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Hub You - Getting it Together: Integrating Customer Focus, Involvement, and Horizontal Management
Bubble Wrap Branding .I'm always seeking fun and creative ways to market my clients, and myself so I just couldn't overlook this opportunity. Chase’s Calendar of Events has chosen January 30 as this year’s day when Americans should stop and appreciate the uniqueness and versatility of Bubble Wrap®.Even more interesting is that Bubble Wrap® was invented as plastic wallpaper with a paper backing. After the plastic wallpaper failed to take off in the consumer market, the inventors realized that their invention could be used as a packaging material. Look where it is today, a mainstream of modern life. We can all aspire to having our product become a household word. Wouldn’t it be great if the first person someone thinks of when they have a problem to resolve or needs a solution were you and your product?The point of this trivial information is to send home the message that your success is all about branding. It is vital to brand yourself. That means build an image in someone's mind that pops (no pun intended) to the forefront when they need a particular product, service or expertise. Branding yourself doesn't happen overnight. First, you have to compete with the awareness factor. (Do they even know that you exist?) Next, you have to overcome the credibility factor. (They know who you are, but do they know what you can do for them?) Finally, you have to tackle accessibility or availability (Can they reach you when they need to? Do they know where and how to get in touch with you?)Think again about Bubble Wrap® and all of its unlikely applications. People never seem to throw it away. They save it for future uses or because it’s cool and Reversing Direction 1. From Internal Focus: Products and services are pushed out to the market To Customer Focus: Products and services are pulled through the organization From Internal Focus: Management and internal professionals "know best" To Customer Focus: "Naive listening" keeps everyone tuned to changing needs From Internal Focus: Performance measurements are top down and aimed at maximizing internal control To Customer Focus: Rigorous measurements are based on customers' perceptions of value 2. From Functional Management: Departments are narrowly accountable for the results of their individual units To Horizontal Management: Managers are accountable for understanding and managing core strategic processes that flow across departments From Functional Management: Departmental walls cause work and customers to "fall between the cracks" To Horizontal Management: Customer needs drive the key work processes that are managed across departments From Functional Management: Management intuition and hunches drive decision making and resource allocation To Horizontal Management: Rigorous data and analysis help clarify systemic cause-and-effect relationships 3. From Management-Centeredness: Management's needs come first in a "command and control" hierarchy To Total Involvement: Managers become "servant leaders" to a team-based organization From Management-Centeredness: Employees serve management To Total Involvement: Employees serve internal and external customers From Management-Centeredness: Information is hoarded To Total Involvement: Information is widely shared For most organizations, these are not minor course corrections. Each of these three key areas demands changing direction by a full 180 degrees. Besides changing direction in any one of these key areas individually, there is an ever more pressing need to integrate all three as an organization-wide system. This can be either an area-by-area evolution or a broad scale simultaneous implementation. For example, an organization might start by focusing on customers, begin managing processes with basic teams, and then move toward shared leadership and self-directed teams. Or the change effort may begin by involving employees through teams, focus on customers, and then move to incorporate process management. An executive at a U How to Build a Customer Focused Business If we don't change our direction we are likely to end up where we're headed.You can have the best products, the plushest offices, the best location, but unless you are a ‘customer focused’ business, all of this counts for nothing, you will never really hit the heights you deserve.So what can you do to build a business which focuses outwardly on the customer, and not inwardly on the business?Build Passion and CommitmentThe first building block is passion and commitment. This is the very foundation stone of a customer focused business. Without passion and commitment the structure you will build above will be weak and prone to collapse at the first sign of stress.The passion and commitment has to come from you and your staff. All of you have to totally believe in the concept of the customer being the centre of everything you do. From the moment you step into work everyone has to do whatever it takes to satisfy the customer.As the key person in the business what can you do to build passion and commitment? Lead from the front and set an example. Keep the concept at the top of the agenda and demonstrate it in everything you do. Keep talking about it. Celebrate all the great examples of putting the customer totally in focus.Build Processes Around Your Customer Not The BusinessAll great businesses have clearly laid down processes on how to get things done. Whether you have a formal Process Manual or a Quick Reference Guide, which sets out your processes, a clear procedure provides confidence and clarity for both your staff and the customer.But don’t just build your processes around making things easier for you, build them to make things easier for the customer. Look at every step in the pro In today's "Nanosecond" culture, successful organizations are doing what was once considered impossible. They are increasing customer satisfaction, shortening process cycles and response times, reducing costs, and developing innovative new products and services -- all at the same time. Not long ago, organizations could succeed by excelling at one or two of these areas. But the corporate landscape is now littered with the once mighty victims of this obsolete thinking. Today's winners are capitalizing on the changes and challenges facing all organizations by being better and faster and cheaper and newer then their less nimble competitors. Pointed In The Wrong Direction Transforming a traditional organization to one that's better, faster, cheaper, and newer is extremely difficult. That's because organizations have built powerful cultures, systems, and practices that are now pointed in the wrong direction. This misdirection can be found across three key areas: • Internally-Focused -- most decisions about products, services, and organization direction are inside out. Product and service development specialists, technical experts, managers, planners, and other professionals spend most of their time inside the organization pushing products and services out to the market. Too often the needs of the organization are put ahead of those people it's trying to "serve". As John McDonnell, Chairman and CEO of McDonnell Douglas put it, "we did not always listen to what the customer had to say before telling him what he wanted". This we-know-best approach is now finding many long time leaders out of sync with their markets. The ratings (and revenues) of many mighty corporations are plummeting. Their "loyal" (once treated as captive) customers find products and services that better reflect their changing perceptions of value. • Functionally Managed -- individual departments work to optimize their own internal efficiency. Goals, objectives, measurements, and career paths move up and down within the narrow, functional "chimney walls". Functional managers and their employees focus on doing their own jobs or segment of the production, delivery, or support process. Functionally managed organizations typically reduce service/quality levels while increasing cycle times and costs by; 1) fostering an "us-versus-them" approach to communications and fighting for organizational resources, 2) leaving unmanaged gaps between departments which disrupt cross-functional work processes, 3) making improvements or changes in one department which hurts the effectiveness of other departments in the process, and, 4) losing sight of customer-supplier relationships and meeting everyone's needs. Since the 1950s, Toyota has worked tirelessly to reduce the walls and gaps between departments. By the 1970s, their manufacturing methods became widely known throughout Japan as the "Toyota Production Methods". In the early 1980s, their highly successful practices migrated to North America as Just-In-Time manufacturing. Stressing the importance of managing across organizational boundaries, a Toyota executive said, "It is not enough to manage the affairs within your own division. One of the most important functions of a division manager is to improve coordination between his own division and other divisions. It you cannot handle this task, please go work for an American company". • Management-Centered -- management's needs, goals, and perspectives are the starting point for all activities. Managers and their staff professionals are the brains and employees are the hands. Employees serve their managerial masters and do as they are told. Broad business perspectives and strategies, operational performance data, problem solving and decision making authority, and cross-functional skills are kept by management. But the world is now moving too fast to maintain this archaic "command and control" approach that puts management at the center of the universe. Managers can no longer know enough, fast enough, about enough things, enough of the time to anticipate enough of the changes that are needed to improve the organization enough to become better and faster and cheaper and newer enough. Partial Improvement Patches and Pieces Recognizing the urgent need to quickly reverse direction, many organizations are implementing a variety of improvement programs and process. These include: • Employee Involvement and Empowerment -- many training and motivational programs, as well as structural changes aim to move daily problem solving, decision making, customer satisfaction, and productivity improvement responsibilities closer to the front lines. • Teams -- a rapidly growing employee involvement trend uses departmental, problem solving, cross-functional, project, process improvement, planning and coordinating, and self-directed work teams in many combinations and configurations. • Customer Service -- increasingly organizations are identifying key customer groups, clarifying and ranking their expectations, working to realign the organization's systems customer around those expectations, and training employees to deal with customers more effectively. • Process Improvement and Reengineering -- data-based tools and techniques, flowcharting, and other "mapping" approaches improve processes at micro or departmental levels. In other cases, processes are radically reengineered across vertical departments at macro or strategic levels. • Training and Development -- many executives recognize the need for massive improvements in skill levels throughout their organizations. This is leading to major increases in technical, personal communications and effectiveness, team (leaders and members), data-based tools and techniques, process improvement and management, and coaching skill development. • Technology -- investments in factory automation, information systems, voice and data communication systems, inventory control systems, and so on are growing rapidly as companies push for higher productivity, faster response times, and improved service/quality. Many of the above efforts are piecemeal or implemented in isolation. For example, training and development, customer service, technology, and process reengineering are often implemented by separate departments with little or no joint planning and coordination. As a result, products or services are either better or faster or cheaper or newer, but rarely all four. That leads to a weakened competitive position. And cynicism for subsequent change programs grows throughout the organization. Total Quality Management (TQM) is one management approach that can successfully integrate all of the above improvement efforts. But very few organizations are implementing truly total quality management. Most so-called TQM efforts are really PQM -- Partial Quality Management. That's why many studies now show that 50-70 percent of what are called TQM efforts are dying or dead. The good news is that 30-50 percent of TQM implementations (those that are truly total) are dramatically increasing customer satisfaction, shortening process cycles and response times, reducing costs and strengthening innovation. Although it's very tough to do, it can clearly be done. The Labels Rarely Describe The Contents The TQM/PQM problem is hardly unique. Most labels describing a number of organization change and improvement efforts have become meaningless. For example, when an executive talks about building a team-based organization, he or she may mean instilling a "teaminess" attitude. Or this might mean using temporary task forces to solve problems. Possibly the executive envisions filling their organization with employee improvement teams (similar to quality circles). Or he or she may want to develop self-directed work teams with no direct supervision. Some times "Reengineering" describes layoffs or traditional "slash and burn" cost cutting exercises. In other cases, reengineering means a change to the organization's structure. Sometimes it means installing new information technology systems. Or reengineering could be a radical revamping of the macro, strategic processes that establish how most work and customer interactions flow across the organization. Successful change and improvement initiatives are integrated or "whole" rather then partial and piecemeal. They flow from the organization's basic reason for being, values, vision of the future, and strategies. The effort is intertwined with the organization's operating goals, systems, and measurements. These changes and improvements aren't programs bolted on the side of the organization. These approaches are tightly intertwined and connected to management systems, daily practices, and behavior. As he continues a long string of successes in building "the new GE", CEO Jack Welch observed, "The winners of the 90s will be those who can develop a culture that allows them to move faster, communicate more clearly, and involve everyone in a focused effort to serve every more demanding customers". At Multifoods, the international food processing giant (brands include Robin Hood and Bicks), Human Resource vice president, Bob Maddocks finds that "the improvement process isn't separate from good leadership and management practices". He adds, "We want everyone involved in operating the company, focusing on customers, and improving our processes and systems. It's got to become a way of life for all of us". Whatever labels are used, a "wholistic" or systems approach to change and improvement means reversing the inward focus, management-centeredness, and vertical management found in most organizations. Reversing Direction 1. From Internal Focus: Products and services are pushed out to the market To Customer Focus: Products and services are pulled through the organization From Internal Focus: Management and internal professionals "know best" To Customer Focus: "Naive listening" keeps everyone tuned to changing needs From Internal Focus: Performance measurements are top down and aimed at maximizing internal control To Customer Focus: Rigorous measurements are based on customers' perceptions of value 2. From Functional Management: Departments are narrowly accountable for the results of their individual units To Horizontal Management: Managers are accountable for understanding and managing core strategic processes that flow across departments From Functional Management: Departmental walls cause work and customers to "fall between the cracks" To Horizontal Management: Customer needs drive the key work processes that are managed across departments From Functional Management: Management intuition and hunches drive decision making and resource allocation To Horizontal Management: Rigorous data and analysis help clarify systemic cause-and-effect relationships 3. From Management-Centeredness: Management's needs come first in a "command and control" hierarchy To Total Involvement: Managers become "servant leaders" to a team-based organization From Management-Centeredness: Employees serve management To Total Involvement: Employees serve internal and external customers From Management-Centeredness: Information is hoarded To Total Involvement: Information is widely shared For most organizations, these are not minor course corrections. Each of these three key areas demands changing direction by a full 180 degrees. Besides changing direction in any one of these key areas individually, there is an ever more pressing need to integrate all three as an organization-wide system. This can be either an area-by-area evolution or a broad scale simultaneous implementation. For example, an organization might start by focusing on customers, begin managing processes with basic teams, and then move toward shared leadership and self-directed teams. Or the change effort may begin by involving employees through teams, focus on customers, and then move to incorporate process management. An executive at a US It's Not Funny Unless it Sells o communications and fighting for organizational resources, 2) leaving unmanaged gaps between departments which disrupt cross-functional work processes, 3) making improvements or changes in one department which hurts the effectiveness of other departments in the process, and, 4) losing sight of customer-supplier relationships and meeting everyone's needs.We've all encountered humor in advertising. TV ads showing smart dogs fetching their owners a beer. Radio spots with aliens purifying our drinking water. Print ads with famous people wearing milk mustaches. Many use dry wit. Others are just plain silly. A few are in bad taste. And some, heaven forbid, aren't even funny.Humor has its placeDoes humor really work in advertising? Is it okay to get a few laughs when talking about your product or service? Does humor sell? There are no absolutes, no easy answers. What we do know is that, as in real life, humor has its place. In advertising, that place must always be clearly defined and understood. For humor used indiscriminately can be a disaster—for your product, your image and your sales. And that's not funny.Making human contactThe object of humor is to make human contact and break the boredom barrier. This invisible barrier goes up the second your audience is exposed to any advertising. It's the result of tens of thousands of ads that confront us every year. For the human brain, it’s a matter of survival. It simply shuts out what it sees or hears and says, “I know a sales pitch is coming, I’ve been bored to death before, I’m tuning out.” Humor is one way to get through. Used correctly, humor leads your audience to a common ground of understanding. A feeling of "we're all in this together." Just like a speaker who starts with a humorous anecdote to ‘break the ice,’ using a funny situation or character can make your audience more receptive as you segue into your selling message.Tread lightly and cautiouslyBy the same token, an off-color jo Since the 1950s, Toyota has worked tirelessly to reduce the walls and gaps between departments. By the 1970s, their manufacturing methods became widely known throughout Japan as the "Toyota Production Methods". In the early 1980s, their highly successful practices migrated to North America as Just-In-Time manufacturing. Stressing the importance of managing across organizational boundaries, a Toyota executive said, "It is not enough to manage the affairs within your own division. One of the most important functions of a division manager is to improve coordination between his own division and other divisions. It you cannot handle this task, please go work for an American company". • Management-Centered -- management's needs, goals, and perspectives are the starting point for all activities. Managers and their staff professionals are the brains and employees are the hands. Employees serve their managerial masters and do as they are told. Broad business perspectives and strategies, operational performance data, problem solving and decision making authority, and cross-functional skills are kept by management. But the world is now moving too fast to maintain this archaic "command and control" approach that puts management at the center of the universe. Managers can no longer know enough, fast enough, about enough things, enough of the time to anticipate enough of the changes that are needed to improve the organization enough to become better and faster and cheaper and newer enough. Partial Improvement Patches and Pieces Recognizing the urgent need to quickly reverse direction, many organizations are implementing a variety of improvement programs and process. These include: • Employee Involvement and Empowerment -- many training and motivational programs, as well as structural changes aim to move daily problem solving, decision making, customer satisfaction, and productivity improvement responsibilities closer to the front lines. • Teams -- a rapidly growing employee involvement trend uses departmental, problem solving, cross-functional, project, process improvement, planning and coordinating, and self-directed work teams in many combinations and configurations. • Customer Service -- increasingly organizations are identifying key customer groups, clarifying and ranking their expectations, working to realign the organization's systems customer around those expectations, and training employees to deal with customers more effectively. • Process Improvement and Reengineering -- data-based tools and techniques, flowcharting, and other "mapping" approaches improve processes at micro or departmental levels. In other cases, processes are radically reengineered across vertical departments at macro or strategic levels. • Training and Development -- many executives recognize the need for massive improvements in skill levels throughout their organizations. This is leading to major increases in technical, personal communications and effectiveness, team (leaders and members), data-based tools and techniques, process improvement and management, and coaching skill development. • Technology -- investments in factory automation, information systems, voice and data communication systems, inventory control systems, and so on are growing rapidly as companies push for higher productivity, faster response times, and improved service/quality. Many of the above efforts are piecemeal or implemented in isolation. For example, training and development, customer service, technology, and process reengineering are often implemented by separate departments with little or no joint planning and coordination. As a result, products or services are either better or faster or cheaper or newer, but rarely all four. That leads to a weakened competitive position. And cynicism for subsequent change programs grows throughout the organization. Total Quality Management (TQM) is one management approach that can successfully integrate all of the above improvement efforts. But very few organizations are implementing truly total quality management. Most so-called TQM efforts are really PQM -- Partial Quality Management. That's why many studies now show that 50-70 percent of what are called TQM efforts are dying or dead. The good news is that 30-50 percent of TQM implementations (those that are truly total) are dramatically increasing customer satisfaction, shortening process cycles and response times, reducing costs and strengthening innovation. Although it's very tough to do, it can clearly be done. The Labels Rarely Describe The Contents The TQM/PQM problem is hardly unique. Most labels describing a number of organization change and improvement efforts have become meaningless. For example, when an executive talks about building a team-based organization, he or she may mean instilling a "teaminess" attitude. Or this might mean using temporary task forces to solve problems. Possibly the executive envisions filling their organization with employee improvement teams (similar to quality circles). Or he or she may want to develop self-directed work teams with no direct supervision. Some times "Reengineering" describes layoffs or traditional "slash and burn" cost cutting exercises. In other cases, reengineering means a change to the organization's structure. Sometimes it means installing new information technology systems. Or reengineering could be a radical revamping of the macro, strategic processes that establish how most work and customer interactions flow across the organization. Successful change and improvement initiatives are integrated or "whole" rather then partial and piecemeal. They flow from the organization's basic reason for being, values, vision of the future, and strategies. The effort is intertwined with the organization's operating goals, systems, and measurements. These changes and improvements aren't programs bolted on the side of the organization. These approaches are tightly intertwined and connected to management systems, daily practices, and behavior. As he continues a long string of successes in building "the new GE", CEO Jack Welch observed, "The winners of the 90s will be those who can develop a culture that allows them to move faster, communicate more clearly, and involve everyone in a focused effort to serve every more demanding customers". At Multifoods, the international food processing giant (brands include Robin Hood and Bicks), Human Resource vice president, Bob Maddocks finds that "the improvement process isn't separate from good leadership and management practices". He adds, "We want everyone involved in operating the company, focusing on customers, and improving our processes and systems. It's got to become a way of life for all of us". Whatever labels are used, a "wholistic" or systems approach to change and improvement means reversing the inward focus, management-centeredness, and vertical management found in most organizations. Reversing Direction 1. From Internal Focus: Products and services are pushed out to the market To Customer Focus: Products and services are pulled through the organization From Internal Focus: Management and internal professionals "know best" To Customer Focus: "Naive listening" keeps everyone tuned to changing needs From Internal Focus: Performance measurements are top down and aimed at maximizing internal control To Customer Focus: Rigorous measurements are based on customers' perceptions of value 2. From Functional Management: Departments are narrowly accountable for the results of their individual units To Horizontal Management: Managers are accountable for understanding and managing core strategic processes that flow across departments From Functional Management: Departmental walls cause work and customers to "fall between the cracks" To Horizontal Management: Customer needs drive the key work processes that are managed across departments From Functional Management: Management intuition and hunches drive decision making and resource allocation To Horizontal Management: Rigorous data and analysis help clarify systemic cause-and-effect relationships 3. From Management-Centeredness: Management's needs come first in a "command and control" hierarchy To Total Involvement: Managers become "servant leaders" to a team-based organization From Management-Centeredness: Employees serve management To Total Involvement: Employees serve internal and external customers From Management-Centeredness: Information is hoarded To Total Involvement: Information is widely shared For most organizations, these are not minor course corrections. Each of these three key areas demands changing direction by a full 180 degrees. Besides changing direction in any one of these key areas individually, there is an ever more pressing need to integrate all three as an organization-wide system. This can be either an area-by-area evolution or a broad scale simultaneous implementation. For example, an organization might start by focusing on customers, begin managing processes with basic teams, and then move toward shared leadership and self-directed teams. Or the change effort may begin by involving employees through teams, focus on customers, and then move to incorporate process management. An executive at a U Marketing Tips For Small Business - Advertising That Works, Part I roject, process improvement, planning and coordinating, and self-directed work teams in many combinations and configurations.Have you ever seen an ad on television that was beautiful, slick, and stylish but didn’t fit the product? How about a magazine ad that, though gorgeously photographed, didn’t make it clear what was being sold? Or have you heard a catchy radio ad that neglected to give contact information? If you pay attention, you’ll notice these money-wasting advertisements in all types of media.If a corporation puts out a bad advertisement, the marketing department will have the resources and budget to make a mid-course correction (sometimes). Often the thousands of dollars a small business puts into an advertising promotion are the bulk of the marketing budget for the entire year (usually). There’s no money, time or resources for a do-over if the ad doesn’t bring in customers. Small business people simply can’t afford to spend money on expensive ads that don’t work.Preparing an effective ad is harder than it looks, but even the smallest business can produce an ad that works if some simple rules are followed. Following are four tips you can use to create a great ad for your business, regardless of your budget, marketing experience, or the media used:1. State the Product or Service ClearlyMake it absolutely clear what product or service you are selling. Keep it simple and honest. Instead of advertising “meticulously crafted, threaded fastening accessories” just say, “best steel wing nuts.” Don’t make it hard for the customer to pinpoint what you’re selling and don’t overdo the flowery descriptions.2. Use a Call-For-Action PhraseForgetting the call-for-action is the biggest mistake I see in small business advertising. A call-for-action is a short sente • Customer Service -- increasingly organizations are identifying key customer groups, clarifying and ranking their expectations, working to realign the organization's systems customer around those expectations, and training employees to deal with customers more effectively. • Process Improvement and Reengineering -- data-based tools and techniques, flowcharting, and other "mapping" approaches improve processes at micro or departmental levels. In other cases, processes are radically reengineered across vertical departments at macro or strategic levels. • Training and Development -- many executives recognize the need for massive improvements in skill levels throughout their organizations. This is leading to major increases in technical, personal communications and effectiveness, team (leaders and members), data-based tools and techniques, process improvement and management, and coaching skill development. • Technology -- investments in factory automation, information systems, voice and data communication systems, inventory control systems, and so on are growing rapidly as companies push for higher productivity, faster response times, and improved service/quality. Many of the above efforts are piecemeal or implemented in isolation. For example, training and development, customer service, technology, and process reengineering are often implemented by separate departments with little or no joint planning and coordination. As a result, products or services are either better or faster or cheaper or newer, but rarely all four. That leads to a weakened competitive position. And cynicism for subsequent change programs grows throughout the organization. Total Quality Management (TQM) is one management approach that can successfully integrate all of the above improvement efforts. But very few organizations are implementing truly total quality management. Most so-called TQM efforts are really PQM -- Partial Quality Management. That's why many studies now show that 50-70 percent of what are called TQM efforts are dying or dead. The good news is that 30-50 percent of TQM implementations (those that are truly total) are dramatically increasing customer satisfaction, shortening process cycles and response times, reducing costs and strengthening innovation. Although it's very tough to do, it can clearly be done. The Labels Rarely Describe The Contents The TQM/PQM problem is hardly unique. Most labels describing a number of organization change and improvement efforts have become meaningless. For example, when an executive talks about building a team-based organization, he or she may mean instilling a "teaminess" attitude. Or this might mean using temporary task forces to solve problems. Possibly the executive envisions filling their organization with employee improvement teams (similar to quality circles). Or he or she may want to develop self-directed work teams with no direct supervision. Some times "Reengineering" describes layoffs or traditional "slash and burn" cost cutting exercises. In other cases, reengineering means a change to the organization's structure. Sometimes it means installing new information technology systems. Or reengineering could be a radical revamping of the macro, strategic processes that establish how most work and customer interactions flow across the organization. Successful change and improvement initiatives are integrated or "whole" rather then partial and piecemeal. They flow from the organization's basic reason for being, values, vision of the future, and strategies. The effort is intertwined with the organization's operating goals, systems, and measurements. These changes and improvements aren't programs bolted on the side of the organization. These approaches are tightly intertwined and connected to management systems, daily practices, and behavior. As he continues a long string of successes in building "the new GE", CEO Jack Welch observed, "The winners of the 90s will be those who can develop a culture that allows them to move faster, communicate more clearly, and involve everyone in a focused effort to serve every more demanding customers". At Multifoods, the international food processing giant (brands include Robin Hood and Bicks), Human Resource vice president, Bob Maddocks finds that "the improvement process isn't separate from good leadership and management practices". He adds, "We want everyone involved in operating the company, focusing on customers, and improving our processes and systems. It's got to become a way of life for all of us". Whatever labels are used, a "wholistic" or systems approach to change and improvement means reversing the inward focus, management-centeredness, and vertical management found in most organizations. Reversing Direction 1. From Internal Focus: Products and services are pushed out to the market To Customer Focus: Products and services are pulled through the organization From Internal Focus: Management and internal professionals "know best" To Customer Focus: "Naive listening" keeps everyone tuned to changing needs From Internal Focus: Performance measurements are top down and aimed at maximizing internal control To Customer Focus: Rigorous measurements are based on customers' perceptions of value 2. From Functional Management: Departments are narrowly accountable for the results of their individual units To Horizontal Management: Managers are accountable for understanding and managing core strategic processes that flow across departments From Functional Management: Departmental walls cause work and customers to "fall between the cracks" To Horizontal Management: Customer needs drive the key work processes that are managed across departments From Functional Management: Management intuition and hunches drive decision making and resource allocation To Horizontal Management: Rigorous data and analysis help clarify systemic cause-and-effect relationships 3. From Management-Centeredness: Management's needs come first in a "command and control" hierarchy To Total Involvement: Managers become "servant leaders" to a team-based organization From Management-Centeredness: Employees serve management To Total Involvement: Employees serve internal and external customers From Management-Centeredness: Information is hoarded To Total Involvement: Information is widely shared For most organizations, these are not minor course corrections. Each of these three key areas demands changing direction by a full 180 degrees. Besides changing direction in any one of these key areas individually, there is an ever more pressing need to integrate all three as an organization-wide system. This can be either an area-by-area evolution or a broad scale simultaneous implementation. For example, an organization might start by focusing on customers, begin managing processes with basic teams, and then move toward shared leadership and self-directed teams. Or the change effort may begin by involving employees through teams, focus on customers, and then move to incorporate process management. An executive at a U Good Employer Bad Employer o do, it can clearly be done.In general, you are looking for a job. You go to school, work hard, and get professional qualifications. All these efforts are spent to make you ‘Employable’ only. You look for a company with good brand, salary, parks etc. Normally you start with good salary and good hikes in initial years. You work hard; attain more qualification to make yourself more ‘Employable’.This is life. You assume yourself as successful if you get a job in a blue chip company BM, Microsoft or Google in a senior position. You will probably take loan to buy luxury apartment in the posh locality. You would drive latest model car. You will always consider yourself that you are doing well and you are leading your dream life.Wait! Let’s check other side of the coin. Are you financially free? Have you checked your own debt/saving ratio? Probably you have more debt than your total worth. What will happen, if company transfers you to a department where you can not meet the high expectation of your boss or you simple could not perform because you do not like your assignment or your health does not allow you take the job pressure?This is the most stumbling blocks in our daily life. Unless you invest your after tax salaried income to other asset which generates more income than your salaried income, you are not winner.The employer who gives pseudo job satisfaction and you enjoy all luxuries of life by taking loan is BAD EMPLOYER. Bad employer exploits your feature of ‘employability’. You always work in a narrow domain with a stringent delivery norm. It is seldom you get the opportunity to expand yourself in other area. If you want to enter other area it The Labels Rarely Describe The Contents The TQM/PQM problem is hardly unique. Most labels describing a number of organization change and improvement efforts have become meaningless. For example, when an executive talks about building a team-based organization, he or she may mean instilling a "teaminess" attitude. Or this might mean using temporary task forces to solve problems. Possibly the executive envisions filling their organization with employee improvement teams (similar to quality circles). Or he or she may want to develop self-directed work teams with no direct supervision. Some times "Reengineering" describes layoffs or traditional "slash and burn" cost cutting exercises. In other cases, reengineering means a change to the organization's structure. Sometimes it means installing new information technology systems. Or reengineering could be a radical revamping of the macro, strategic processes that establish how most work and customer interactions flow across the organization. Successful change and improvement initiatives are integrated or "whole" rather then partial and piecemeal. They flow from the organization's basic reason for being, values, vision of the future, and strategies. The effort is intertwined with the organization's operating goals, systems, and measurements. These changes and improvements aren't programs bolted on the side of the organization. These approaches are tightly intertwined and connected to management systems, daily practices, and behavior. As he continues a long string of successes in building "the new GE", CEO Jack Welch observed, "The winners of the 90s will be those who can develop a culture that allows them to move faster, communicate more clearly, and involve everyone in a focused effort to serve every more demanding customers". At Multifoods, the international food processing giant (brands include Robin Hood and Bicks), Human Resource vice president, Bob Maddocks finds that "the improvement process isn't separate from good leadership and management practices". He adds, "We want everyone involved in operating the company, focusing on customers, and improving our processes and systems. It's got to become a way of life for all of us". Whatever labels are used, a "wholistic" or systems approach to change and improvement means reversing the inward focus, management-centeredness, and vertical management found in most organizations. Reversing Direction 1. From Internal Focus: Products and services are pushed out to the market To Customer Focus: Products and services are pulled through the organization From Internal Focus: Management and internal professionals "know best" To Customer Focus: "Naive listening" keeps everyone tuned to changing needs From Internal Focus: Performance measurements are top down and aimed at maximizing internal control To Customer Focus: Rigorous measurements are based on customers' perceptions of value 2. From Functional Management: Departments are narrowly accountable for the results of their individual units To Horizontal Management: Managers are accountable for understanding and managing core strategic processes that flow across departments From Functional Management: Departmental walls cause work and customers to "fall between the cracks" To Horizontal Management: Customer needs drive the key work processes that are managed across departments From Functional Management: Management intuition and hunches drive decision making and resource allocation To Horizontal Management: Rigorous data and analysis help clarify systemic cause-and-effect relationships 3. From Management-Centeredness: Management's needs come first in a "command and control" hierarchy To Total Involvement: Managers become "servant leaders" to a team-based organization From Management-Centeredness: Employees serve management To Total Involvement: Employees serve internal and external customers From Management-Centeredness: Information is hoarded To Total Involvement: Information is widely shared For most organizations, these are not minor course corrections. Each of these three key areas demands changing direction by a full 180 degrees. Besides changing direction in any one of these key areas individually, there is an ever more pressing need to integrate all three as an organization-wide system. This can be either an area-by-area evolution or a broad scale simultaneous implementation. For example, an organization might start by focusing on customers, begin managing processes with basic teams, and then move toward shared leadership and self-directed teams. Or the change effort may begin by involving employees through teams, focus on customers, and then move to incorporate process management. An executive at a U Billboard Ads On The Back Of A Bus – A Good Advertising Idea For Real Estate Agents .While I was driving to work this morning I was stuck in traffic. Even worse, I was stuck in traffic behind a bus. I hate traffic jams and I hated being behind buses in traffic jams. When behind a bus, your vision is restricted; you cannot see beyond the bus. So you have to look at it. And, you are forced to look at whatever is on the back of that bus.On this particular bus was an advertisement for a local real estate agent. It was one of those big billboard-style ads that cover the entire back of the bus. It was quite a good ad. The tag-line read, "If I can't sell your house in 30 days, I’ll buy it myself." But whether or not the ad was good wasn’t the issue. The issue was that I had no choice – I had to look at the ad because there was absolutely nothing else to capture my attention.This is why I think that billboard-style ads on the back of a bus are a good idea, not only for real estate agents, but for any business professional or small business. People stuck in traffic cannot "turn off" the ad. They cannot change the channel like they can when watching television and a commercial comes on. They cannot switch the dial like they can when listening to the radio and a commercial comes on. People notice bus advertising because it is in their line of sight and they cannot turn it off.I would assume that the same applies to ads inside public transit like buses, trains, and subways. People need to stare at something and they don’t want to stare at eachother. So they stare at the ads.Ads on buses are a good advertising idea for many small businesses! Reversing Direction 1. From Internal Focus: Products and services are pushed out to the market To Customer Focus: Products and services are pulled through the organization From Internal Focus: Management and internal professionals "know best" To Customer Focus: "Naive listening" keeps everyone tuned to changing needs From Internal Focus: Performance measurements are top down and aimed at maximizing internal control To Customer Focus: Rigorous measurements are based on customers' perceptions of value 2. From Functional Management: Departments are narrowly accountable for the results of their individual units To Horizontal Management: Managers are accountable for understanding and managing core strategic processes that flow across departments From Functional Management: Departmental walls cause work and customers to "fall between the cracks" To Horizontal Management: Customer needs drive the key work processes that are managed across departments From Functional Management: Management intuition and hunches drive decision making and resource allocation To Horizontal Management: Rigorous data and analysis help clarify systemic cause-and-effect relationships 3. From Management-Centeredness: Management's needs come first in a "command and control" hierarchy To Total Involvement: Managers become "servant leaders" to a team-based organization From Management-Centeredness: Employees serve management To Total Involvement: Employees serve internal and external customers From Management-Centeredness: Information is hoarded To Total Involvement: Information is widely shared For most organizations, these are not minor course corrections. Each of these three key areas demands changing direction by a full 180 degrees. Besides changing direction in any one of these key areas individually, there is an ever more pressing need to integrate all three as an organization-wide system. This can be either an area-by-area evolution or a broad scale simultaneous implementation. For example, an organization might start by focusing on customers, begin managing processes with basic teams, and then move toward shared leadership and self-directed teams. Or the change effort may begin by involving employees through teams, focus on customers, and then move to incorporate process management. An executive at a US-based telecommunications equipment manufacturer illustrates how these areas can evolve and merge, "We hit the cultural change wall because people didn't want to do the behavioral stuff (skill building, dealing with conflict, changing habits and practices). People didn't want to do that because it hurt too much. That got real ugly. So we said, 'we're not going to do that behavioral stuff. Instead we're going to do process improvement work.' And, after beating our heads against the process wall for a few months, some people found out that they're really not separate and distinct. You can't do one without the other. And, oh by the way, the only way that is going to work is to have teams. So, we're starting to break through the barrier of linking all of those pieces that were originally perceived to be separate. We're really breaking through the barrier and recognizing that this is all interconnected." However the transformation is begun and whatever it's called, effective long-term change and improvement efforts integrate all three of the key areas. Only through an integrated systems approach to customer service, process management, and employee involvement can organizations become industry leaders who are clearly better and faster and cheaper and newer than their competitors.
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