen several articles that begin with lines like "the only constant today is change." I assert that change that is constant can't really be called change. It's simply a new reality. It's... Read More
Job interviews are easier for the interviewer or the interviewee if you plan and prepare and use proper interviewing techniques. On this page are job interview questions and purpose of each interview question,... Read More
Imagine the following scenario; Ten years ago you decided to quit your job and start your own company. For ten years you worked hard, made sacrifices, and it paid off in the end.... Read More
The good news is that a new hire orientation program offers an opportunity to build a lasting impression of the new company. The bad news is that that is going to happen whether... Read More
Recognizing good performance through praise or other positive action is one of the simplest and most cost-effective ways to motivate people. It provides three major benefits: It lets people know that their performance... Read More
Creativity can be defined as problem identification and idea generation whilst innovation can be defined as idea selection, development and commercialisation.There are other useful definitions in this field, for example, creativity can be... Read More
COMPANY/ORGANIZATIONA South Florida hospital. The CEO of the hospital saw the need to provide exceptional customer service to differentiate itself from the competition and avoid being acquired.PROBLEMThe hospital was undergoing a series of... Read More
Nearly all leaders I've encountered are underachievers. They're getting a fraction of the results they are capable of. And in most cases, it's their fault. Their failures are the result of the choices... Read More
Learning comes from many places. And one of the most wondrous opportunities is right in front of us. At dinner, at play and at bedtime, every evening. It is there on the sports... Read More
Human Resource Employee Risk ProfileIs your business at risk? Do you want peace of mind?Please answer the following question honestly by drawing a circle around or shading in the column. If you can... Read More
Make Sure You Understand Your Motivation for SellingAre you thinking about selling your business?This simple one-question quiz will help you to better understand your motivations behind this thought. A better understanding of your... Read More
The higher you go, the cooler it becomes. Really? Let us begin from first principles. This is a maxim we learnt in geography about the weather. Having come a long way in our... Read More
Janet DiClaudio, who was charge of medical records at two large American hospitals, had an unusual problem. But, the past master in finding creative solutions to work related problems that she was, she... Read More
Building a 'bridge of understanding' between parties is fundamental if your business communication is to succeed. If you are a consultant to a client, or a salesperson attempting a closer... Read More
Conflict is a fact of life for all of us, but too many painful consequences are generated by avoiding or managing it in the wrong way. When we deal with everybody else day... Read More
Creativity can be defined as problem identification and idea generation whilst innovation can be defined as idea selection, development and commercialisation.There are distinct processes that enhance problem identification and idea generation and, similarly,... Read More
The verdict is in: More and more baby boomers will be leaving the workplace sooner, rather than later. Many industries are predicting that between 25 and 45% of their more senior employees will... Read More
This is a bottom-line environment.Decreasing the downtime of revenue producing employees is a major concern. Efficiency, effectiveness, productivity gains, lowering expenses and increasing ROI are words we are all hearing more of these... Read More
This week I was asked to speak at an internal conference for a bank. The subject was how to build a great customer experience. However, the reality was somewhat different to the title.... Read More
Check Out Your E-HabitsAnother week has ended. And, despite moving at the speed of light, you've once again barely made a dent in your more important goals or projects. Just about everyone wishes... Read More
If Baby Boomers can get botox and tummy tucks, then why don't companies receive facelifts to improve their image as well? The telephone is the lifeblood of any business. Use it respectfully. Don't... Read More
Creativity can be defined as problem identification and idea generation whilst innovation can be defined as idea selection, development and commercialisation.There are other useful definitions in this field, for example, creativity can be... Read More
Implementing an ISO 9001 system represents a major effort. However, all of that effort can represent a significant shift for a business - from quantity to quality. And this could make sure your... Read More
One of the biggest challenges any business owner or manager has is hiring the right people. I've recently discovered a simple, inexpensive yet very effective way which will help you get it right.... Read More
[This article is based on excerpts from the special report "Overcoming Resistance to Change" by Dr. Mike Beitler.]Senior management often creates a plan for implementing an organizational change while completely ignoring the following... Read More
Six Ways to Keep Things Simple We can have greater success with our Clients when we make our work processes and agreements simpler and more elegant. This article will give you ideas for... Read More
Many HR managers believe that by sending their workers to participate in external training programs, they have fulfilled their responsibilities. This is not the best situation. In this article, I will be emphasizing... Read More
"Nothing inspires confidence in a business man sooner than punctuality, nor is there any habit which sooner saps his reputation than that of being always behind time." (W. Mathews)Being tardy can be a... Read More
I once worked with a developer who showed up at every product demo and constantly suggested improvements for the product. Don't get me wrong. Feedback is important and you shouldn't discourage developers from... Read More
Here's a scary statistic. According to four prominent research firms, only around 20% of all IT projects are finished in a timely manner. By "timely" the researchers mean without loss of quality or... Read More
[This article is based on excerpts from the special report "Overcoming Resistance to Change" by Dr. Mike Beitler.]Senior management often creates a plan for implementing an organizational change while completely ignoring the following... Read More
Employee performance reviews are one of the most dreaded tasks by most managers. It is hard to win here ? you can never say enough good things, and one word of criticism is... Read More
People who work with us often struggle with this dilemma: in theory, they come to believe that it would be very helpful to use our approach with people who have more power than... Read More
As a manager, it is your job to ensure that the work gets done effectively. Coaching and discipline are unpleasant tasks. However, it must be a part of your everyday job duties. Here... Read More
Workers compensation secrets are hidden deep within piles and piles of bureaucratic mumbo jumbo. They are sometimes used as high priced paper weights for over worked government workers who may or may not... Read More
It's very easy for a business owner or manager to fall into the trap of condemning one of their team as a no-hoper or a problem child.It may turn out that this person... Read More
Many organisations use the term "lessons learned" to describe the way in which they avoid repeating mistakes, or ensure that they build on past successes, yet a lesson can only be applied if... Read More
The concept of knowledge management or knowledge sharing makes intellectual sense to the leadership teams in most organisations. Why wouldn't we want to learn from our successes and failures, and translate that learning... Read More
Here are 10 subjects that academia should be teaching their students in business school:1. Generate revenue for your companyWhat academia doesn't teach you is that the real purpose organizations hire you is to... Read More
A few weeks ago I asked my readers what the most important issue was in their business. Hundreds responded with a variety of answers, but one of the most common was, "How do... Read More
Writing a safety manual is a tough job and most larger corporations outsource such jobs or they have someone on staff with the proper credentials in risk management. Imagine writing the safety manuals... Read More
In my organisational career, I had budgets from the age of 22 to 47. I lived and breathed them and many times, budgets, the gospel that they were, caused havoc, albeit within the... Read More
Despite the fact that everyone sighs "How glamorous!", the life of the business traveller can actually be hell! Fighting international datelines, jetlag, airline food, hotel pillows filled with rocks, and the constant packing... Read More
1. Let people know what you expect. If people know what's expected of them, that's what they'll do--if they don't know what's expected, they'll do something else. Communicate clear and unambiguous performance expectations... Read More
Office politics! It's just another way of saying: "The employees are not getting along!"When so much of a company's success depends on the employees' ability to work together as a cohesive team, it... Read More
Six Sigma is a highly disciplined process focused on satisfying customers by delivering nearly perfect products and services. In today's competitive market, consistently maintaining satisfied customers is essential to growth and success. Major... Read More
Creativity can be defined as problem identification and idea generation whilst innovation can be defined as idea selection, development and commercialisation.There are other useful definitions in this field, for example, creativity can be... Read More
The day job as a manager is all about managing your people to deliver, to meet the needs of your customers or clients and generating success after success! Right? And you have consequences... Read More
The Critical Success Factors Focusing on the things that make the biggest difference to your future prosperity. (Note, although this article was written in early 2002, it is totally... Read More
Whoever said that being a meeting planner was easy, lied! Rather, it should be classified under the tough and demanding job category. But, along with being tough, it's also fun, exciting, exhilarating, stimulating,... Read More
Imagine for a moment this scenario from a frustrated Senior Manager of a large pharmaceutical organization: "Our organization has experienced a large turnover among project managers in the past year. This creates problems... Read More
Somewhere in the world is a person who wants to see their provisioning/user management systems get a sorely needed upgrade. But they seem to be getting nowhere.The technical requirements are unarticulated. Key decisionmakers... Read More
Q: I started my small business about a year ago and it's grown steadily. I like having my own business, but I'm having a tough time managing people. I have 5 employees now... Read More
You can boil down the difference between successful businesses and the rest in how they work with their customers, in just five areas.So, what does this mean? What They WantSelling what your customers... Read More
Purpose: Show how immersion leadership training makes strategic initiative success possible.Adults learn through experience. We learn behaviors through experience. This is the flagpole fact of the educational world. This flag is visible for... Read More
| GOOGLE AD |
Business Management Business Management |