Business > Management > Let a Subordinate Solve It!
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Article rating : 0.00, 0 votes. Author : Pat Wiklund
Effective change comes from the top. That's the
conventional wisdom about workplace change. And like lots
of conventional wisdom, it's not necessarily the prevailing
pattern or even wise.
When companies make change the responsibility of
senior management, they train their employees to take a
hands-off attitude, to resist activities imposed upon them,
and stop offering beneficial suggestions. When all
employees look for ways of doing their jobs better, easier,
or faster, then the benefits impact internal customers,
suppliers, and the company's bottom line. Subordinates can
rely on their expertise, personality, relationships, or ability to
work the corporate culture to "sell" changes to colleagues
and internal customers and suppliers.
In her role as a Systems Tech intern, Ellen used her
superior computer systems knowledge to leverage
suggestions for company wide changes. Hired to fix
immediate problems, Ellen soon realized the underlying
problem was the jumble of computing environments,
platforms, applications, and systems within the company.
As she answered service calls, Ellen talked to the
professionals she supported. As the "intern" no one
expected her to know much about the business. She used
her ignorance to good advantage, asking basic questions
no one else ever asked.
Ellen not only asked about their problems, but what they
wanted their computer to do. She asked about
annoying repetitive tasks, "What bugged them about the
work of getting their work done." Soon Ellen was taking a
few minutes to explain a nifty tool or feature. Most of the time
her lessons would have prevented the problem; other times
it was about a technique other employees had found
helpful. Soon Ellen was posting a tip of the day on E-mail
and offering brown bag sessions in the lunch room.
When the Ops Manager charged Ellen to fix an E-mail
mess that caused a major production error, the intern was
ready. Instead of just fixing the E-mail, she suggested
a comprehensive plan for standardizing the systems and
applications. When the Ops Manager hesitated because "no
one wants their systems changed," the professionals
supported her. They did not know exactly what she was
suggesting but they trusted her suggestions would make
their work easier.
As a systems intern, Ellen was in a classic support role.
She knew more about her area of responsibility than
the professionals she was supporting. Yet, they had much
more formal education and standing in the company than
she did. She relied on education, teaching them what she
knew, in a context of how it could make their jobs easier. As
they gained skill and confidence from her lessons, they
were more willing to listen to her and support her
suggestions for change.
Jack used his personality and reputation to get his
internal customers to change. Known for his Yankee
thriftiness (friends called him cheap) and his laid back
approach to life, Jack could get real ornery when pushed. As
the facilities supervisor of a small engineering company, he
had to procure or install new equipment or utilities at the
last minute. Everything was crucial. They had to have what
they wanted right now, tomorrow at the latest. Finally, he
posted a large sign on his cubicle: "Your lack of planning
does not constitute my crisis." The sign was the major topic
of conversation in the break room that day.
At lunch, Jack just spread out pictures of the house he was
building, a much grander, but less costly, house than those
of his coworkers. As his own general contractor, he brought
every system in under budget and under deadline. He hadn't
used overnight package delivery. He'd shopped for the best
prices and hadn't paid overtime. "See what's possible with
planning?" Jack challenged. "Why should I have to do any
less here at work?" Later that day, someone took one of the
pictures and taped it to the sign on Jack's door.
Again Jack didn't have the formal education or
professional background of the people he supported, but
his personality and demonstrable results gave him
standing with his group. He showed them what he
could do and then challenged them to meet him at his level.
There was no denying he could walk his talk.
Mark did not have to sell his boss on making changes.
Mark's subordinates were creative and technically
astute. They just did not work well together. Meetings
went on forever with no real results, sites competed for
resources and recognition, and previous team work
programs had been demoralizing failures. Mark knew he
had to increase skills on the "soft side" of business:
communication, team work and visioning. Yet he couldn't
use those labels.
Mark asked the organizational consultants he previously
used to teach the team work skills his people needed by
using the existing technical development review program.
He wanted to bring the team work standards up to the
level of the technical standards. The consultants facilitated
the meetings and set the standards for meeting behavior:
defining purpose, setting agendas and discussion
guidelines, demanding action lists with deadlines and
expected results. As the effectiveness of the development
review became visible, other groups started asking the
consultants to help them.
Mark knew he could make a turn around in his new
group. He also knew the resistance he'd get would be
emotional not technical. While honoring the established
design and review program, he changed the process of
how
the team worked the program He leveraged the corporate
value for technical excellence to achieve the needed
interpersonal changes
Each of these employees used a different approach to
suggest change: using their superior knowledge, previous
experience or ability to work the culture issues. But the
underlying process was the same. They all demonstrated
what they could do, built solid relationships with their
internal vendors, subordinates, colleagues and customers.
Then they leveraged their proposals for change. Their
approach, "let me show you how we can both win" insured
successful change efforts.
Copyright © 2005 Pat Wiklund. All rights in all media
reserved. This article may be reprinted so long as it is kept
intact with the copyright and by-line.
Pat Wiklund is known as the One-Person Business
Turnaround Specialist. She works with professional
services
business owners so they can make more money and get
more personal satisfaction from their work. Start taking
charge of your business and your life with her TakingCharge
mini ecourse from her latest book, Taking Charge When
You’re Not in Control by sending a blank email to tcnic@1PersonBusiness.com
Contact Pat at
Pat@1PersonBusiness.com
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