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Showing posts with label management. Show all posts
Showing posts with label management. Show all posts

Monday, May 2, 2016

If You Want to Be a Real Leader, Quit Being Fake

The following article is a copy of the one posted on fortune on April 29th by Steve Tobak. (http://fortune.com/2016/04/29/quit-being-fake/)

I agree with Steve that you have to be your own style ofleader.  You will have your own style that suits you best, but this does not mean that you cannot learn something from other leaders.  In a recent seminar by Tony Robbins, he clearly stated that he still engages with other world leaders to learn more.  He also once questioned Senior citizens that were exercising and very healthy in their 80's 90's and 100's just to see what they do differently. 

You can learn from anyone in any position anywhere in the world at any time!  Technology has made this even easier than ever before.

These days it seems everyone’s a serial entrepreneur, best-selling author or motivational speaker.

In a digital world full of virtual personas, authenticity is quickly becoming an endangered quality. Everyone wants to be what they’re not. That would be fine if folks would just keep their delusions to themselves. Unfortunately, they’re jumping on the “fake it ‘til you make it” hype parade en masse.
Maybe you haven’t noticed that everyone is suddenly a CEO, a serial entrepreneur, a best-selling author, a millennial millionaire, a [fill in the blank] expert, an award-winning motivational speaker or a coach who can inspire you to find happiness, greatness or your purpose in life, even though they can’t find it themselves.

Like it or not, B.S. is the new normal.

How in the world did such dysfunctional behavior become a cultural norm, practically overnight? I’m not really sure. I suppose it could have been the personal branding craze or Facebook envy that made everyone so desperate to portray themselves in a utopian light. The next thing we knew, LinkedIn profiles that once resembled resumes had turned into fanciful works of fiction.

Clearly, the architects of Web 2.0 never foresaw that social media and user-generated content would become the loudest echo chamber in the history of humankind. Reinforced by billions of blog posts, likes, updates, tweets and retweets, a trending hashtag can go viral and become a global phenomenon in a flash.

Even if this disturbing trend did start online, it certainly didn’t end there. It’s hitting the fan in leadership circles all over the offline world, as well.
It certainly doesn’t help that political leaders routinely lie through their teeth and get away with it. Why do they do it? I’m sure it hasn’t escaped any of the beltway political strategists or campaign advisors that we the people have our heads stuck so far up our smartphones we can no longer see the light of reality.

How prophetic were the words of Hillary Clinton, when she asked rhetorically, “What difference at this point does it make?” Indeed. She was referring to the terrorist attack on our Benghazi embassy in 2012, but her words highlight our growing ambivalence to truth. We’re simply too distracted to care.

Not to pick on the politicians, but you’ve got to admit, when it comes to authenticity, you simply can’t find easier targets. Perhaps a business leader like Harvard business professor and former Medtronic CEO Bill George would make a more challenging, if not intriguing, example.
After a long and successful executive career, George wrote the book Authentic Leadership in 2004.

He followed that up with True North: Discover Your Authentic Leadership, and turned it into a franchise. For a guy who calls authenticity “the gold standard for leaders,” I personally find George to be neither authentic nor a leader these days. Rather, he consistently spews feel-good leadership fluff that panders to the popular groupthink du jour.

While promoting yet another – I think it was the fifth – True North book last year, I saw an interview where he rattled off a dizzying array of business jargon, leadership fads, and populist sound bites that made my head spin. I don’t know how, but in the space of a few minutes, he somehow managed to praise emotional intelligence and EQ, non-hierarchical leadership, empowerment, collaboration, sustainable culture, innovation, diversity, 360-degree reviews, millennials, Steve Jobs (Act 2, not Act 1), Jeff Bezos, Jeff Immelt, Apple, Google and Facebook.

To top it off, he singled out Donald Trump as an inauthentic phony. Far be it from me to defend the Donald; he seems to do a pretty good job of standing up for himself. But here’s the thing. You can say a lot of things about the man, but he’s no phony. What you see is what you get. He is the real deal. That much I know.

Authentic leaders have the courage to speak their minds, even when their views are unpopular. They tell folks the truth, even when it’s not what they want to hear. They’re honest about who they are and don’t pretend to be who they’re not. They fight the status quo, even though it would be so easy to just follow the crowd.

Look, you can’t all be leaders in the organizational sense, but that doesn’t mean you can’t have certain leadership qualities. You can, and you should, carve your own path even when it cuts against the grain of cultural norms. You can, and you should, have the courage to be your genuine self.

 
 
 

Sunday, May 1, 2016

Your Leadership = Your Growth

"Before you are a leader, success is all about growing yourself. When you become a leader success is all about growing others." Jack Welch.
Enjoy and be provoked.
Question for you, one that I ask many CEO/MD and GMs - What is stopping your organisation from growing? What are the excuses your people are giving you.
  • The economy is slow - they have no money
  • Our wharehouse, logistics, service, finance, marketing, sales people are letting us down
  • We are too expensive - the customer needs more discounts
  • Our product/service is not right, old, wrong for the client
  • We don't have the money to do that
And on and on it goes - I bet you could add a few. So what next, how do we push through these excuses and more forward?

The toughest activity for a leader is accountability and motivating - both take time, effort and focus. What would your role be like if your people were even more responsible for their actions and driven to succeed as a team?

As a leader of the business your role is to have everyone aligned to the purpose, goals, strategy, mission, objectives and culture of the organisation.
The difference between success and failure is YOU. Look around at some of the businesses that fail, there are patterns, well documented time and time again.

Success in any organisation is about how YOU influence others - those that are employed by you and those that you need to choose your organisation to perform a function of some description. How effective you are at influencing is directly correlated to how successful you are and inversely how stressed/frustrated/angry you become.

TIP: So next time someone inside your organisation provides an excuse use this question - "How would you know if that wasn't true?"
This may seem like a pretty benign question and yet there is some deep psychology within the wording and combination of the words.
Let me explain. Firstly "How would YOU know" - this puts the focus back on them. This requires them to challenge their current beliefs. "if that wasn't true", this requires them to go into the future to figure out what they would have to do to know that it wasn't true - hence coming up with the solution that was hidden before and because of their belief.

Once you ask them they will act like a deer in headlights. They will go around in circles, possibly saying "I don't understand the question?" Ask it again, do not change the wording. Keep asking. They will say " I don't know the answer" You reply "and if you did know - How would you know if that wasn't true?"

There is so much power in this question.

You see it's all about making your life easier, less stressful and more enjoyable as a leader in your organisation. It's about having tools and strategies that influence others to see your way of thinking and implementing what needs to be done to get even better outcomes - time and time again.

What would your life be like if people wanted to follow you?
Inversely, what is life like NOW pushing against the stream time and time again and going backwards?

I experience so many leaders feeling beaten, struggling to moving their organisation forward, growing and having people aligned. 

Today more than ever, the leader's role requires them to grasp the rapid rate of change in the business world and to build an organisation that’s capable of continually adapting.

Your VOICE is your tool of leadership. Have you been maximising it to influence people? Have you ever trained on how to be even more effective with your language, your tone, your meaning, the power of your voice.

This is why we have created the SG Partners Influential Leadership Workshop in May, Brisbane. One company is sending 3 senior leaders!
This unique workshop is about providing YOU and YOUR PEOPLE tools and strategies to have people do what you want them to do, not because they HAVE to because they WANT too. This is the difference between short term change and sustainable change - it's about influencing them at a mindset level.Click here for more information or see below:
SG Partners Influential Leadership Workshop - May 18/19th Brisbane.
Why doesn’t my team work together, share information – why do I have silo’s, still?
How much time do I waste re hashing the same thing everyday with my people – why can’t they get it and implement the objectives?
Why is it so hard? Why can’t they do what is expected of them? If only they would do their job my life would be a lot easier!
Not another meeting/waste of time, why can’t these be more productive?
At our Leadership workshop you will learn tools and strategies to:
  • Align people with your values and mission
  • Transform teams by understanding limitations and shift to resourceful thinking patterns
  • Get clarity and alignment with your strategy
  • Enable people to perform at their peak performance
  • Create meaningful outcome that motivate & inspire others
  • and much much more
Who is this FOR: CEO’s, MD’s, Owners, General Managers, Senior Leaders, HR Leaders, Sales Leaders - When you are ready to learn tools and strategies to:
  • Supercharging your team so they functions holistically and towards a shared strategy. 
  • Lead others so they naturally follow. 
  • Communicate with clarity and sell your ideas with more confidence. 
  • Influence others utilising their own inherent values. 
  • Being more congruent with your mission.
Which of these challenges are you faced with at present:
  • Managing Employee Dissatisfaction.
  • Handling Confrontation.
  • Challenging, Supporting and Empowering Others.
  • Control stress and wayward emotion.
  • Faster and better aligned decisions.
  • Lead through times of uncertainty.
  • Gain trust, alignment and loyalty from others.
  • Model best practice in your organisation and replicate in others.
  • Improve personal alignment and happiness
So what are you waiting for Click HERE to access the workshop flyer.

Want to learn more about how we improve your company's position, your success, you revenue, margins and marketshare, contact me roland.weber@sgpartners.com.au

Original Post by Michael Lang (SG Partners)

Monday, February 18, 2013

Do you work for a 3BL company?





The triple bottom line (abbreviated as TBL or 3BL, and also known as people, planet, profit or "the three pillars") captures an expanded spectrum of values and criteria for measuring organisational (and societal) success: economic, ecological, and social.

Company Culture
Through Principles learned from some of the “best companies to work for” and “most successful companies” we help you focus on the cultural clusters in your company that can help you grow, implement new strategies and become more productive.   We help you with the introduction of tailored solutions to change non-practical cultural believes, and get buy in from the front line through to senior management.  We stay involved throughout the whole process, enabling the best possible outcomes.

Change Management
Change can often be difficult and met by resistance.  We help you fully understand change, what is required, help you map out the path, and support you through it, just like in a successful partnership.

Employee Engagement
The key here is to not only have your employees engaged, but for them to manage up and create innovation from within.  Employee engagement will also reduce absenteeism and staff retention.

Staff Motivation
Most people have something that drives and motivates them, and in most cases it’s not the same.  Establishing whether people are extrinsically or intrinsically motivated, and finding out why they are at work, will aid in creating a better workplace where employees look forward to showing up.

Team Leadership
Starting with leaders understanding themselves through “self-evaluation”, understanding the EQ’s SQ’s (emotional and social quotient) etc., understanding the difference between leadership and management, and how to get the best from your staff are only some of the factors we focus on.  Our program cannot be successful unless we have total support from the senior leadership team down, as well as from the front line up.  Lean culture and lean leadership are two key components in the journey of become a great leader.

Systems & Processes (Lean Six Sigma)
Lean Six Sigma is todays buzz word, but in essence all we are talking about are principles found in Lean and Six Sigma.  There are many other tools, but at the end we investigate if a process that is in place is really the best means to an end.  We may find that there are a few steps to many, which make it inefficient.  We may look at the supply chain and find areas to save time, money, reduce inventory, etc.  This will create savings due to the removal of wasteful practices.

Productivity and Efficiency Increases
Through a combination of all of the above we are able to help you target specific areas in your business that will most benefit in the short term, as well as a focus on the big picture and long term sustainability of the business. 

Environment and Sustainability
With carbon taxes, global warming, utilities and transport costs all affecting our bottom line, we can take a closer look at the triple bottom line (3BL).  People and profit will be targeted through the areas above, and planet will be included early on to ensure any change incorporates environmental responsibility and sustainability, without any major cost impacts on the business.

Our approach 
in assisting your business is based on an initial business audit, a 360 degree review, a systems and processes audit, people audit and much more.  Below are some of the key target areas and some very basic explanations on what we do.  We could discuss each and every one of these points over many pages, but we’d rather meet you and find out what most concerns you in your business.  What are you or your employees losing sleep over?  Once we fully understand where it hurts, we can target these areas, and through root cause analysis drill down into the whole value chain of your business (from suppliers to end customers), to ensure a measured approach in line with your business strategy.


Last, but not least, we have the added advantage of not only being a specialist consultancy firm, but through our RTO (Registered Training Organisation) arm, we can structure our programs to include your whole organisations training requirements.  Whether it is accredited and nationally recognised training, skills cluster training, or purely non accredited specific skills in areas like sales, procurement or finance (to name a few) to address any areas above and make you an even more successful business.  If you are in Australia, New Zealand or Great Britain that furthermore means that we can access to a number of government initiatives to support some of the programs on offer financially.

If you have read through all the above, my guess is that you have nodded at least a couple of times.  Are you ready however to drop me a line or give me a call to set up a meeting over a coffee to start the conversation on how we can add value to your business?

Sunday, December 9, 2012

Organisational Change

I came across an interesting article last weekend initially posted on Forbes back in July 2011.  I liked it because it further combined the message I have been pushing about leadership versus management enveloped in organisational change driven by understanding what is wrong in the first place, before setting out on a journey.

“Change takes place no matter what deters it… There must be measured laborious preparation for change to avoid chaos”- Plato

So what does Plato’s statement tell us?  Well, it’s nothing new, it is deeply embedded in our genes, and it is also what creates some of our resistance to change like:

·         Fear of the unknown. Could change make the situation worse?  What will others think, especially if it doesn't work?
·         Psychological egoism.  Are we really always motivated by self-interest?  And if so, are these the reasons we worry about outcomes of change related to income and status?
·         Is change forced upon us by external forces?  If so, does this create automatic resistance because it wasn't our idea?
·         Been there, done that.  Maybe we tried something similar and it didn't work.  Even if it did work, was it worth the effort?

There could be many more factors, but at the end of the day, every situation is different, and as our environment changes, so will how we approach change.  However, with a detailed plan at hand, and innovation from within, change should be ongoing; we may also refer to it as continuous improvement.  For more information about change and how it can affect your business in a positive way please visit www.chaseperformance.com or call me on 1300 880 338.

I hope you enjoy the article below by Steve Denning “The Four Stories You Need To Lead Deep Organizational Change”, originally posted on 22/7/2011 at http://www.forbes.com/sites/stevedenning/2011/07/25/the-four-stories-you-need-to-lead-deep-organizational-change/

RADICAL MANAGEMENT: Rethinking leadership and innovation
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“It’s only when you drop yesterday’s assumptions that you can glimpse tomorrow’s patterns and possibilities. To see deeper, unseen first.”  Umair Haq

How does Wal-Mart [WMT] unlearn its failing 20thCentury business model and move into the 21st Century? How does GE [GE] detach itself from the traditional management baggage that is dragging down its share price and move into the future? How does Cisco [CSCO] unlearn the business model that made it for a brief time in the 20th Century the most valuable company on the planet and start managing itself with a successful 21st Century business model?  How does Merck (MRK) or the other big pharmaceutical companies escape from their trajectory of declining returns and move, as suggested by Don Tapscott and Anthony Williams in MacrowikinomicsDescription: http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=&l=as2&o=1&a=1591843561&camp=217145&creative=399369, into a collaborative mode with high returns? How does the World Bankshed its rigid culture of hierarchical bureaucracy and acquire the agility to become a significant player on the world stage?

Reasons by themselves don’t lead to change

At this point, we know what needs to be done: focus on delighting customers and stakeholders, managers enable self-organizing teams, accountability through dynamic linking, values that grow the firm and horizontal communications.

We now know precisely how unproductive traditional management is—declining rate of return on assets (one quarter of what it was in 1965), declining life expectancy of firms in the Fortune 500 (less than 15 years) and lack of engagement of workers (only one in five workers is fully engaged in his or her work.)

But to make any of this happen, leaders and managers have to unlearn the management practices that were so successful in the 20th Century but so unsuccessful today. How do we unlearn the things that we still believe in our heart of hearts are true?

Facts and statistics don’t get the job done. Charts left listeners bemused. Prose remains unread. Dialogue is just too laborious and slow.

By contrast, leadership stories can get inside people’s minds and affect how they think, worry, wonder, agonize and dream about themselves and in the process create – and recreate – their organization. Storytelling enables the individuals in an organization to see themselves and the organization in a different light, and accordingly take decisions and change their behaviour in accordance with these new perceptions, insights and identities.

Four leadership stories are key
The story of the future
Springboard stories of the future
The story of the past
The story that explains why the story of the past is no longer viable

1.  The new business model story

The first story is fairly obvious: it’s the story of the business model of the new way of operating. It helps the sponsors or managers see how the business will work when once the change is undertaken.

A business model is a story that explains in effect “the theory of the business.” It’s a story set in the present or near future. The narrative is tied to numbers as the elements in the business model are quantified. The business model answers questions like these: Who is the customer? And what does the customer value? How do we make money in this business? What is the underlying economic logic that shows how we can deliver value to customers at an appropriate cost?[i] Its validity depends on a combination of narrative logic—does the story hang together?—and quantitative logic—do the numbers add up?

2.  The burning platform story

The problem with the business model story as a rhetorical tool is that it’s a future story. As such, it’s typically not believable to people who have operated in a different fashion for years, perhaps even decades. It also doesn't include any explicit reason why the organization needs to change to this strange new way of operating.

So the second story you need is a burning platform story, a story that explains why the way of operating in the past that was so successful is no longer successful and is leading to disaster.
In the case of the shift from traditional to radical management, it will be the story of two major shifts.

Over the last couple of decades, there has been an epochal shift in the balance of power from seller to buyer. For the first two-thirds of the 20thCentury, oligopolies were in charge of the marketplace. These companies were successful by pushing products at customers, and manufacturing demand through advertising. But this situation changed. Today customers have instant access to reliable information and have options: they can choose firms who delight them and avoid companies whose principal objective is taking money from our wallets and putting in their own. The result is a fundamental shift in power in the marketplace from the seller to the buyer: not only do customers not appreciate being treated as “demand” to be manufactured: now they can do something about it. If they are not delighted, they can and do go elsewhere.

The second is a fundamental shift in the workplace where the nature of work has shifted from semi-skilled to knowledge work. Meeting the business imperative of delighting customers can only be accomplished if the knowledge workers contribute their full talents and energy to contribute continuous innovation. Treating employees as “human resources” to be manipulated undermines the workforce commitment that is needed.

As a result, the 20th Century management system—the goose that laid America’s golden egg—stopped delivering. There is thus a need to change.

3.  The springboard story

The weakness of the business model story as a rhetorical tool is that it isn't believable because it’s a future story. Future stories are inherently unbelievable.

The weakness of the burning platform story is that it’s negative. And negative stories get people worried but they don’t generate positive action.

To get action you also need a story that will move people into the future: a springboard story.
The springboard story is a story about the past—something that’s already happened. So the story is easy to tell. There’s no need to invent anything. And because it has already happened, it is very believable. Because it is positive, it tends to spark action.

I first come across this at the World Bank in the mid-1990s when I was trying to get people to support efforts at knowledge management—a strange notion in the organization at the time. I had no success until I stumbled on the following story:

In June of 1995, a health worker in a tiny town in Zambia went to the Web site of the Centers for Disease Control and got the answer to a question about the treatment of malaria. Remember that this was in Zambia, one of the poorest countries in the world, and it was in a tiny place six hundred kilometres from the capital city. But the most striking thing about this picture, at least for us, is that the World Bank isn't in it. Despite our know-how on all kinds of poverty-related issues, that knowledge isn't available to the millions of people who could use it. Imagine if it were. Think what an organization we could become!

This simple story helped World Bank staff and managers envision a different kind of future for the organization. When knowledge management later became an official corporate priority, I used similar stories to maintain the momentum.

A springboard story elicits a future story in the minds of the listeners—the listeners start to imagine what the future could be like if they implemented the relevant change idea embodied in the story in their own contexts. Consequently it’s the listeners who do the hard work of inventing the future. Even while the speaker is talking, the audience is soundlessly generating future stories tailor-made to their own situations, and hence grounded in reality. What’s more, as the future unfolds, the listeners continuously update the stories they have generated so as to fit the new reality. The springboard story itself doesn't need updating because it doesn't change: it’s already happened.
Moreover, because the springboard story’s listeners invent the future for themselves, they are much more likely to find that future alluring than if some stranger had dreamed it up for them. The springboard story thus sidesteps the problem of telling a compelling future story.

Not all stories have the springboard effect. Thus springboard stories need to be told from the perspective of a single protagonist who was in a predicament that is prototypical of the organization’s business. The predicament of the explicit story is familiar to the particular audience, and indeed, it is the very predicament that the change proposal is meant to solve. The stories have a degree of strangeness or incongruity for the listeners, so that it captures their attention and stimulates their imaginations.

To communicate the idea of radical management, stories might be drawn from successful implementers, such as Apple [AAPL], Amazon [AMZN] or Salesforce.com [CRM].

4.  The story of the past

The final story that you need is the least obvious—the story of how the organization is functioning today. One might think that this wouldn't be needed because everybody already knows how the organization currently operates. However much of this knowledge is tacit: it exists in the unspoken attitudes and assumptions that are like the water that fish swim in. These attitudes assumptions are so ever-present that they are no longer visible. They are so much part of perceived reality that it is impossible to imagine the world in any other way.

So unless you can describe it and remind people of set of explicit assumptions and attitudes, and in effect drag from the tacit to the explicit, there is no way to get a handle on it. It will keep undermining any change effort.

John Seely Brown has written amusingly about this on my sister website about his efforts to break bad habits on how to drive a motor bike. Until he understood how he was driving the motor bike the wrong way, there was no way that he was able to learn the right way. The old way kept re-emerging.
Similarly, I had little success in communicating the idea of radical management until I nailed  the characteristics of traditional management, and was able to point to the specific differences.


The unlearning (or unseeing) doesn’t happen instantly. Even as I evangelize about the new kind of workplace, where people are treated as people, and firm focuses on delighting clients, I often find myself unwittingly slipping into the vocabulary of traditional management.
But arduous or easy, the unlearning has to happen. Unless it happens, we will continue to live the old story.
_________________

Steve Denning’s most recent book on leadership storytelling is the second edition (2011) of The Leader’s Guide to StorytellingDescription: http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=&l=as2&o=1&a=0470548673(Jossey-Bass)
Follow Steve Denning on Twitter @stevedenning

[i] Magretta, J. “Why Business Models Matter.” Harvard Business Review, May 2002, pp. 87–92..

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Culture, Productivity, Kaizen, Lean, Business Improvement

All the above are current buzz words, especially productivity.  No matter which of these areas we focus on, I think we would agree that leadership is of utmost importance.

When talking about the above we mention empowering individuals, and allowing for innovation from within.  But how can we achieve this without effective leadership, and a culture that thrives on the excitement of being involved in creating a better department, company or economy.

The Australian prime minister’s task force came up with a report on manufacturing entitled “Smarter Manufacturing for a Smarter Australia”. (http://www.innovation.gov.au/Industry/Manufacturing/Taskforce/Documents/SmarterManufacturing.pdf)

While looking at the challenges that face the manufacturing sector, the report also focuses on the opportunities that this creates.  It discusses the importance of manufacturing to Australia, the economy and most importantly our people, you, me and our children.

One comment in the report, also made directly to the Prime Minister, Ministers Combet and Shorten was: “We are particularly concerned that leadership and judgement is brought to bear on the ‘perceptions issue’ about Australian manufacturing.”

Again we are talking about leadership and judgement, but the report further outlines the importance of broad-based Australian economy, built on competitiveness, productivity and innovation.

Figure 1.1 below highlights the importance of policy in achieving the above objective through a strong direction created by a solid strategy.  The total report spans over 117 pages and contains detailed data on the manufacturing industry.  I would recommend that you have a good read of it, if you are interested in the future of our country.
















Figure 1.1 SMARTER MANUFACTURING FOR A SMARTER AUSTRALIA – POLICY FRAMEWORK

The bottom line however is that while policies can be set, strategies discussed, and recommendations presented, it is up to the individual’s leading the businesses within the sector, as well as the ones supplying the sector, and finally the consumers to ensure the path is sustainable.  Associations and industry councils, advisory boards, the education sector and we as individuals also play an important part.  We all have a hand in shaping the future of this country, as insignificant as it may seem.

At the end of the day, it will be the voice of many that will create a better future.  I think none of us can be under the illusion that it will be easy.  We must accept that severe changes will be required about how and where we do business.  And the “pessimists” must stop the negativity and winching, and should focus on the opportunities that are presented to us.  The faster this happens, the sooner we will move on.

Change can be exciting, although scary at times, and it will mean entering a zone that we are not comfortable with.  But if we are big enough to accept that there are other options, and that we need to open our eyes, we will be able to see the light at the end of the tunnel.

There are many tools that will help us achieve better productivity, leaders, culture and so on.  Not all will work for everyone, but they will allow individuals at the front line to help pave our way to the future.  Together with the right leaders these individuals will create companies that are efficient and sustainable.  There are already many programs available to businesses that will support change financially.  These could be initiatives to support sustainable practices, reduce environmental impacts, or purely arm individuals with the skills required to affect the necessary changes within industry.

For more information on initiatives, leadership, or any other comments, please contact me at Chase Performance on 1300 880 338.  I am located in Melbourne, but regularly visit our offices in Adelaide, Perth, Brisbane and Sydney, and am always happy to have a chat and discuss any of the items above in person over an Espresso.

Best regards
Roland Weber

Thursday, November 15, 2012

Inside the Mind of a Great Manager


As a manager and leader I aspire to be the best I can be in both areas.  Too often however I find that we get caught up with the day to day operations in a way that lets us forget our basics and values. 

It is in these times that we need to take a breather, re-focus, re-evaluate and just remember what really matters, and what makes us who we are.  We cannot always be everyone’s friend, that's the reality. 

As much as I like to be close to everyone in our business, and especially to my team, there are times where decisions have to be made.  Decisions that affect others and the greater good of the business, decisions that influence areas which individuals may not understand or consider when pursuing a specific goal. 

Making decisions is something that we constantly face, and often we do not have much time to consider whether they are the right or wrong ones.  Often we will not find out until much later whether we have made the right decision, but at the end of the day, someone has to, and armed with intellectual knowledge as well as experience we are generally able to take the correct path, no matter how tough or unreasonable it may seem to others.

In saying all this, I came across the article below by David Di Salvo, posted on 25/9/2012.

Since each of us has had good and bad managers, it’s tempting to wonder if there’s a brain-based distinction between them.  At times I’ve worked with managers so appallingly unfit for their role that it seemed like there just had to be something missing upstairs — some crucial component of what makes a manager effective that these people just didn’t have.
Getty Images
On rarer occasions, I’ve met managers who seemed genetically predestined for their jobs.  I asked one of those people once why he appeared so naturally in sync with managing people and projects, and he said, “I’ve never really thought about it, but I just like working with good people and helping to make things happen.”  His air of nonchalance didn’t surprise me, nor did the fact that he’d never given it much thought — I knew he was genuine in both regards.
In this, my concluding article to a series I began weeks ago, I’m going to describe what my research and observations reveal about what’s going on in the minds of great managers.

1.  Great managers don’t “do” management — they embody it.
This speaks to why I knew the manager I mentioned above was genuine when he said he hadn’t considered the question very much, and that the question itself didn’t really seem important to him.  The question I was asking him addressed the “function” of management, but for him management “function” wasn’t the point of his job.  He never saw it that way.  Instead, he embodied the functions of good management so thoroughly that separating himself from them and analyzing why he did this or that well never occurred to him as a good use of time.
2. Great managers limit their accessibility for only two reasons.
Great managers realize that a vital part of their job is to be accessible to their staff, and they always strive to uphold this role — with only two exceptions.  The first is if they must meet a deadline that is crucial, and taking any time away from doing so will result in disaster.  Note: this doesn’t describe every deadline. If a manager effectively manages his or her time, most deadlines still allow for windows of accessibility. But every so often one comes up that does not, and for the period of time necessary to meet it, an effective manager knows they have to “lock down” their schedule for a while.
The other exception is if an employee is abusing the manager’s accessibility because they are not able to accomplish what’s required of them.  When an employee is constantly in the manager’s doorway with a barrage of questions, and no answer is ever sufficient to light their path, then the manager knows another course of action is necessary. Maybe it’s training, maybe it’s reassignment – but whatever the case, more accessibility isn’t the answer; the employee is using it as an excuse.
3. Great managers never mistreat staff in group settings (or otherwise).
This one may sound like the typical “great managers don’t throw their employees under the bus,” but there’s more to it than just that.  Every sub-par manager I have met or worked with/for, has on at least one occasion caused a staff member embarrassment, shame or outright humiliation in front of others.  The reason is always the same — insecure managers derive a sense of control from showing people that no one is beyond being stomped on.  Sometimes this behavior comes completely out of nowhere (or so it seemed to the employee), because the manager felt they had to “send a message” on that particular day.  Bad managers have a muted sense of how much damage they’re doing each time they mistreat a staff member. They may even think that their willingness to be harsh in public is a sign of strength, when in fact it’s the ultimate sign of weakness.

4. Great managers celebrate great achievements and congratulate daily successes. 
When a team accomplishes something truly great, the manager of that team makes sure that the team has an opportunity to jointly celebrate.  Maybe it’s a team lunch, maybe it’s happy hour — whatever fits the team — but great managers don’t let opportunities like that go by without giving the team a chance to grow closer through their achievement.  Of course, not every team achievement reaches the level of “greatness,” but great managers are also always on the lookout for daily successes — and those are met with congratulations. Maybe it’s a congratulatory email with a cc: to another supervisor, or perhaps just a face-to-face show of appreciation.  The point is, great managers know that big achievements and daily successes are opportunities, and they don’t let them pass by unnoticed.
5. Great managers always refer back to their experience before making a decision.
Great managers became managers because they performed well enough to merit the attention of their supervisors and eventually were given responsibility for other employees.  As such, they know how messy a process getting promoted can be, and that they didn’t make it to their positions without suffering their fair share of mistakes.  Poor managers (even if they were once good employees) make decisions using formulaic, one-size-fits-all approaches.  They think that their role dictates that they supervise generically.  Great managers never make that mistake, but instead rely on their rich repository of personal experience–including mistakes and failures–whenever they make a decision that affects others.
6. Great managers don’t care about being known as “great” — they care about being known as great contributors. 
The late great Peter Drucker said, paraphrasing, the effective executive always asks him/herself, “What can I contribute?”  That’s essential to what makes the mind of a great manager different than that of just about anyone else in an organization.  Every day, they are looking for ways to contribute more of what they have to offer to make their teams better, make their projects better, and make the organization better.  And striving to contribute need not be a conscious, intentional process every day; rather, it becomes a normal part of how a great manager thinks.  Again, it’s not about “being” the role — it’s about embodying it.

7. Great managers willingly pass the baton.
You can always tell who the insecure managers are, because they’re the ones most unwilling to identify successors to their positions.  But great managers think about this very differently.  They don’t lack ambition, but they pursue their ambitions with a “back fill” mentality.  Someone on their team has what it takes to do the manager’s job, and great managers cultivate that talent because they want that person to move into their role when a new opportunity presents itself.  A poor manager, on the other hand, is an ambitious opportunist who really doesn’t care about nurturing a replacement — that’s “someone else’s problem.”

8. Great managers are already leaders, no matter their title.
Countless business books discuss the differences between management and leadership, but my observation has been that a great manager is already a leader — and doesn’t especially care what books say about the alleged differences.  Perhaps average managers (to say nothing of the bad ones) fall short of leadership material, but the great ones already embody the characteristics that make people highly respected leaders.  And if others in an organization are paying attention, the great manager will eventually achieve a true leadership role, and many will benefit from a wise decision to capitalize on greatness.
You can find David on Twitter @neuronarrative and at his website, The Daily Brain.

You can find me on Twitter @goal1e, and more information on management and leadership coaching as well as cultural change through www.chaseperformance.com

Monday, October 22, 2012

Lean Leadership

The following information is from a presentation out of the lean leadership series by Factory Strategies Group LLC. (2009).  I have previously discussed the differences between management and leadership, as well as traditional and modern variations.  The following further highlights the importance of leadership, and the direct distinction from management.  Changing from wearing one hat to the other, and combing both takes practice, but will allow for a better organisational culture and increased efficiencies.  Although the following doesn't discuss energising and motivating employees, it is an area that will stem from good leadership.

Leadership Influences Change

ENGAGEMENT

“People don’t resist change.  They resist being changed.” - Peter Senge

REALISM

“Culture does not change because we desire to change it.  Culture changes when the organisation is transformed; the culture reflects the realities of people working together every day.” - Frances Hesselbein

DETERMINATION

“Faced with the choice between changing one’s mind and proving that there is no need to do so, almost everyone getsbusy on the proof.” - John Kenneth Galbraith

Leadership versus Management

Leadership is not management

3 Tenets of management

Planning and budgeting
Involves creating timetables to meet commitments and developing specific action steps.

Organising and staffing
Requires that managers put some structure to the plan which includes staffing requirements, communications and delegation of responsibility.

Controlling and problem-solving
Entails the monitoring of activities, spotting deviations from the plan and organising solutions.

These management processes create and maintain order and predictability within the organisation. - John P. Kotter

Lean Leadership Characteristics

A leader needs to be visible as a role model in order to demonstrate his/her breadth of knowledge and understanding of the business environment and the organisational challenges.

A leader should display an aptitude for logic and a desire to challenge the status quo or “alleged wisdom” in order to facilitate free flowing decision making.

A leader must posses the ability to be a linking agent (facilitator) with a wide array of knowledge and information coupled with an unquestionable trust, professionalism and an open invitation for dissent.

Traditional versus Lean



Lean Leadership:

Good leaders motivate people in a variety of ways, three of which are the basis to the “lean” approach.


1.  Leaders must define the organisation’s vision in a way
     that highlights the values of their group
2.  Leaders must support people’s efforts to achieve the
     shared vision through coaching, feedback, and role modelling
3.  A leader should recognise and reward success


There are five leadership moves, or actions, a leader can perform to provide leadership on the Lean journey.


1.  Leaders Must Be Teachers
2.  Build Tension, Not Stress
3.  Eliminate Fear and Comfort
4.  Lead Through Visible Participation, Not Proclamation
5.  Build Lean Into Personal Practice




Monday, August 27, 2012

Organisational Behaviour


I have recently completed my first module for my MBA in Leadership and Sustainability through Robert Kennedy College and the University of Cumbria.  It was an interesting start to this journey, enhanced by the multi-cultural and multi-business background of the participants in the course.  The individual views of individuals in the course widely varied depending on their cultural background and geographical location.
The discussions often included individual’s examples and their personal experiences, bringing a different perspective to the subject matter.  The course material was interesting and there was plenty of it.  More material was introduced as the course progressed.  The structure that lead from leadership and general organisational behaviour, through communication and teams, while looking at human capital and the motivation and management styles encountered in organisations did not only make sense, it was practical and allowed an in depth analysis on the way about one’s own present and past businesses.
The consideration of culture and conflict management as part of the organisational structure, as well as the tools discussed like balanced scoreboard, SWOT analysis and McKinsey’s 7s analysis allowed for a detailed analysis of an organisation, leading to clearly defined solutions relevant to our daily business lives.
The Professor was knowledgeable and easily approachable both through the public forums and through private communication.
I would recommend this course to anyone who wants to become a leader, or a more effective leader.  The investment of both time and money is minimal compared to the outcomes gained from the experience.  Below is a summary of this particular course (as taken from the Robert Kennedy College online campus).  Should you have any further questions, please do not hesitate to contact me.
Best regards
Roland

COURSE OBJECTIVES 

-- To focus on increasing the effectiveness of organisations and thus, of their members. 

-- To understand why people and groups in organisations feel and behave as they do. 

-- To identify principles that can improve the behaviour and attitudes of organisational members. 

-- To develop and enhance your skills as an organisational member and a manager. 

COURSE OVERVIEW 

The course involves learning from a variety of sources - audio clips, slide presentations, textbook, lecture notes, case studies, and interaction with peers and faculty in the forums. 

The course aims to be an examination of research and theory on the forces underlying the way that the members of an organisation behave. Topics covered include the behaviour of work groups and supervisors, inter-group relations, employees’ goals and attitudes, problems in communication, the circumstances of change in an organisation, and the goals and design of an organisation. 

READINGS 

Please read the articles provided under the resource tab of this course to get a brief idea about the focus. Students can also avail of our e-library facilities to surf, and research for material. The faculty will also provide some online links for selected reading as and when required. 

ON-LINE PARTICIPATION 

All students are expected to participate regularly in the discussions taking place in the forums. A wide range of discussion is usually desired in these discussion forums. These areas are an interesting and informative way of interacting with peers and faculty. They also allow you to apply concepts learned in isolation to real life or personal experiences.