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Name of author Rick Baker, P.Eng.

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@GKWCC #CEOP2P: Consider ex- Canadian Armed Forces people...they offer strong leadership skills.

by Rick Baker
On Feb 10, 2013

A Couple of related articles…   Crank Up Your Leadership Strengths      General Rick Hillier visits Waterloo

The @GKWCC #P2P series of thought tweets contains ideas, quotes, & suggestions provided by local business leaders at "CEO Peer-to-Peer" group meetings, sponsored by the Greater Kitchener Waterloo Chamber of Commerce.

The goals of the thought tweets: to help local business leaders and to promote the sharing of business thoughts.

The thoughts expressed are not opinions of the Greater Kitchener Waterloo Chamber of Commerce...they are opinions of local business leaders who are Chamber members and participate in the Chamber's CEO P2P program.

Right Butts, Right Buses, Right Seats, & Right Tasks

by Rick Baker
On Feb 7, 2013

Following a presentation about a week ago, we had a detailed discussion about ‘getting the right butts into the right seats of the bus’.

I had presented this slide…

And, the following slide...

 

This was an effort to take Jim Collins’ bus analogy one step further. This is essential because, beyond theory, the advice provided by business educators and motivational speakers doesn’t go far enough to help business leaders and managers resolve the people problems that are common in real-life business situations.

While creating the presentation, I spent a lot of time thinking about ‘How?’ … how do we get the right people on the bus?  

Carrying on with the bus analogy, I concluded the best first step is – Look at your existing people, your existing bus, and the seats on the bus…including the seat’s fabric, nuts & bolts, etc. And, specifically, look at each person’s talents & strengths and how those talents & strengths [or lack of them] present themselves when that person does a task.

Understand the linkage between the person’s talents & strengths and the tasks you are asking the person to perform. That is the main point.

To pave the path for good-to-great performance at work, a leader or manager must understand 2 things:

1.       The details of the Person:

Talents: does the person possess the talent to do the task?

Knowledge: does the person possess the knowledge [often, specialized knowledge] to do the task?

Skill: has the person practised and performed the task enough to possess the skill to perform it well?

  • For Simple tasks skill will be developed with less practise
  • For Complicated and Complex tasks it may take years to master the skills

 2.       The details of the Task:

  • Is it a routine task or a not-routine task?
  • Is there a system/process for doing the task?
  • Is that system/process in writing?
  • Has that system been well communicated to all involved and affected?

If the leader or manager does not understand both those things then the leader is taking a chance – taking a risk – when people are assigned to perform tasks.

To make this point more graphically - It is risky to assume bright people can perform simple tasks.

Another graphic point – When a task is not performed well there are only a few reasons why it is not performed well.

Seeking Simple, let’s create a short list of the reasons why a task is not performed well:

  1. The task is impossible, so nobody could do it
  2. The task is possible but not clearly defined/described, so people may do the wrong thing
  3. The task is possible but the person doesn’t understand it: the person isn’t capable of understanding the way the task was defined/described; the person, for one reason or another, didn’t listen…the communication failed
  4. The task is possible & the person understands it  but lacks the talent to perform it
  5. The task is possible & the person understands it  but lacks the knowledge to perform it
  6. The task is possible & the person understands it  but lacks the skill [practise/experience] to perform it
  7. The task is possible & the person is capable of doing it but chooses not to do it: the person chooses to spend the time doing something else; multi-tasking - the person does something deemed more important and runs out of time; the person doesn't like the task; the person is prone to procrastinate; the person doesn’t like the boss or the company - sabotage

Yes – even the short list contains many possibilities. That’s the challenge of managing and leading people. Many things can go wrong according to Murphy they do go wrong.

So - leaders and managers need systems/processes for sorting through the possibilities to determine why things went wrong.

Back to the buses…the leader needs to understand how to fit people into seats…get the right people on the bus and get the wrong people off the bus.

What does that mean?

Specifically, what do the words ‘right’ and ‘wrong’ mean?

That question yields troubling answers.

  1. There are no ‘right’ people.
  2. There are lots of ‘wrong’ people.

Let’s keep on using the bus analogy but let’s replace the words ‘right’ and ‘wrong’.

Leaders need to make sure the people on the bus fit well in their seats. That’s what it is really all about.

It is not about ‘right’ and ‘wrong’…it is about differences. Square pegs are not ‘right’ or ‘wrong’ they just don’t fit well into round holes.

And –

  1. It is easier to adjust seats than it is to change people.
  2. It is easier to adjust seats than it is to remove & replace people.
  3. You cannot adjust a seat to fit a person without first measuring the person.

The first step then is – measuring the person.

How?

How do we go about measuring the person?

We must do this in small steps….one step at a time.

We must consider each of these steps in an as-objective-as-possible manner.

We must review 3 facets of each small step:

  1. The Task [thought and action steps/pieces]
  2. The Person’s Strengths [Innate Talent + Specialized Knowledge + Practised Skill] doing the Task.
  3. The Person’s Frame of Mind [good mood, bad mood, emotions, feelings - does the person enjoy the Task?]

If the person accurately understands the task, has the strength required to perform the task, and has a positive attitude about doing the task then the task will be done right.

If any of these 3 pieces are missing then there is a high likelihood the task will not be performed well.

The keys to helping people succeed at work tasks are (1) assuming as little as possible and (2) helping as much as possible when people illustrate they are struggling to get over a hurdle. To help a person get over a hurdle the leader needs to be able to accurately identify the hurdle. Does the hurdle rest in the person or in the task?

It is easier to remove the hurdles in tasks. So, leaders should remove as many of those hurdles as possible…establishing clear processes and testing those processes with many people to prove the task is doable.

...making sure the task is not going to be the hurdle

 

 

Thought Tweet #666

by Rick Baker
On Feb 4, 2013

Thought Tweet #666 You cannot force a round talent into a square task.

 

The Thinking Behind The Tweet

"A round man cannot be expected to fit in a square hole right away. He must have time to modify his shape." Mark Twain

And...

Too often we focus on roles as if they are a singular or homogeneous thing. We do better when we treat roles as a package of different tasks, some stand-alone tasks, some interpersonal tasks. People succeed in roles when their talents and strengths mesh with the tasks in the roles. [and, of course, the people have an achievement-oriented attitude]

And... 

Tags:

STRENGTHS: People-Focused for Success | Thought Tweets

Separating Routine & not-Routine Work-Tasks

by Rick Baker
On Feb 2, 2013

 

Leaders need to narrow their focus and dig deep into work-tasks.

For Routine work-tasks we need to establish systems and processes. Many business gurus have taught this…Michael Gerber’s E-Myth series is a good enough what-to-do manual for Routine work.

not-Routine work-tasks require a different type of attention. Few business gurus teach this. I have found Edward de Bono is the best guide…he has written over 70 books on creative thinking and how it can be applied to business.

I have tried to Seek Simple

  

 

In the above picture of Routine work and not-Routine work you see the 80/20 Rule coming into play…at least 80% of our time is spent doing Routine work. That’s the light green part. A much smaller amount of time is spent on not-Routine such as strategizing, idea-storming, and innovating. That’s the dark green part.

Does this visual look a little like PAC-MAN? I hope so. Routine work tends to eat up all of our time. This includes making mistakes and fixing them. This includes fire-fighting the same old types of fires over and over again. Routine work eats up our time and our opportunities for creative thinking.

Here is one example - Leaders need to simplify Routine work to remove communication-confusion…McDonalds provides the best case study. Simple tools like checklists help: checklists stop airplanes from crashing and infections from spreading during major surgeries. If checklists can work such wonders in the airline and medical sectors you can be confident they will do the same thing at your business.

not-Routine work requires a different approach...

  


not-Routine work-tasks require different skills. And, as educators like Dan Pink point out and companies like Google prove, not-Routine work involves a fun-factor.

Creativity happens when people are motivated. People are motivated when they are working in a Strengths Zone.

Creativity can be taught.

Everyone has creativity…many of us have to un-bury it. There are quick-and comfortable ways of doing this.

And, Creativity is an essential ingredient in the magic potion of business success in the 21st Century.

Tags:

80/20 Rule | Leaders' Thoughts | Seeking Simple! | STRENGTHS: People-Focused for Success

Let's Turn This Problem Into Opportunity

by Rick Baker
On Feb 1, 2013

Poor Innovation Ranking Dims the Lights on Canada's Competitiveness and Prosperity

“Overall, Canada’s ranking declined to 14th place in 2012 – from 12th place in 2011 and 10th place in 2010. But in the sub-area of innovation and business sophistication factors, Canada fell six places from 15th to 21st – no other top-ranked country dropped nearly as much.”

Ottawa, September 27, 2012

Conference Board of Canada

***

So - the studies are telling us...

On a global scale, Canada is slipping down the ladders that measure business success.

What this means is Canada is having a tougher time exporting its products and services while at the same time other countries are having an easier time selling their products and services to Canadians.

It also means Canadians are spending too much time tripping over one another’s businesses…thinking small and doing unproductive, repetitive things.

Here's the picture... 

This is about how the people in the rest of the world perceive Canadians: our clients are pulled toward other countries' innovation.  

It’s also about what’s happening in our own back yards: We are struggling too much with one another and that’s not good for any of our businesses…we sell cars at employee pricing, we advertise almost everything with an 'On Sale' message. While we think we are doing our best to compete during these tough times, hindsight will show we are acting like Nero, who was fiddling while Rome burned….we are fiddling while Canada's economic backbone is getting burned.


***

The Problem

 

Three aspects:

  1. We are falling behind other countries,
  2. We are struggling with local competition, &
  3. We are struggling with our own people…and not putting their Talents & Strengths to best use.
The Opportunity


Our business leaders are in the best positions to create opportunities.

The best way to do this is to put Talents & Strengths to Work [at work].

Here are the Major Advantages:

  1. It is Quick,
  2. It is Inexpensive, &
  3. It is the “Right Thing” to do...for their future, for your future...for our future.


 

Tags:

Leaders' Thoughts | Solutions & Opportunities | STRENGTHS: People-Focused for Success

Thought Tweet #665

by Rick Baker
On Feb 1, 2013

Thought Tweet #665 Do you know the nature of the relationships between the talents and work-tasks?


The Thinking Behind The Tweet

Talents tend to bounce off tasks.

This is especially true when talents first meet tasks...talents often resist new tests.

And bounce off is predictable when talents meet repeated defeats at the hands of tasks...after repeated defeats, talents will avoid tasks at all costs.

It's like talents have egos of their own.

Tags:

STRENGTHS: People-Focused for Success | Thought Tweets

Copyright © 2012. W.F.C (Rick) Baker. All Rights Reserved.