Proactive Planning – Innovative Management Tools https://innovativemanagementtools.com Sat, 27 Jan 2024 13:34:26 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7 https://i0.wp.com/innovativemanagementtools.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/cropped-cropped-304c42ff-b175-4900-b0e3-b6a7772a1d9a.png?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Proactive Planning – Innovative Management Tools https://innovativemanagementtools.com 32 32 230777158 PRIORITIZE – Priority Management Activity https://innovativemanagementtools.com/2024/01/27/prioritize-priority-management-activity/ Sat, 27 Jan 2024 13:34:02 +0000 https://innovativemanagementtools.com/?p=605 The post PRIORITIZE – Priority Management Activity appeared first on Innovative Management Tools.

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Multiple, new projects + Limited talent with special skills + Worker shortage = Priority Management Urgency.

With our ongoing surveying of Organizational Challenges (contact me to participate in the 15-minute survey), Priority Management ranks #2 out of the 28 categories polled with an incredible 94.1% of current respondents siting two scenarios that are creating challenges for them:

1) Project teams that launched into action in the past without an adequate plan on how to prioritize resources have created problems and now the company wants to plan a project in a different way to avoid creating problems. Companies realize that a different approach should be considered because the past way of doing things did not ensure success.

2) The same employees are on multiple projects at the same time and need help in prioritizing how to spread their time and talent.

Looking across the talent pool of people who will be on projects, certain individuals are getting pulled into too many directions and need guidance from “the powers that be” to define priorities. If not, burnout is a very real outcome possibility.

Enter the Conversation Framework PRIORITIZE – Priority Management Activity. Designed to guide a group of people through a process of taking a “laundry list” of things to do and assign the tasks to the available resources, based on skills. Having this view of who does what, visually, and with the perspective how overloaded a person might be or where skills gaps exist, BEFORE launching into the project is priceless information and help create a better roadmap for project success. The same activity could be used to review the myriad of open projects and who is involved in each one to spot overload for individual contributors.

Conversation Frameworks – Guiding the Power and Ideas from Within.

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Going Lean, Part 3: Lean Tools and Strategies https://innovativemanagementtools.com/2024/01/04/going-lean-part-3-lean-tools-and-strategies/ Thu, 04 Jan 2024 20:26:29 +0000 https://innovativemanagementtools.com/?p=583 The post Going Lean, Part 3: Lean Tools and Strategies appeared first on Innovative Management Tools.

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In the previous Lean Series blog (Part 2), I talked about how to get Lean started in your organization.  One of the first things to do when embarking on your Lean Journey is to educate your staff on what Lean is and what Lean isn’t.  Aligning your staff to a common understanding is extremely important.

However, once your people know what Lean is, the next logical questions are “How do we do it?  What tools and strategies are needed to help us start enjoying successes?”  As explained in previous blogs, Lean suggests getting people to change their work habits in ways that will improve both workflow and the bottom line of the organization.

While it may seem cliché, I will use the analogy of the toolbox.  A carpenter can’t do all the jobs he is asked to do if he doesn’t have the proper tools.  And if a job calls for a pipe wrench, will he try it with a screwdriver?  Of course not.  To be successful, he needs lots of tools.  But even more important is that he knows the purpose of each tool and how to use it effectively.

Managing people and implementing Lean is no different.

There are some specific Lean tools that are described in all Lean books and often referred to as the “hard” tools.  5S, Value Stream Mapping, Kaizen, and Kanbans are some of the basics.  There are also advanced concepts that are used in world class Lean implementations.

The other tools and strategies that help drive Lean success are often considered “soft” tools.  Many of these tools fall into the area of people management and let’s not forget that Lean is 80% people and behaviors.  The soft tools are easily understood, but tricky to implement, and are, therefore, too often underutilized.

Top 25

Twenty-five of the most critical soft tools that help the Lean Journey success and put structure and organization around the conversations that need to take place, using frameworks to align the people (in alphabetical order):

#1: Barrier Analysis

Barrier Analysis is looking at what barriers exist that prohibit an improvement initiative from moving forward.   In other words, it means figuring out what has made an initiative become “stuck” and then coming up with a plan to eliminate those barriers or obstacles.

#2: Brainstorm Management

Brainstorm Management is making sure that brainstorm sessions aren’t classified as a “waste of time” by the participants.  This is done by putting structure and process to the session without losing the creativity.  It is also important to allow ideas and input to come from everybody in the session, not only from the dominant personalities in the group.

#3: Collaborator Skills

Knowing what skills your employees possess, compared to what skills are needed for their position, and identifying where the skills gaps exist (potentially leaving your department vulnerable) is vital knowledge.  On the flip side, your staff may possess skills that are not being tapped into simply because you didn’t know that the people had the skills.  Having a profile of each employee can help managers make duty assignments with more ease and certainty during the Lean Journey.

#4: Communications Management

Communications Management is so underutilized today.  We assume that people know how to talk and communicate with one another.  That isn’t the problem.  People talk all the time (sometimes too much) but they frequently talk about the wrong stuff.  Communications Management is understanding how, why, with whom, and with what vehicles staff members communicate critical information with others in the organization.  It is making sure that communication bridges are in place where needed and minimizing unproductive, inefficient, or ineffective bridges.

#5: Curriculum Development

Organizations need to train their employees. Having a curriculum that flows from level to level and addresses all five areas of skills development is crucial to a learner’s success. Skills and training needs to pushed to the lowest levels of the company so that the best decisions can be made during the Lean Journey.

#6: Customer Service

Without customers we have no reason for staying in business. We all strive to have superior customer service, but do we know what our customers really think about our organization, our products, our services, our policies, our delivery times, and countless other topics? By analyzing the customer experience from multiple angles, organizations can identify areas in need of improvement as well as identify reasons that explain why customers come back again and again.  Many of these improvements can reduce or eliminate waste.

#7: Decision Analysis

Decision Analysis is anticipating the impact a decision will have on the company and its staff.  The main drive behind this is to make sure that decisions that are made (or will be made), with a positive impact in mind, remain positive as the decisions make their way through the organization.

#8: Delegation Management

Delegation Management is a way to put a process in motion that enables managers (possibly micro-managers) to effectively delegate to their staff without feeling a loss of control.  The process also creates check points to make sure that the delegation isn’t simply “dumping.”

#9: Departmental Positioning

Departmental Positioning helps formalize a departmental identity by way of capturing the text, messages, and content for a Departmental Communications and Positioning Guide.  By having a single go-to document that aligns the department employees, serves as an educational tool for internal roles and responsibilities, and helps new employees come up to speed faster during their onboarding time, miscommunication and misunderstandings are minimized.  When attached to an Organizational Positioning Guide along with other departments, the complete picture of how the various pieces fit together becomes clear.

#10: Directional Efficiency

Directional Efficiency is all about having everybody in the boat rowing in a synchronized fashion.  It helps senior management, a team, or a department identify how well aligned they are and where they have areas for improvement.  The boat moves along faster when everybody is rowing together.

#11: Employee Awareness

Employee Awareness helps employees get to know each other across a variety of topics that might not typically come up in the office.  Nothing too personal but digging into topics that help show more similarities among the team/group than differences.  Helping people realize that we have more in common with our co-workers than we thought builds respect, comradery, and appreciation for each other.

#12: Intentional Isolation

Intentional Isolation is a strategic effort to differentiate the company from its competitors in ways far beyond price and delivery.  Those are important factors, but there are many other ways to be different in the market and create unique experiences for the customers that both embrace Lean Principles and gain market share.

#13: Internal Restructuring

Internal Restructuring is needed from time to time because of growth, staff changes, and organizational clarity to get to the next level.  While often done in a vacuum and on a sheet of paper, making it a more collaborative activity with the senior management and key employees helps build trust, respect, and loyalty.

#14: Organizational Positioning

Organizational Positioning is the parent to Departmental Positioning.  It helps formalize an organizational identity by way of capturing the text, messages, and content for an Organizational Communications and Positioning Guide.  By having a single go-to document that aligns employees, serves as an educational tool for marketing and future initiatives, and helps new employees come up to speed faster during their onboarding time, the organization has a foundation document that aligns the staff.  When complemented with Departmental Positioning Guides, the complete picture of how the various pieces fit together becomes clear.

#15: Planning and Preparation

Planning and Preparation is taking the time up front to determine what it would take to reach specific organizational goals, launch new projects or initiatives, or make significant changes in concrete, tactical terms.  This planning helps to understand the readiness before launching, minimizing the need to regroup (and rework) later on, both of which waste time, resources, and money.

#16: Priority Management

With certain projects, the laundry list of things to do seems to go on forever while the resources available (and their skills) seem to be on the short side.  Aligning the tasks to complete with the resources and their skills, taking into account deadlines, milestones, and dependencies can be a daunting task without a structured approach to tackling the list of to-do items.  Streamlining tasks and priorities is a cornerstone of Lean.

#17: Process Analysis

Process Analysis is taking periodic snapshots of a specific process to ensure that the process is as efficient and streamlined as possible.  It is a way to engage process players in the change process and use their improvement ideas to better the process.  There is no better way to get their buy-in for changes than inclusion.  Major processes should be reviewed every six to eight months to introduce the concept of continuous improvement, reinforce the mindset that change is allowed and expected, and make sure that current processes are properly aligned to the company’s goals and needs.

#18: Process Development

Process Development helps develop a new process (or formalize a really loose, informal process) from scratch.  During the Lean Journey, there are many opportunities to think outside the box and try something new.  As we know, efficiency comes from having processes in place for people to follow, but how do you go from an idea to a formalized process?  For some people this is a difficult task and does not come naturally.  Helping people go from concepts or ideas to specifics and creating a step-by-step process is important.

#19: Project Definition

Important projects deserve time to properly scope the work to be done so that time, money, and resources are not wasted down the line. Without a clear objective, scope, and approach spelled out, the project team cannot align their time, energy, and talent to make the project a success. Additionally, without a clear scope, team members can’t define deliverables, secure project buy-in, or define tangible returns for the organization.

#20: SWOT Analysis

SWOT...a four-letter word for some companies that brings up images of wasted time, too much data to work with, and nothing concrete that comes from the grueling session.  However, when done well, under focused, timed, and controlled conditions, the results are amazing and very actionable.  SWOT can be done at both the org and department levels with interesting results through collaboration and structure.

#21: Task Management

Task Management is looking at who wears what hats, how many hats, and if the hats are the best fit for the person.  It is comparing and balancing workloads across employees.  It is used to ensure that employees are placing the proper priority to the various tasks under their area of responsibility.  Just like Process Analysis, Task Management is something that could/should be done every six months to make sure that how people spend their time aligns with the changing dynamics of the organization.

#22: Team Management

Team Management is very important.  I explain Team Management as working with groups of people who are called “teams” by the organization and helping them define their purpose, their product, their goals, and their processes so that the team enjoys success.  Great teams don’t happen by chance.  They are created through planning, preparation, dedication, and intentionality.

#23: Time Management

Time Management is almost a misnomer.  While we can’t “manage” how time advances, we can manage what we do and when we do something to be more effective and efficient during our day.  When people get caught up and accustomed to doing tasks that do not add value, that goes against Lean principles.  Helping people understand how they spend their days through a lens of value and intentionality, advances in Lean are possible in small, but important steps.

#24: Vision/Mission/Values Statements

“If you don’t know where you are going, any road will get you there.”  Now multiply this by every employee going on their own path forward, and you can see why having a unified vision statement is important.  Coupled with the “why” we are going in this direction (the mission) and what we hold to be our morale compass (values), and organization can move forward with less wasted time, more focused efforts, and a better understanding of the organization.  This provides a north star for everyone, moving forward more effectively and efficiently in their Lean Journey.

#25: Waste Elimination

Waste Elimination, while it comes last alphabetically, is at the top in the Lean focus.  Looking for and eliminating the 15 forms of waste that exist in organizations and processes is the first and easiest thing to do.  Go for low-hanging fruit across the company.  No department is immune from having waste embedded into processes.  This is not any one person’s fault.  The waste has likely been there since the inception of the process.  This is not a blame game of who inserted the waste.  Instead, it’s an intentional effort to ferret out and get rid of the waste.  Additionally, people want to work smarter, not harder, and with less feeling of wasted time and effort.  Several small waste eliminations can add up to big impacts and savings.

There are two Honorable Mentions to comment on.

Details Management

The devil is in the details. We’ve heard that over and over. And organizations are not immune to the need to pay attention to details. Whether it is worn carpet in the entryway, a cracked window in the warehouse, a grumpy receptionist, or a customer-unfriendly return policy, these things create perceptions for your staff and your customers. Left unattended, the perception turns into reality, and once a reality in your organization, people might begin to believe that management doesn’t care, so why should they? And so the downward spiral begins…and all counter to Lean Principles that call for small improvements and actions.

Product and Services Management

Organizations are expected to reinvent themselves, their products, and their services on a regular basis, if they want to stay competitive in the marketplace. That reinvention can be quite an expensive investment, depending on the extent of the changes. However, before abandoning a product and beginning development on something totally new, organizations should first look at their existing products and services from all angles to see where smaller, more manageable updates can be made, while still pleasing the customer. By analyzing products and services from 20 different perspectives, organizations may be able to update a product or service without being forced to undergo a total redesign.  Small improvements that can have a big impact.  The Lean way of thinking.

Some people try to hit a homerun with every improvement initiative.  These tools and strategies help uncover and overcome issues – sometimes homeruns, but often singles and doubles.  But who defines whether an issue is a homerun or a single?  The manager?  Hopefully not.  It should be the employee because he or she has to live with that issue every day.  A single to the manager is often a homerun for an employee.

In conclusion, remembering that Lean is about making small, incremental changes, the tools and strategies outlined in this article help do exactly that.  But you first need to learn how to use the tools and be able to identify when a tool needs to be brought out of the toolbox.  Should you want help learning more about these tools, that I call Conversation Frameworks, let me know.  I’d be happy to provide more information and details.

Additionally, an Organizational Challenges Survey exists to help understand how widespread the challenges are in the company, impacting performance and hindering the Lean Journey advancement potential.

Lean Tools and Strategies: Top 25 “Soft” Tools (not Lean-specific “Hard” Tools)

#1: Barrier Analysis

#2: Brainstorm Management

#3: Collaborator Skills

#4: Communications Management

#5: Curriculum Development

#6: Customer Service

#7: Decision Analysis

#8: Delegation Management

#9: Departmental Positioning

#10: Directional Efficiency

#11: Employee Awareness

#12: Intentional Isolation

#13: Internal Restructuring

#14: Organizational Positioning

#15: Planning and Preparation

#16: Priority Management

#17: Process Analysis

#18: Process Development

#19: Project Definition

#20: SWOT Analysis

#21: Task Management

#22: Team Management

#23: Time Management

#24: Vision/Mission/Values Statements

#25: Waste Elimination

Honorable Mentions:

#1: Details Management

#2: Product and Services Management

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PERCEPTIONS – Details Analysis Activity https://innovativemanagementtools.com/2023/12/08/perceptions-details-analysis-activity/ https://innovativemanagementtools.com/2023/12/08/perceptions-details-analysis-activity/#respond Fri, 08 Dec 2023 15:08:55 +0000 https://innovativemanagementtools.com/?p=457 The post PERCEPTIONS – Details Analysis Activity appeared first on Innovative Management Tools.

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A 2005 book titled, “Broken Windows, Broken Business: How the Smallest Remedies Reap the Biggest Rewards” by Michael Levine showcased the power of perceptions and the human brain’s ability to come to false conclusions.
 
In an online introduction and description of the book, some very valuable insights are shared:
 
1) In the world of business, the perception of the average consumer is a vital part of every business.

It starts, clearly, with something as seemingly insignificant as an inadequate supply of toys to go with Happy Meals, the prepackaged product aimed at young children. Because McDonald’s does a great deal of advertising and promotion to children, and emphasizes the Happy Meal toy in all of it, children will often ask to be taken to the restaurant specifically to get that particular toy. When the franchise owner or manager has not ordered an adequate number of toys, or the company itself has failed to produce enough and supply its restaurants, the child is disappointed, the parent frustrated, and the cycle of dissatisfaction set in motion.

2) Service is the absolute center of broken windows for business.

Call [a large corporation] sometime and have a stopwatch handy. See how long it takes for you to speak to a living, breathing human being after you’re done with all the automated phone system prompts.

3) Can little things turn a consumer against an entire brand? … The ‘weakest link’ theory is at work here, and it is very strong.

To create a personality for a business, and to have that personality permeate every aspect of the business, to have it become the business in the minds of customers, is the goal of branding… But all these things are tied to a larger concept: the idea of trust. For customers to accept a brand, to have an opinion—preferably a favorable one—about the brand, and to embrace it to the point that the mention of the brand name is enough to evoke a positive image in the mind, it must never disappoint.  When the bad impression is made on the first experience with the company, however, it’s extremely unlikely the consumer will become a regular customer. In fact, it’s better than even money that you’ll never see this particular customer again. Ever.

4) Employees who go above and beyond the call of duty are the ones who will spot and repair broken windows. Motivating employees to do so is one of the most important jobs a manager has.

The saying that a chain is as strong as its weakest link has great resonance in the world of the broken windows for business theory. An employee—especially one who has direct contact with customers—is the most visible type of broken window imaginable. Nothing will drive customers away faster than an employee who isn’t with the program.
 
In all these cases, when there is a negative perception, the brain can begin to think that the entire company is broken or on the verge of collapsing.
 
The Customer Journey, Voice of the Customer (VoC), and other tools and frameworks help identify “broken windows” inside a company.
 
The Conversation Framework PERCEPTIONS – Details Analysis Activity is a collaboration tool that allows people from all over the company to come together to identify what “broken windows” they are seeing or hearing about when interfacing with customers – the “what”.  It also moves into the “how” to fix the “broken windows”.  Identify and set a plan for repair – two crucial pieces to the equation.
 
When talking about “broken windows”, two scenarios are frequently selected in an on-going organizational challenges survey conducted by Innovative Management Tools.  Those scenarios are the following:
 
“Customers complain or ask questions about the stability of the company because of certain “details” that seem to go unattended.”

“The office upkeep/improvement budget was cut and it is beginning to show the consequences of that through “small” maintenance and upkeep details around the office.”
 
While the lack of attention to details might not have an immediate impact on a business, the long-term impact is a risk that few companies want to have dangling in front of them. 
 
Paying attention to these details and issues on a regular basis, perhaps once every six months, is a good practice for companies to adopt.  To its contrary, leaving multiple “broken windows” broken and in plain sight of customers will compound the situation and potentially push it to the point of no return or impossible to repair without requiring substantial money and effort. 
 
The moral of the story is this: Take care of the small things before they become big things.
 
PERCEPTIONS embraces the concept and ideas set forth in Michael Levine’s book from almost 20 years ago.  The timeless messages set forward in the book remain challenges to today’s companies.  PERCEPTIONS brings those messages into action with this Conversation Framework.

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INNOVATE – Product Analysis Activity https://innovativemanagementtools.com/2023/12/08/innovate-a-conversation-framework-overview/ https://innovativemanagementtools.com/2023/12/08/innovate-a-conversation-framework-overview/#respond Fri, 08 Dec 2023 14:59:53 +0000 https://innovativemanagementtools.com/?p=453 The post INNOVATE – Product Analysis Activity appeared first on Innovative Management Tools.

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Companies need to stay current, fresh, and relevant.  Most people would agree with that when talking about their products and services.  While companies know this, 71.4% of surveyed companies say that this is a challenge for them.  To be more precise, this is the scenario that resonates most with them and is most challenging:
 
“There are complaints about current products or services and a product revisit, review, upgrade, update, or analysis is needed.”
 
Revising products or services does not mean that the company must throw everything out and create something brand new.  There are many different aspects that can be factors in a product/service upgrade project.  There are 20 aspects, to be exact.  Pricing to Packaging.  Policies to After Sales Support.  Design to Distribution.  Positioning to Quality.  These only scratch the service of how a company make internal and external adjustments and tweaks to refresh and renew a product or service.  While some are traditional or “obvious”, other factors are less “front-and-center” but can have a significant impact on the market.
 
This is where the Conversation Framework INNOVATE – Product Analysis Activity comes in.  INNOVATE provides prompts and ideas in the 20 different areas to help spark ideas and collaboration around how a product or service could get a makeover.  Including people from the various areas of the company enriches the session even more.  More diverse perspectives give a broader set of possible ideas.  A broader set of ideas opens the door to ideas outside the traditional lower price or significant overhaul.
 
INNOVATE can help participants to generate enough ideas to build out a multi-phase roadmap for a product or service.

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TEAMS – Workgroup Management Activity https://innovativemanagementtools.com/2023/12/08/teams-a-conversation-framework-overview/ https://innovativemanagementtools.com/2023/12/08/teams-a-conversation-framework-overview/#respond Fri, 08 Dec 2023 14:47:38 +0000 https://innovativemanagementtools.com/?p=445 The post TEAMS – Workgroup Management Activity appeared first on Innovative Management Tools.

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Collective knowledge and teamwork are more powerful than individuals trying to do everything alone on a project.  Nobody will dispute that. 
 
An inspirational quote from years ago said, “Teamwork make the Dream work.”

Today, teams and workgroups are very commonplace in organizations.  However, despite all the greatest intentions of a team, 76.2% of companies surveyed on the topic say that they struggle in two specific areas.
 
“There are several teams that fail or fall short of their goals and outputs, signaling a need to approach team planning differently.”

“Official teams and workgroups have inconsistent results. An analysis of why this is taking place reveals that they tend to jump into the work without taking the time to create a Team Charter.”
 
Both scenarios have a common theme – upfront team planning and organization.  We tend to bring the brightest and best people resources into a team and launch them into action, urging them for quick results.  That urge to produce results prompts the team members to skip over the most crucial step in the team’s journey, the Forming stage (for those who remember the Motorola Team Stages from the 1980s and 1990s).  If you start off a team without a solid foundation, it will have consequences later on.
 
Now, let’s be realistic.  Even with a solid Forming foundation for the team, things can still go whacky and fail to produce results later for a variety of reasons.  However, the chances of team success greatly increase when the team starts off aligned and on the same page.
 
This is where the Conversation Framework TEAMS – Workgroup Management Activity can help.  TEAMS walks a newly formed team through the team chartering process in a collaborative, focused, and proactive manner.  It helps the team consider many aspects of the team’s journey that are typically overlooked or unaddressed until later when things are getting a little derailed.  That is not the best moment to talk about these things for the first time.  Emotions are high and pressure is creating tension.  The “rules of the game” are best addressed at the beginning, when there are no emotions flaring and the pressure to push forward to the deadlines is low.
 
This team chartering process, using the TEAMS framework, aligns the team members and sponsors, creates a roadmap for the journey ahead, and creates an anchoring communication tool for all stakeholders.
 
While you can’t ensure team success 100% of the time, you can ensure that teams get off on the right foot every time and increase their chances of success with TEAMS – Workgroup Management Activity, the family of Conversation Frameworks from Innovative Management Tools. 

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FRAMING – Project Definition Activity https://innovativemanagementtools.com/2023/11/14/framing-a-conversation-framework-overview/ https://innovativemanagementtools.com/2023/11/14/framing-a-conversation-framework-overview/#respond Tue, 14 Nov 2023 13:05:29 +0000 https://innovativemanagementtools.com/?p=433 The post FRAMING – Project Definition Activity appeared first on Innovative Management Tools.

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How you frame the problem determines how you frame success.
How you frame success determines how you frame the work.
How you frame the work determines how you frame the agreement on how to proceed.

 
Projects rarely succeed when they are rushed into without planning and proper definition. 
 
Defining the problem is often rushed over, confusing symptoms as problems.
 
The urge to start getting something done often results in a lack of alignment with what success looks like for the various stakeholders.
 
All the stuff in between those two points is often left figuring out the details in the moment, after the project is launched.
 
61% of companies surveyed in our on-going organizational challenges survey, DIAGNOSE, indicate that they have challenges with gathering project information and detailing the project up front.  Their most common scenario is the following:
 
“There is a time-sensitive project coming up that will require a tight control and transparency of the tasks and accomplishments and leaves no room for a “Regroup” after starting the project.”
 
This scenario is closely followed by another common challenge:
 
“An important project is on the horizon that needs to go as smoothly as possible and as formal/structured as possible.”
 
Companies know that the infamous “regrouping” does not benefit them.  Companies also have important, strategic projects that require more than a “we hope this project goes off without a hitch”.
 
While these are not wild ideas, and there is likely a never-ending list of projects from the past that could have gone better from the start, companies find themselves in the same situation over and over.
 
Enter FRAMING – Project Definition Activity, an collaborative activity that allows the project stakeholders to “frame” the project starting with the problem, then defining what success looks like, then filling in the middle section.  It’s kind of like filling up a bookshelf.  The problem and success definitions are the bookends.  The other topics, Approach, Deliverables, Investment, etc… are the middle books that complete the frame.
 
If you want to take a different approach to defining projects, consider the Conversation Framework FRAMING – Project Definition Activity.
 
For a short overview of this framework, please watch the video.

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ONBOARDING – Employee Welcoming Process Development Course https://innovativemanagementtools.com/2023/09/14/onboarding-a-conversation-frameworks-course/ https://innovativemanagementtools.com/2023/09/14/onboarding-a-conversation-frameworks-course/#respond Thu, 14 Sep 2023 01:56:13 +0000 https://innovativemanagementtools.com/?p=312 The post ONBOARDING – Employee Welcoming Process Development Course appeared first on Innovative Management Tools.

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Some alarming 2023 statistics.

38% of new employees leave their job in the first year.
40% are likely to leave in the first 90 days.

The recruitment process does everything possible to attract great talent.
HR and Management focus on talent retention.

That squishy space in between those two - the onboarding time - is a crucial time that far too many companies leave to luck and chance for creating an intentional, consistent, and positive experience for the new employees. Poor performance during the onboarding time directly impacts the new employees' willingness to stay with the company.

Enter ONBOARDING, a course designed for those organizations that are tired of Disenchanted New Employee Syndrome and want to shake it up by guiding their supervisors, managers, and HR staff through the development of a standardized onboarding process that leverages multiple Conversation Frameworks and coaching to remove that squishy space and replace it with a consistent, intentional, and welcoming experience.

A hands-on, 9-course, workshop style course that will be a game changer for those organizations that join the movement to champions and drive their onboarding experience.

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HAND-OFF – Delegation Enabler Activity https://innovativemanagementtools.com/2023/09/12/hand-off-a-conversation-framework-overview/ https://innovativemanagementtools.com/2023/09/12/hand-off-a-conversation-framework-overview/#respond Tue, 12 Sep 2023 00:32:20 +0000 https://innovativemanagementtools.com/?p=307 The post HAND-OFF – Delegation Enabler Activity appeared first on Innovative Management Tools.

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In recent surveys from organizations of all sizes, delegation has shown up in 100% of the surveys as a challenge they face.

New supervisors and managers need to delegate tasks from their individual contributor days so they can dedicate the necessary time to their new role. They are told to delegate, but very often they don't know how to do it effectively.

For seasoned managers, they may have "delegated" in the past, while the recipient feels like they were "dumped on."

The Conversation Framework HAND-OFF is here to help all supervisors and managers learn the process of effective delegation so that it becomes an intentional, proactive development tool for those being delegated to, not a reactive, quick solution just to clear the supervisor's or manager's plate for more supervisor time.

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NAVIGATE – Planning and Preparation Activity https://innovativemanagementtools.com/2023/09/10/navigate/ https://innovativemanagementtools.com/2023/09/10/navigate/#respond Sun, 10 Sep 2023 17:17:18 +0000 https://innovativemanagementtools.com/?p=303 The post NAVIGATE – Planning and Preparation Activity appeared first on Innovative Management Tools.

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Lack of planning is one of the three root causes of business problems.

How many projects have you been involved in where the group or team rushed into action without upfront planning and with the idea that you would figure out the details along the way? Then, the project hit that infamous moment when things weren't going as well as has been hoped and the team needed to "regroup"?

The Conversation Framework NAVIGATE is designed to help that project team do a short 4-hour planning session prior to jumping into action. Avoid or minimize regrouping costs, time losses, and frustrations by proactively planning instead of reactively regrouping.

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Firefighter or Pyrotechnician? https://innovativemanagementtools.com/2023/08/19/firefighter-or-pyrotechnician/ https://innovativemanagementtools.com/2023/08/19/firefighter-or-pyrotechnician/#respond Sat, 19 Aug 2023 23:33:32 +0000 https://innovativemanagementtools.com/?p=156 This is the third post in a mini-series of three. We have already talked about People and Process in previous posts.  This post we will focus on Planning / Preparation. Have you ever thought about the difference between Firefighters and Pyrotechnicians?  Firefighters: They wait in the firehouse until the alarm goes off.  Then they race […]

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This is the third post in a mini-series of three.

We have already talked about People and Process in previous posts.  This post we will focus on Planning / Preparation.

Have you ever thought about the difference between Firefighters and Pyrotechnicians? 

Firefighters: They wait in the firehouse until the alarm goes off.  Then they race to the scene of the fire, put it out, and then go back and wait for the next fire.  Despite the fact that they do occasional fire safety education, they are reactive in their work.

Pyrotechnicians: They select the fireworks that will go off, the sequence, the music, and the timing.  They are totally proactive in their jobs.

Both are talents and both are and can be learned skills.  But different jobs and roles require different skills.

So, what are you?  What about your staff?  What did you hire?  What is supported and recognized in your company culture?  What do you need to drive your organization forward?

What I offer to you this month is to consider if you have trained and conditioned your employees to be the consummate firefighter through action and praise, while verbally urging them to become better pyrotechnicians.  Therein lies a conflict.

The problem is this.  Proactive skills are exactly that – skills.  They need to be learned, practiced, and fine-tuned if we are to be good at them.  When we are constantly fighting fires, we may only have a few short minutes to put on our “proactive” hat.  Just when we think we’ll have time to do something proactive – DING! DING! DING! The fire alarm goes off again and we rush off to put out the next fire.  (And often those Firefighters get all the praise and glory in an organization while little praise and recognition is given to the Pyrotechnicians who avoid having fires to put out.)

Another thing that really perplexes me is the following:  Why is it that we very often rush through, or skip the planning stage of a project?  We get so excited to jump right in and begin “doing something” and/or we say that there isn’t enough time to plan it out beyond, “Here is the idea.  Go!”.  

And when a project is assigned to us, why we are urged to get quick answers and results?  We feel pressured to start “working.” 

What I don’t understand is that while we don’t/can’t/won’t take the time to plan up front for 2 or 3 hours, we almost always hit the point in the project when we need to “regroup.”  “Regroup” has become a common phrase in companies today.  We “regroup” because things aren’t going the way we anticipated.  How is it that we can always find the 15 hours (or 10, or 20) needed to undo the work that was done, fix the problem, redo the work, and get back to where we were before we “regrouped,” but we rarely find the time for a couple hours of planning up front?

Strategic Planning

I once met with a manufacturing company outside Chicago to help them plan for their next two years of growth.  The president knew where he would like the company to be in terms of revenue, profit, and implementation of their Lean Manufacturing initiatives.  What he needed was his management team’s support and dedication.

We conducted a planning session with the president and the department managers.  The president outlined his vision and goals to the group.  Each person had the opportunity to ask questions about the goals, challenge the numbers, and ultimately understand the target for the next 24 months. 

Once everybody understood where the company was going and agreed that it was achievable, we turned our attention to “What will it take to pull this off?”  Each manager detailed what his/her department would need to change or need to invest in if the goals were to be met.

The president learned a lot that day.  He had the raw material he needed to devise a very comprehensive plan that would bring them toward their goals.  The managers also learned many things about the other departments.  They saw that Purchasing was going to need more support and investment than anyone else and that Sales was ready to open the flood gates for increased sales.  However, Sales also learned that the rest of the organization wasn’t ready for the floodgates to be opened right now.  Too many other things needed to get into place or else the company would have been buried by a surge in orders.

Had the group not met together and planned together, each department would have been off making plans on their own – unaware of what impact their actions might have on others in the company.  The management team saw the big picture from the session and the president wasn’t the one trying to paint the picture for everybody.  They painted the picture themselves.

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Taking the time to plan and prepare for upcoming changes, projects, and strategic initiatives does not have to be complicated.  Remember that people accept change better when there is a focus on processes, when they are included in the process, when they are allowed and encouraged to ask questions or voice concerns, and when they feel that there is a plan in place so that they don’t have to “regroup” later.

So, if you really want people to be proactive and help drive your company forward toward a great future, create opportunities for them to build and hone their proactive skills.  The first step to becoming proactive is to learn to plan. 

The Benefits Planning:

1. Lower costs by eliminating rework and “regrouping”

2. Increase productivity by making sure there is a plan and people know their priorities that will bring them closer to the goals

3. Improve morale by opening communication lines, minimizing stress and frustration for those who typically don’t have a role in the planning process, and validating employees’ contributions to the organization’s strategic goals

4. Develop peoples’ skills by giving them a vehicle for learning how to be proactive

A Few Best Practices

1. Conduct a planning session for every major project or initiative (ideally in a structured environment using the IMT Conversation Framework NAVIGATE or other collaborative planning and preparation tool)

2. Make sure that the goal is clear and attainable (stretch is OK)

3. Make sure the project or initiative champion participates in the session

4. Use a facilitator from outside the area (or organization) to bring fresh perspectives and unbiased suggestions to the group

Until next time!

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