StrategyDriven Podcast Special Edition 33 – An Interview with Larry Myler, author of Indispensable By Monday

StrategyDriven Podcasts focus on the tools and techniques executives and managers can use to improve their organization’s alignment and accountability to ultimately achieve superior results. These podcasts elaborate on the best practice and warning flag articles on the StrategyDriven website.

Special Edition 33 – An Interview with Larry Myler, author of Indispensable By Monday explores how to increase one’s personal profit-production, thereby enhancing the organization’s bottom-line and one’s overall business value. During our discussion, Larry Myler, author of Indispensable By Monday: Learn the Profit-Producing Behaviors that will Help Your Company and Yourself and Chief Executive Officer of By Monday, shares with us his insights and illustrative examples regarding:

  • the several key employee attributes that make them more valuable to their organization, more likely to be promoted, and more likely to be retained during a corporate downsizing
  • how to calculate one’s value to the organization – regardless of position or function
  • creating value in areas not under one’s direct control
  • communicating one’s profit contribution during an annual performance evaluation
  • why it is important for employees to be able to read their company’s financial statements and what information they should be able to glean from these documents

Additional Information

In addition to the invaluable insights Larry shares in Indispensable By Monday and this special edition podcast are the resources accessible from his website, www.ByMonday.com.   Larry’s book, Indispensable By Monday, can be purchased by clicking here.

STRATEGYDRIVEN BONUS

As a special bonus, Larry Myler has made Part 1 of Indispensable By Monday available for free to all StrategyDriven listeners and readers. Through this excerpt, you’ll learn:

  • what being indespensible looks like
  • what your boss wants you to do
  • how to capture your contributions
  • and much, much more!

Click here to download your copy of Indispensable By Monday‘s Part 1: Help Your Company, Help Yourself.

Final Request…

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Thank you again for listening to the StrategyDriven Podcast!


About the Author

Larry Myler, author of Indispensable By Monday, is Chief Executive Officer of By Monday, a consulting firm specializing in profit enhancement through employee engagement. Over the course of his thirty year career, Larry has helped others improve their businesses through consulting and training for leadership teams and employees in the areas of interpersonal communication, profit enhancement, organizational efficiency, survey research, and more. His past clients include AT&T, Shell Oil, Lockheed Martin, and Ford Motor Company. To read Larry’s complete biography, click here.
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Creating a Visual Company: What it means and why productivity hinges upon it

In a Visual Company people communicate visually with flowcharts, mind maps and other visuals just as frequently as they do with written documents. Why?

We live in exponential times. It’s estimated that more unique information will be generated this year alone than in the previous five thousand years combined!

We’ve all heard the saying “a picture is worth a thousand words.” Visuals let you condense information into a form that is both quickly digestible and shows connections and relationships. In a fast changing world, using visuals helps solve the information overload problem. I believe that within five to ten years, all companies will be visual companies.

[wcm_restrict]Studies show that communicating with visuals is up to six times more effective than communicating with words alone. When you look at information presented visually, you can immediately see the key ideas and the relationships between them, instead of having to take the time to read a lengthy report.

In a global company with many different languages, visuals provide a common way to summarize and effectively communicate key ideas. Mind maps, organization charts, flowcharts, project charts, graphs, plans and blueprints are all very effective at communicating information clearly and quickly, within diverse groups and distributed organizations. Yet today less than three percent of business communication includes visuals. This is because, until the development of visual processor software in 2010, creating a visual was more trouble than it was worth.

Before the visual processor, visuals had to be created manually with complex graphics software, usually by an expert. Even for experts, producing a visual like a flowchart was time consuming and the results were often not presentation-quality.

But now, just as anyone can use a word processor to quickly create professional-looking written documentation, anyone can use a visual processor to just as quickly create professional-looking visuals.

With a visual processor, a typical computer user can create presentation-quality visuals in minutes. The visual processor makes the promise of the Visual Company a reality.
 

Why Become a Visual Company?

Visual Companies grow faster, operate at lower costs and are more profitable than other companies.

  • A Visual Company is agile because it communicates new initiatives quickly and effectively.
  • It operates efficiently with low costs because everyone understands the priorities and follows the same processes.
  • It is flexible: knowledge is easily shared between people because it is documented and accessible.

In a Visual Company, processes are defined and documented with process flowcharts.

Projects are planned with mind maps and managed with Gantt charts and timelines that are automatically generated from the mind mapped plan.

There are clear assignments of responsibility that are documented with an organization chart.

Visual Companies formulate and communicate their strategy and operating plans visually. They summarize key issues using a mind map so these things can be easily communicated and understood.

Visual Companies illustrate their generic strategy with a matrix. They validate their strategy with a SWOT diagram.

And Visual Companies create their operating plans with a project chart.

Summary

A Visual Company uses visuals to summarize and quickly communicate key information. Its organizational structure, goals, plans, processes and expertise are documented and easily accessible, and all of its employees have a visual processor on their desktop, just as they have a word processor today. This allows the company to operate efficiently and to react quickly in order to take advantage of new opportunities.

Visual Companies grow faster, operate with lower costs and are more profitable than traditional companies . In the next decade all companies that survive and prosper will have to become visual companies.[/wcm_restrict][wcm_nonmember]


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About the Author

Paul Stannard is the founder and CEO of SmartDraw.com. A self-taught software developer, Paul began his career in the PC industry in 1980, founding a software company that developed software for Apple computers. Since that time, he has written more than a dozen published software applications, primarily graphics software. Paul, himself, wrote the first version of SmartDraw, and continues to play a key role in developing the company’s software products. To read Paul’s complete biography, click here.

Standards and Expectations Warning Flag 1 – Standards Creep

StrategyDriven Standards and Expectations Warning Flag articleHave you ever been confronted by a customer’s challenge that your product or service quality just isn’t what it used to be? Or notice the number of quality defects in your products or services has somehow increased over the past months, quarters, or years? Or felt so much pressure to get something done that you deemed the quality to be ‘good enough for government work?’

All of these are signs of standards creep; not a beneficial raising of the bar but rather an allowance of ever worsening performance.[wcm_restrict plans=”25541, 25542, 25653″]

Standards creep occurs for any of a number of reasons, many of which seem justified at the time of the initial allowance for substandard performance. As time goes one, these types of allowances become easier to make and more frequently made – they become the new norm. Thus, standards creep typically occurs over extended periods of time.

Regardless of why it happens, this unintended, undesired, and frequently unnoticed lowering of performance and quality standards inevitably becomes self evident in an organization’s products and services; placing at risk the company’s financial performance as well as its reputation. While not all inclusive, the four lists below, Process-Based Warning Flags, Process Execution Warning Flags – Behaviors, Potential, Observable Results, and Potential Causes, are designed to help organization leaders to recognize whether their performance and quality standards have or are at risk of declining over time. Only after a problem is recognized and its causes identified can the needed action be taken to move the organization toward improved performance.

Process-Based Warning Flags

  • standards are vaguely or undefined
  • standards are not well documented or easily located and retrieved
  • communications programs, such as a required reading program, does not exist or do not adequately ensure employee awareness and understanding of performance standards and expectations
  • compliance with performance and quality standards are not tracked with mechanisms such as performance metrics
  • training programs do not routinely reinforce all of the organization’s performance standards and expectations
  • reinforcement programs, such as a management observation program, either does not exist or does not adequately cover the broad spectrum of organizational standards
  • adherence to performance standards and expectations is not incorporated into the organization’s performance appraisal system

Process Execution Warning Flags – Behaviors

  • executives and managers do not make the time to observe in-the-field work and reinforce performance expectations; they seldom practice management by walking around
  • executives and managers do not demand or focus on performance measures reflective of the organization’s adherence to performance standards
  • executives and managers do not routinely include the discussion of organizational performance standards in their communications
  • executives and manager often accept performance that is slightly below the established standard
  • executives and managers provide only positive or superficially constructive feedback
  • executives and managers seldom provide feedback outside of routine performance review periods

Potential, Observable Results

  • human performance error rates increase
  • rework rate increases
  • product and service quality defect rates increase
  • warrantee repair costs increase
  • product returns increase
  • customer support center calls increase
  • customer satisfaction ratings decline
  • sales, particularly for high-end products and services, decline
  • overall financial performance declines

Potential Causes

  • executives and managers are uncomfortable with confrontation and so do not aggressively reinforce organizational standards
  • executives and managers don’t feel the routine reinforcement of standards is important
  • executives and managers assume employees understand what is expected of them and so don’t believe it is necessary to document and make easily accessible specific performance guidelines
  • executives and managers feel overwhelmed by administrative work and prioritize in-the-field observation of work and reinforcement of standards as being of secondary importance
  • executives and managers accept substantial performance because they feel it is expedient to do so
  • managers function as ‘working managers’ and therefore do not reinforce those performance standards that make their work perceivably difficult (see Management and Leadership Warning Flag 1 – Working Managers)

Final Thought…

Product and service quality is often viewed as a marketplace differentiator. Therefore, many organizations continually seek opportunities to improve quality across the entire spectrum of offering characteristics. Subsequently, those organizations not continuously raising their standards are frequently perceived to be allowing the downward creep in the quality of their offerings. Thus, standards creep can be actually realized through a decline in performance or perceptibly realized when standards improvements do not keep pace with those of competitors.[/wcm_restrict][wcm_nonmember plans=”25541, 25542, 25653″]


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Get Buy-In First Before Initiating Strategic Change

StrategyDriven Change Management ArticleInitiatives involve change. Yet no matter how essential or critical the change, change is fraught with pitfalls that are costly.

The problem is that too often the change is a push from the top, with the assumption being that because the initiative is important, and well presented, that folks will naturally buy-in. But we know that’s not true.

The conventional way of achieving buy-in usually involves some sort of influencing:

  • find the decision makers in a group or those deemed to be ‘in the know’;
  • inundate these folks with the importance of this particular new initiative;
  • get influencers involved with creating and testing a prototype;
  • get 5 or 6 influencers to use it and start a buzz going;
  • write up case studies and send them out to the user population;
  • test the results, make the necessary changes, and start the implementation.

Basically, it’s a sales job: it’s information-driven and does not manage a belief change; individuals are often left out of consideration; communication is often top down rather than across contexts and individual-criteria based.

A Change Initiative Deemed Successful

I interviewed the CEO of a well-known copy company, asking him how he managed change. He told me of a recent initiative that had needed buy-in from 30,000 employees. He spent over a million dollars on a high quality dog and pony show – and then went on the road for 6 months to introduce the initiative.

He said everyone bought in. Everyone I asked? Well, yes, except for about 10%.
SDM: What happened to those 10%?
CEO: It became a retention issue.
SDM: You fired them? You fired 3,000 people?
CEO: Yes, but it wasn’t a problem. They were deadwood: the folks that had been around 18-20 years.

He fired the core – the very history – of his company because he didn’t know how to get buy-in. Others have since told me that a 10% fall-out rate is great, that it could have been worse.

We have assumed that by asking our target audience to make behavioral shifts – often leading to new job descriptions, or new relationships and skills – we can get buy-in. But we are merely pitching an idea from our own map of the world and assuming that the listeners will react as we want. We are pushing from the outside, hoping to get specific results from the inside.

The Systems of Change

We actually have no idea what criteria needs to be met before others are willing to change. We have no idea what internal issues we’re asking people to shift.

We don’t realize that before change can happen, a series of internal agreements must be accomplished to ensure the congruency of the unique system the person or group has lived with for some time.

Until or unless a person or group is consciously willing to support a request for change, they will merely attempt to carry out what they think they’ve understood.

But what does that mean? It means people will only do what they are comfortable with, to the level they agree. It’s quite impractical to assume that others will change because they’re told to.

Let’s think about that for a moment. People-systems include all of the criteria – rules, roles, relationships, beliefs, partners, economic factors, branding and competition issues, ego needs – which the people have already bought into and acted upon when entering the system (i.e. becoming an employee).

In fact, the entire range of criteria that folks have originally bought into is relatively impervious to change, otherwise it wouldn’t be a system. And anything new that enters that system must parallel the same norms, rules, beliefs, and implied outcomes included in the status quo, or the system will reject it.

In other words, if a team has been doing a job based on one set of rules, they won’t change their behaviors just because a new set of rules has been issued. They would certainly individually give it a try because the request comes from on-high, but they might not know how to work together as a team with the new rules, or they might individually be carrying out functions inappropriately because their unconscious annoyance might kick in, or whatever.

Indeed, when others must acquiesce to change, when rules and roles and norms, relationships and skills must change as a result, the ‘inside’ needs to shift more than the ‘outside’ – the inner beliefs rather than the external behavior or rules.

Change Our Beliefs

What if we believed that:

  1. unless each person – each person – that will be a part of the change process has to buy-in to the change before they are presented with an action plan or they might end up unwittingly (or ‘wittingly’) sabotaging the operation;
  2. a system will reject any element that threatens its status quo;
  3. people are doing the best they can at any moment, but may have conflicts: What if the change encroaches on their levels of responsibility, or interaction with colleagues or clients or other departments? What about managing new partner relationships? A lot of ideas and responsibilities may be competing in the same category for the same mind share;
  4. unless there is buy-in at the belief level, people may not necessary know how, or be (un)consciously willing, to change;
  5. people are generally willing to change and be compliant at a conscious level but un/sub conscious issues may create a different set of buy-in behaviors that may be counter productive to the ultimate change requested;
  6. decisions don’t need to get made right away – the status quo has successfully been in place until ‘now’;
  7. disagreement up-front might end up shedding light on inherent problems with a proposed implementation, and managing the disagreement might yield a more robust solution.

In other words, people may not be aware that they have issues that are causing them to not be compliant with the change request, and that without discovering and then managing these issues up front, there will be implementation issues that may derail the success of the project. Not to mention how the change process might be enhanced as buy-in discussions might lead to increased creativity and leadership.

Let’s approach change by recognizing that buy-in should be achieve before attempting to implement any change initiative.


About the Author

Sharon Drew Morgen is founder of Morgen Facilitations, Inc. (www.newsalesparadigm.com). She is the visionary behind Buying Facilitation®, the decision facilitation model that enables people to change with integrity. A pioneer who has spoken about, written about, and taught the skills to help buyers buy, she is the author of the acclaimed New York Times Business Bestseller Selling with Integrity and the new book Dirty Little Secrets: Why buyers can’t buy and sellers can’t sell and what you can do about it. She lives in Austin, Texas.