Archive for 2012

Organizational Phase Change

Tuesday, September 25th, 2012 by Troy Schrock

As certified CEO Advantage advisors, we generally consider middle market organizations (50-2,500 employees) to be in our sweet spot.  As an organization matures, “midmarket” is an inflection point where entrepreneurial companies must become “professionally managed” entrepreneurial companies (a favorite Verne Harnish term).  The entrepreneurial edge is still vital, but the company will suffer without professional management.

Years ago, Peter Drucker nailed this transition, which he dubbed a “change of phase”.  In People and Performance, Peter Drucker writes:

“The change from a business which the ‘boss’ can run with ‘helpers’ to a business enterprise that requires management is what the physicists call a ‘change of phase’ such as the change from fluid to solid.  It is a leap from one state of matter, from one fundamental structure, to another…The English biologist D’Arcy Thompson showed that animals supported by a hard skin can reach only a certain size and complexity.  Beyond this, a land animal has to have a skeleton.  Yet the skeleton has not genetically evolved out of the hard skin of the insect; it is a
different organ with different antecedents.  Similarly, management becomes necessary when a business reaches a certain size and complexity.  But management, while it replaces the ‘hard-skin’ structure of the owner, is not its successor.  It is, rather, its replacement.  When does a business reach the stage at which it has to shift from ‘hard skin’ to ‘skeleton’?  The line lies somewhere between 300 and 1,000 employees in size.  More important, perhaps, is the increase in complexity of the business; when a variety of tasks have all to be performed in cooperation, synchronization, and communication, a business needs managers and a management.”

In today’s environment, with global supply chains and competition, instant communication, more complex compliance requirements, and knowledge workers increasing relative to administrators and technicians, companies hit the complexity inflection point with fewer employees than in the past.  Rather than 300 employees, the line is probably crossed at 100, if not 50, employees.

This inflection point is an exciting place to be as companies grapple with the changes that accompany growth, but it can be a particularly challenging time for the owner/entrepreneur.  Owners should only manage to the extent that they’re able to do so effectively.  Where necessary, they must be willing to concede control to capable managers and a management team.

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In 100 Words: Team Book Assignments

Friday, September 14th, 2012 by Troy Schrock

One effective way to improve the performance and bonding of your team is something you may not have done since high school: book assignments.

Team book assignments are a great way to prompt conversations on outside ideas that could impact the business (an emerging trend, a different process, an idea from a different industry, etc.).  Everyone has an opportunity to offer input, and teams often find that the planned discussion of new ideas quickly leads to practical implementation and growth in their organizations.

Click here for a list of suggestions to start.  Feel free to contact me for additional ideas.

“Books constitute capital. A library book lasts as long as a house, for hundreds of years. It is not, then, an article of mere consumption but fairly of capital, and often in the case of professional men, setting out in life, it is their only capital.” (Thomas Jefferson)

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Entrepreneurs: Beware of Boredom

Wednesday, August 29th, 2012 by Troy Schrock

It is not uncommon for entrepreneurs to get bored when their organizations mature to a certain size.  Management becomes procedural, the business is humming, and life becomes all too routine and mundane.  Entrepreneurs can find this environment stifling.

Unfortunately, the reflexive urge is to engage in behaviors that may be destructive to the very existence of the organizations they started.  They pursue growth, jump into other executives’ domains, launch new ventures, or invest in other businesses – anything to break up the new monotony.  These moves aren’t always bad, but only if approached strategically.  They should not be done merely as desperate reaches for something different.

In starting his second restaurant, Union Square Hospitality Group founder Danny Meyer said, “[The first restaurant] was a great canvas, but I needed a new place to express my creativity.  I didn’t think I should alter a successful restaurant because I was restless.  I didn’t have to get all of my ideas into one place.” (as quoted in Small Giants by Bo Burlingham)

Restless entrepreneurs can learn from Meyer’s recognition.  Proper channeling of creative energy can lead to good results for the initial enterprise as well as any new ventures that may arise.

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Debrief Like a Fighter Pilot

Tuesday, August 7th, 2012 by Troy Schrock

I am fascinated by the U.S. Military practice of systematic debriefing.  Geoff Colvin writes in Talent is Overrated:

“After any significant action, in training or in combat, soldiers and officers meet to discuss what happened.  They take off their helmets – a symbolic action indicating that ‘there’s no rank in the room,’ as [Colonel Thomas] Kolditz says.  ‘Comments are blunt.  If the boss made a bad decision, often it’s a subordinate who points that out.’  The session isn’t about blaming; instead, it’s ‘a professional discussion,’ as an army training circular puts it.  Part of its strength is that it yields very complete feedback.”

Wow.  Does your organization regularly run debriefs like that?  Think of the professionalism it requires.   Think of the discipline it demands.  Think of the trust teammates must have in one another to engage in that exercise.

Think of the results it must get.

If you don’t already, get in the habit of objectively reviewing successes and failures with your team.  Regardless of outcome, it’s important to pay attention to the decision making process that led to your present situation.  Remember, bad process sometimes yields good results, so unless you’re willing to debrief like the military, you may never catch your mistakes in order to fix them.

For more on this, you might be interested in Afterburner, a corporate training company led by fighter pilots that helps organizations implement the disciplines of flawless execution.

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In 100 Words: 3 Ways to Increase Time Efficiency

Wednesday, August 1st, 2012 by Troy Schrock

3 Ways to Increase Time Efficiency*:

  1. Log your actual time to the nearest quarter hour.  I guarantee your time efficiency will be lower than what you think it is.
  2. Begin each day by jotting your 3-5 most important priorities for that day on a note card.  Carry that card with you all day.  It will free your mind from less important to-dos and keep you focused on driving the most pertinent organizational goals.
  3. Each week, look at your time log and identify one activity that should be delegated to someone else.  You might even ask your team what you should not be doing.

*These tips are pulled from “Leveraging Leadership” by Ben Anderson-Ray.

“Management is doing things right.  Leadership is doing the right things.”  (Peter Drucker)

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4 Things to Know About Each Employee

Tuesday, July 17th, 2012 by Troy Schrock

The following is adapted from The One Thing You Need to Know by Marcus Buckingham.

A manager turns one person’s talent into performance.  As a manager, people should work harder for you than someone else.  You should be a catalyst – someone who speeds up the reaction between the talent of the employee and the goals of the organization.  How do you do this?  Discover what is unique to the individual and capitalize on it!

Four Unique Characteristics You Should Know About Each Employee:

  1. Strengths.  Describe your best day at work in the last three months.  What were you doing?  Why did you love it?  How did it energize you?
  2. Weaknesses.  Describe your worst day at work in the last three months.  What were you doing?  Why did you dislike it?  How did it drain you?
  3. Triggers.  Describe the best manager relationship you ever had.  What made it so good?  What was the best recognition you received?
  4. Style of Learning:  When in your career did you learn the most?  What did you learn?  How did you learn?  Why did this work so well for you?
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