Tuesday, July 17, 2007
Visionary Or Crazy?
The key to getting work done on time is to stop wearing a watch.
The best way to invest corporate profits is to give them to the employees.
The purpose of work is not to make money. The purpose of work is to make the workers,
whether working stiffs or top executives, feel good about life.
Ricardo Semler (CEO Semco, author of "The Seven Day Weekend")
Sunday, July 15, 2007
A New Thread: Fear, Organizations & Potential
In addition to simple sales improvement ideas, I believe cultural and organizational ideas can set the stage for even more fundamental, long-term success of a team or company. However, from my personal experience, I know people (like yourself) will fall into one of three categories:
a) Believer. "Yes!" You get it and connect with these new ideas. You see how they can benefit your organization and are willing to try some out,
b) Skeptic. "No way Jose." You think these ideas are impractical because "this isn't how things work in the real world," or you're
c) Agnostic. "Where's the proof?" You aren't sure about all this yet, but it's intriguing enough to keep reading about it, perhaps even try something at some point if it really seems relevant to a particular situation you're facing and there is some proof of success.
Classic corporate culture is, at its root, based on fear and insecurity (I'm speaking in generalizations here, so yes I realize there are exceptions). This fear shows up symptomatically in ways such as:
*Insecurity (I'm afraid of what people or my boss will think of the truth, so I have to massage it)
*Secrecy (I'm afraid that if this something is known, either to coworkers or other companies, it might hurt me)
*Parent-child relationships (I'm afraid to let you do something different than what I want. I say "no" a lot)
*Control (I'm uncomfortable without control)
*Denial (Failure cannot happen; failure is unacceptable)
Just as someone who's individual personality is fearful, paranoid and in denial can't live up to their full potential, these same values in a corporation holds back the entire organization's potential and growth.
More to come, but if this first post strikes a chord, send me a note (you can do that through the email link in my Blogger profile)
Sunday, February 25, 2007
Do You Believe In Theory X or Theory Y?
Douglas McGregor developed a philosophical view of humankind with his Theory X and Theory Y in 1960. These are two opposing perceptions about how people view human behavior at work and organizational life.
THEORY X
With Theory X assumptions, management's role is to coerce and control employees.
* People have an inherent dislike for work and will avoid it whenever possible.
* People must be coerced, controlled, directed, or threatened with punishment in order to get them to achieve the organizational objectives.
* People prefer to be directed, do not want responsibility, and have little or no ambition.
* People seek security above all else.
THEORY Y
With Theory Y assumptions, management's role is to develop the potential in employees and help them to release that potential towards common goals.
* Work is as natural as play and rest.
* People will exercise self-direction if they are committed to the objectives (they are NOT lazy).
* Commitment to objectives is a function of the rewards associated with their achievement.
* People learn to accept and seek responsibility.
* Creativity, ingenuity, and imagination are widely distributed among the population. People are capable of using these abilities to solve an organizational problem.
* People have potential.
Which theory do you subscribe to?
His book, "The Human Side of Enterprise"
http://www.codysbooks.com/product/info.jsp?isbn=0071462228
(Thanks Kary!)
Sunday, February 11, 2007
Don't Delegate: Just Do It
The point is not that delegation is bad, but that delegation is like any tool: it can be used efficiently or inefficiently. If it becomes a way for a manager (whether you or your own manager) to just shift pain to someone more vulnerable than they, like a report, it becomes destructive. There is a difference between delegating work to the right person who should own it, and delegating work to someone else because you don't want to do it or think that you're too busy (who isn't busy?) Delegation gone wrong wastes your and your people's time and sends a message to them that you don't respect their time.
As a manager, by just getting stuff done that you might have delegated for the wrong reasons in the past, you:
1) Save you the time of explaining, clarifying and following up,
2) Saves your team's time and increase their productivity, and
3) Boosts their morale by communicating to them through your actions that you respect their time
Be authentic about your delegation - who really is the best, not most convenient or most junior, person to handle it?
Sunday, January 21, 2007
Control without Controlling
People hate to be controlled, whether through arbitrary rules and regulations or management that is afraid of any kind of risk. Who needs a new parent? Not only is control frustrating to people, it kills the kind of new ideas and energy that creates new kinds of businesses through innovation! Managers can choose to exert another kind of control: control of quality and results through vision, learning and development of judgment, rather than through rules and regulations.
Control through vision and alignment
If people have a clear vision of what is important to their team and company, have aligned goals, and are encouraged to learn through experience in making appropriate decisions and judgments, the need to 'control' in the first place will naturally go away. It's much more effective to spend time on developing and communicating compelling vision, values and goals than it is on creating and enforcing rules and regulations.
Monday, January 01, 2007
Work for Their Success, Not Your Success
As a manager, does your team work for you, or do you work for them?
Do they work to make you successful, or do you work to make them successful?
Do you ask people "what are you doing for me?" Or do you ask them "what can I do for you?"
Traditional management and leadership models promote a manager stereotype of a powerful, strong and decisive authority figure. "We're climbing the mountain, follow me!" Yet the most powerful kind of manager can let go of their ego and themselves, and is able to completely focus on making their people successful. After all, they're usually the ones doing the work and interacting with customers!
Making a bigger impact
As one person I am constrained in what I can do. I don't scale. But my impact on the organization is much bigger if I can make my 3, 10, 20 or 200 people more effective. The more people that I can make more successful...makes me more effective and successful!
Motivation
Most people aren't used to feeling that managers are truly there to support them and work for them. The true tests occur when the manager chooses between their own self-interests and their team's...such as giving or taking credit. Or in being happy for someone who's leaving the company for a better job, instead of trying to find ways to get them to stay in a job that isn't as a good a fit for that person.
It's amazingly motivating to your people once they understand you're there to support them, whatever they need.
Each person defines success differently
Your definition of success will vary from what success means to each person on the team. What does success mean for each individual? The #1 motivation for the best people is not money. What is it to them? Do they even know? This isn't a question you can answer at a team level, as it'll vary wildly by each person.
Walking the walk
As an example, pay attention to youself the next person that finds a job outside your team or company, one that really is a better fit for their personal goals. Will you celebrate their new opportunity wholeheartedly? Or will you feel resentful that they've created work for you to replace them, or perhaps rejected that they didn't want to stay with you?
Monday, December 11, 2006
Avoid Making Decisions
Decision making skills, just like muscles, get better as you use them more often. As a manager, think about how much you've learned by exercising these muscles, and how you've been able to move the team forward with your confident (or at least confident-sounding) decisions.
That makes sense, right? Now flip it around to look at it from the team's side: the more decisions you make for your people, the fewer they make for themselves. For every decision you choose to make for the team or for someone, you've deprived the team or that person of an opportunity to exercise their decision muscles. Even bad decisions can be valuable, when the person learns from them.
By making decisions for them, you're teaching them to become dependent on you and less self-reliant. This is true even if that person wants the decision to come from you - you can still decline to accept. An obvious example: "Should I stay in my position and earn another promotion, or try to move to another group where I might find my job more fulfilling but will earn less?"
Yes, there will be decisions that ultimately HAVE to be made by you, but many fewer than you think, such as significant organizational changes, [examples] I bet most of the decisions you current make are ones you don't have to make but that you choose to make.
As a manager, it's your decision to make as many, or as few, decisions as you want with the team. You can choose to encourage your people to get approval on everything new they try, on every discount, on every kind of new marketing message, of every change in seating arrangements...or you can choose to let them take responsibility for their own decisions. Decision-making as a whole will improve and they will truly appreciate it.
Are you (or your company's processes) depriving your people of the opportunity to make decisions?