Strategic development: Are we missing the point?

April 5, 2008

We often talk about strategic programmes and actions, but are we taking the appropriate first steps?

This article looks at the steps we take and explores if we can be more strategic and add more value.

Introduction

Often we know where we want to get to, or at least have a good idea, but often as the old saying goes: “If I was going there, I would not start from here.”

That is a very logical reply, even if it is not advice that is of much immediate practical value to the questioner. If you don’t know where you are going, you are not likely to get there.

It is sound advice to know where you are and where you want to end up before starting the journey. Is this why many of the tourist maps have a ‘you are here’ marker?

Where are we now? Where do we want to be?

This is a simple yet basic step in any intervention, at any level within our respective organisations. Yet what is the extent to which we really do it? Where is the ‘you are here’ marker in our organisations? Sure, some of us have tools like customer satisfaction and staff engagement data (as well as the basic business financial measures), but holistic, strategic data?

In the 2007 survey, Develop the Developers (by Morrison & Ritchie), responders to the survey provided the following answers in response to development activities:

  • Use of diagnostic approaches:
    Always (8%); usually (33%); sometimes (46%); rarely (10%); never (4%).

  • Use of evaluation approaches:
    Always (37%); usually (43%); sometimes (15%); rarely (2%); never (2%).

This highlights why much of what we do in organisational development (OD) and human resource development (HRD) fails, on a regular basis, to make the desired (and recognised) strategic impact.

“How can we ever hope to evaluate any intervention effectively if we do not know where we started from?”

We have read many threads on community forums such as HRZone.co.uk and TrainingZone.co.uk about the difficulties of evaluating activity. How to calculate a return on investment (ROI) or show value for money is a commonly recurring theme.

How can we ever hope to evaluate any intervention effectively if we do not know where we started from? We will only know this by having the same measures at the beginning of an intervention as we want to use for measuring success after the event.

In business we do it – we look at the financial position (profit, turnover etc), we set a plan to achieve it and then we measure after an agreed period of time. In medicine, before a person starts treatment we have some measures – pulse, respiration, blood pressure and so on – we measure before and after (often on going) treatment. Why, in HR and HRD, do we not do the same? Often we do for things like retention, sickness and attendance – but not for the more strategic elements.

What is a diagnostic process?

It is often simpler than it sounds. It is a tool that identifies ‘where you are now’, the dot or arrow on the map if you like. Tools like SWOT and PESTLE are OK to start with, but often these tools are not used as effectively (or broadly) as they were originally intended.

Diagnostic tools that only look at the area of the business you are interested in, for example culture surveys, have their place, but how do you know that culture is the issue – where is the diagnosis to show that a specific tool like a culture survey is the right one? There may be a need with a higher priority.


“A regular, yet effective organisational diagnostic process not only evaluates previous actions but the same data can be used to identify future needs”

It’s like going to your doctor – they will not send you for a special test or scan, until they have undertaken a more general diagnosis. In HR and OD we need to do the same. We need to use holistic diagnostic tools to help us orientate to real needs – often we react to the symptoms. It is easy to treat the cut to the hand from a fall, but if we miss the reason for the person falling – for instance, a minor stroke – sure the hand will get better, but in the mean time the stroke can do more damage.

Making evaluation easier

The more robust the diagnostic process, the easier the evaluation. Some would argue than an evaluation is just a repeat of the diagnostic but with different analysis on the results. The diagnostic is looking for an action plan; an evaluation is looking for change since the last measure. So a regular, yet effective organisational diagnostic process not only evaluates previous actions but the same data can be used (in association with a business plan) to identify future needs. Here is a simple strategic cycle:

  • Holistic diagnosis

  • Analysis

  • Plan

  • Action

  • Diagnosis

Insanity in our world?

As the saying goes, the first sign of madness is doing the same thing as before and expecting different results. It can be a bit like watching a replay of a race and expecting someone else to win. Obvious when we think about it, but why do we do this with our business activity?

Looking back at the results from the Develop the Developer survey, I wonder why many interventions are evaluated, but with little or no formal diagnostic processes undertaken at all; then we wonder why evaluation is so difficult.

Do we, as professionals, not learn? Do we keep doing the same things (evaluation but no initial diagnosis) and wonder why we do not add as much value as we expect? Are we ‘mad’? Maybe we are just reluctant learners?


Mike Morrison is director of RapidBI Ltd, a consultancy specialising in helping individuals and organisations improve their business performance through people and organisation effectiveness.

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This version first published: – HR Zone, 1st April 2008
Categories: HR Strategy

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Mike Morrison is director of RapidBI, an organizational effectiveness consultancy. He has been involved in HR, OD and strategic development for over 20 years. He can be contacted via www.rapidbi.com/

© This article is copyright RapidBI 2006, 2008 – it may be copied providing the authors are credited, and direct links maintained


Quick and Painless interventions and solutions

March 27, 2008

Quick and Painless?

In our fast and busy lives we are often looking for that ‘quick fix’ the ‘painless solution’ – but are they? Does it work?

All too often on professional forums and networking groups I hear people asking for quick and painless solutions. Do they really exist in the worlds of business, Human Resources (HR) and Organizational Development (OD)?

Just because a solution is quick does not mean it will work in the medium or long term, nor does it necessarily mean it will support the culture and direction of the business.

Short term pain = long term gain?
What is pain in a professional context? Hassle? difficulty, effort? All of the above? Are many of us now so much under pressure that we ignore the real problem and are happy to stick on a sticking plaster to all problems we face? Do we care about the medium term consequences? – will we still be in the role in 12-24 months to care?

With the current economic climate I believe so – more and more of us will have to face the facts that the interventions we started just did not work – works in many situations they exasperated the problems. Time for us to start slowing down and doing an effective job.

Proof in the pudding

In the 2007 survey Develop the developers – the results highlighted that many in HR and OD are involved in evaluating activity and intervention, and that this trend was increasing, however less than 50% were actively involved in structured diagnosis before launching an intervention – and while there appeared to be intent to do more this will still mean that in 5 years time less people will be using diagnostic techniques than currently evaluate. And we and our clients often wonder why interventions do not add the value expected…


As the old saying goes – if you always do what you have always done – you will always get what you have always got. Or as I prefer – the real sign of madness – doing the same things time and time again and expecting different results!

For us as professionals to help our clients we must start to employ a robust diagnostic process on all our activity before committing to an intervention.

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Mike Morrison is director of RapidBI, an organizational effectiveness consultancy. He has been involved in HR, OD and strategic development for over 20 years. He can be contacted via www.rapidbi.com/

© This article is copyright RapidBI 2008 – it may be copied providing the authors are credited, and direct links maintained


How to Write a SWOT analysis

January 13, 2008

SWOT Analysis

A SWOT is a planning tool used to understand the Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats involved in a project or in a business. It involves specifying the objective of the business or project and identifying the internal and external factors that are supportive or unfavourable to achieving that objective.

SWOT is an acronym for Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, Threats.

There are several ways of graphically representing the SWOT analysis matrix or grid. Several versions are shown on this article – use the one which is best suited to your application. (More templates can be seen on our website SWOT analysis templates )

While at first glance the SWOT looks like a simple model and easy to apply, I can say from experience, that to do a SWOT analysis that is both effective and meaningful, requires time and a significant resource. This cannot be done effectively by just one person. It requires a team effort. The SWOT methodology has the advantage of being used as a ‘quick and dirty’ tool or a comprehensive management too, and that one can lead to the other. This flexibility is one of the factors that has contributed to its success.

The term “SWOT analysis” is in itself an interesting term. To my understanding, the SWOT is not an analysis. It is a summary of a set of previous analyses – even if those were not more than 15 minutes of mini-brainstorming with yourself in front of your computer. The analysis or more correctly interpretation comes after the SWOT summary has been produced.

The SWOT Model

Positive

Internal

Negative or potential to be negative

Strengths

Weaknesses

Opportunities

Threats

External

Strengths Weaknesses

Opportunities

Offensive

make the most of these

Defensive

watch competition closely

Threats

Adjust

restore strengths

Survive -

turn around

Definition of SWOT

A SWOT analysis process generates information that is helpful in matching an organization or group’s goals, programs, and capacities to the social environment in which it operates. Note the SWOT itself is only a data capture – the analysis follows.

Strengths

  • Positive tangible and intangible attributes, internal to an organization.
  • They are within the organization’s control.

Weakness

  • Factors that are within an organization’s control that detract from its ability to attain the desired goal.
  • Which areas might the organization improve?

Opportunities

  • External attractive factors that represent the reason for an organization to exist and develop.
  • What opportunities exist in the environment, which will propel the organization?
    Identify them by their “time frames”

Threats

  • External factors, beyond an organization’s control, which could place the organization mission or operation at risk.
  • The organization may benefit by having contingency plans to address them if they should occur.
  • Classify them by their “seriousness” and “probability of occurrence”.

Background to the SWOT Analysis

The SWOT analysis technique is credited by Albert Humphrey, who led a research project at Stanford University in the 1960s and 1970s using data from top companies.

The goal was to identify why corporate planning failed. The resulting research identified a number of key areas and the tool used to explore each of the critical areas was called SOFT. Humphrey and the original research team used the categories “What is good in the present is Satisfactory, good in the future is an Opportunity; bad in the present is a Fault and bad in the future is a Threat.” This was called the SOFT analysis.

In 1964 Urick and Orr at a conference changed the F to a W, and it has stuck as that, soFt to sWot

On its own a SWOT analysis is meaningless It works best when part of an overall strategy or in a given context or situation. This strategy may be as simple as:

  1. Goal or objective
  2. SWOT / SOFT
  3. Evaluation or measures of success
  4. Action

Introduction to SWOT

The SWOT analysis tool is great for developing an understanding of an organization or situation and decision-making for all sorts of situations in business, organizations and for individuals.

The SWOT analysis headings provide a good framework for reviewing strategy, position and direction of a company, product, project or person (career).

Doing a SWOT analysis can be very simple, however its strengths lie in its flexibility and experienced application. Remember the capture is only part of the picture.

Applications

A SWOT analysis can be used for:

  • Workshop sessions
  • Brainstorm meetings
  • Problem solving
  • Planning
  • Product evaluation
  • Competitor evaluation
  • Personal Development Planning
  • Decision Making (with force field analysis)

The SWOT is a great tool that can be used in association with PESTLE

Overview of SWOT

POSITIVE/ HELPFUL

to achieving the goal

NEGATIVE/ HARMFUL

to achieving the goal

INTERNAL Origin

facts/ factors of the organization

Strengths

Things that are good now, maintain them, build on them and use as leverage

Weaknesses

Things that are bad now, remedy, change or stop them.

EXTERNAL Origin

facts/ factors of the environment in which it operates

Opportunities

Things that are good for the future, prioritize them, capture them, build on them and optimize

Threats

Things that are bad for the future, put in plans to manage them or counter them

Aim of a SWOT Analysis

  • Reveal your competitive advantages
  • Analyze your prospects for sales, profitability and product development
  • Prepare your company for problems
  • Allow for the development of contingency plans

A SWOT analysis is a process to identify where you are strong and vulnerable — where you should defend and attack. The result of the process is a ‘plan of action’, or ‘action plan’.

The analysis can be performed on a product, on a service, a company or even on an individual.

Done properly, SWOT will give you the BIG PICTURE of the MOST IMPORTANT FACTORS that influence SURVIVAL and PROSPERITY. As well as a PLAN to ACT ON.

How to do a SWOT

Irrespective of whether you or your team are future planning for specific products, work, personal or any other area, the SWOT analysis process is the same.

  • Step 1 – Information collection – In the here and now…
    List all strengths that exist now. Then in turn, list all weaknesses that exist now. Be realistic but avoid modesty!
    • You can conduct one-on-one interviews. Or get a group together to brainstorm. A bit of both is frequently best
    • You’ll first want to prepare questions that relate to the specific company or product that you are analyzing. You’ll find some questions and issues below to get you going.
    • When facilitating a SWOT – search for insight through intelligent questioning and probing
  • Step 2 – What might be…
    List all opportunities that exist in the future. Opportunities are potential future strengths. Then in turn, list all threats that exist in the future. Threats are potential future weaknesses.
  • Step 3 – Plan of action…
    Review your SWOT matrix with a view to creating an action plan to address each of the four areas.

In summary:

  • Strengths need to be maintained, built upon or leveraged.
  • Weaknesses need to be remedied, changed or stopped.
  • Opportunities need to be prioritized, captured, built on and optimized.
  • Threats need to be countered or minimized and managed.

A SWOT analysis can be very subjective, and two people rarely come-up with the same final version of SWOT. It is an excellent tool however, for looking at the negative factors first in order to turn them into positive factors. Use SWOT as guide and not a prescription.

For more detailed examples, templates etc visit http://www.rapidbi.com/created/SWOTanalysis.html

Mike Morrison

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Mike Morrison is director of RapidBI, an organisational effectiveness consultancy. He has been involved in HR, OD and strategic development for over 20 years. He can be contacted via www.rapidbi.com © This article is copyright RapidBI 2006, 2008 – it may be copied providing the authors are credited, and direct links maintained


Trainerbase: making the most of your membership

January 10, 2008
Are you a member of TrainerBase? Are you making it work for you?
In this article Mike Morrison describes how he as made it to be number 1 listing in TrainerBase

Ok so you have ‘signed up’ but what is TB and how can you make it work for you?
Note – if you are a not yet an enhanced member you will not be getting the most from your subscription! I looked at the options and realised that the membership option for the highest ‘price’ provided by far the best value… No such thing as a free lunch…

Introduction
If you are expecting work and purchasers to come beating a path to your door – then you have a misunderstanding of not only TB but the marketplace as a whole.TB is a marketplace, a marketing tool, not necessarily a selling tool. This paper sets to outline how I have used TB to generate activity and how you can too.

What is the difference?
  • Marketing is “everything a company does to acquire customers and maintain a relationship with them”
  • Sales is “income (at invoice values) received for goods and services over some given period of time”How can TrainerBase help you grow your business?
TrainerBase is primarily a marketing tool – the sale comes when you have created your place in the market.

So how can you use TB to better effect?
1) Raise your profile on TB and the TB search listings
2) Use your TB membership to help promote your website (increase Google position)Visit http://www.trainerbase.co.uk/edit/EditProfile_Rank.asp (view your profile position and purchase points) and look at your position. Where are you? Make a note of these figures. These will provide you with your benchmark, the ability to see the changes in position based on effort. No matter how low, do not be put off. All improvements will help you.


Next, search the database for your key words/ associated disciplines. You need to be on the first or second page of results. If not, there is little point in being listed. You may need to accept that you need to specialise for a while until you gain more points.


While you may aspire to being in the top 20 (absolute position <20)
You goal is to have a relative position

For example if you search for ‘coaching’ you will find over 1400 trainers with this skill – if you are not in the first couple of pages for your ‘main offer’ there is little point being in the list. There are trainers with paid profiles on page 25!! Why??

The members that ‘sign up’ and do not pay anything also start on page 25!!

Be bold… be brave … only select the things that you love and you excel at – remembers this IS A COMPETITIVE market place. You need to be seen over the ‘background noise’.

Gaining points
The more points you have the higher you show in the search results. Other less known ways of increasing you position in the listings is to minimise the number of “associated disciplines” that you offer. Focus on the ones you excel at. The ones you can use as a ‘hook’ for potential customers. If you claim to do too many you risk looking desperate for work – this is not a position of strength and will undermine your perception. All the others can be listed on your enhanced listing pages.
Be careful – the more associated disciplines you have the more dilute you are seen to be by potential purchasers.

Ways of earning points:
  • Visit the site – each visit earns one point – so if you have Firefox or IE7 set up 2 home pages – each time you start your browser you earn a point
  • Contribute to the forums – again that earns points
  • Upload and encourage clients to put testimonials
  • Upload resources you have – just be careful of copyright
  • Refer other trainers – make sure they quote your reference
  • Mention TB as a reference source on forums – any forum – but make sure you do it as a hyperlink. That usually means typing http://www.trainerbase.co.uk/ – tip many forums stop this so always include at least 2 sources of info with TB being one. This way it looks less like direct advertising.
  • Be creative – find new forums, invest time giving quality answers. Build a reputation in that arena.
  • If someone wants a resource and you have it – rather than send it – upload it as a resource (earn points) and promote where to get it (more points!).
  • After each posting – screen grab a copy of the posting (alt & print screen) and paste it in your email software and sent to Ed – if you don’t tell him – it doesn’t happen! By the way the forums can be ANYWHERE in the world – not just UK ones – UK ones promote the services of TB, world wide help keep TB high on the search engines – good for you… good for me

Value of points

In the current FAQ section the value of points is given as:

  • 1 point per visit to the site
  • 5 points per testimonial uploaded to your profile
  • 10 points for a posting on the forum20 points per resource uploaded to your profile
  • 50 points per referred friend that signs up to TrainerBase (if they then subscribe you get £10)
  • 50 points minimum per article published (really useful ones will attract more)
  • 50 points minimum for promoting TrainerBase to other networks
  • Note this may be subject to change – so look up the current ‘rewards’

Don’t try to beat the system – work with it… if you upset Ed, he will keep an eye on you.. work with the system and promote TB not just yourself.

You start your TB membership with 1000 points, then for each day that passes and you do not contribute you lose a point – so even if you just click on the website once a day you are holding your position….

You need around 1000 additional points to be a contender – so build a short/ medium term plan:

  • How many resources can you upload, how many daily visits to the site, how many ‘mentions’ on forums and other sites? – aim for a 3-6 month plan. What are your long term (sustainable) plans?
  • How many website visits per week? How many resources per month?, how many mentions on other site per month? Treat this as a long term investment, not a quick return.

Shoot for the stars?

Being in the top 5 is not necessarily a strength – people will make assumptions about you, some are advantageous, some are a hindrance. How often do you ignore the first couple of results in a Google search??

If you want to you can also buy points – But earning is a much more sustainable activity. I have seen people buy points then slide as other who have a more sustainable model gain ground – sure buy points to ‘get in the game’ but sustainability is the real name of the game. Build momentum first – then top-up if needed (to get in the game). This is not a strategy I have ever done nor will I do.

Potential purchasers will read your posts on to this and other forums – you are your own press agent – so be aware of your image – it is what you want your customers to know you as? Posting and answering questions is not only valuable ‘spare time’ activity, but it helps to raise your profile, and helps other TB members and purchasers to understand your strengths. – this is all marketing!

Your Profile

One of the best kept secrets of the TB profiles is the enhanced listing. This is for 2 reasons:

  1. Potential customers can find out about you really easily, see the course you run etc. it is a great shop window.
  2. Often your TB listing will be placed higher in Google than your own site. This is because of the changing content and number of external sites pointing to TB (hence the reason for posting on forums).

The real power of using the TB profile is to have links to your own site, not just one to your home page, but several links to important pages with good content. From a purchaser point of view, they do not need to see your home page – your TB page becomes that, if they want more specific information – take them straight to that page. Keep changing and managing your profile pages, the search engines love changing content, and it will encourage people to re-visit. I have several people re-visiting to see what I change. Sometimes I change a lot, other times a little.

Google appears to LOVE multiple links from TB (or other places) to your site. The links from Google alone could easily cost you £100-£200 pa for quality links from a related high profile site! – why do you think links and adverts from sites like TrainingZone cost £1000s !!!

Talk to other members – exchange discrete links on their TB pages too! Link with people that offer compatible services – not competitive ones.

Building your database

Do you monitor and keep a list of people that visit your site? Do you have a newsletter? Are they added? Keep adding download/ resources – as people download – you get their data, the more you have the more people will visit…

While many visitors may well be other trainers – if they see you as an expert in an area, they may well approach you to partner for pitches, and if they have the lead and see you as a strength….well enough said.

Collect the data, follow up on the data, remember marketing is about building a relationship – one email contact is not a relationship!

Are you making the most of your investment?

If you are not using your membership to best effect you are wasting money. Simple as that!

Visit http://www.trainerbase.co.uk/VIP/RapidBI to see what I do – I’m not saying I am an exemplar – but the site DOES work for me on many levels.

Does this stuff really work?

I know this stuff works… I did it this way. I had stages of growth and targets – first was to be on page one for some searches My next goal was the top 20 trainer list, then the top 10, then the top 5 then number 1. In the same time frame I have seen parts of my business site grow from a Google rank of 3 to 5 – not bad for a small training site. Unique hits have grown from 10’s to over 3500 unique visitors per month and growing. With increasing numbers come increasing sales….

If this works why share it now?

I have considered doing this for some time – but did not want to give away what was working for me – I estimate that only 5-10 other members of TB actually understand how TB really helps them in the long term. With the changes to TB, the trade association and my commitment to growing the community, it is now in the interests of the community for more people to ‘use the system’.

In time other rankings will need to come into play – including I suspect geographic ones – are you ready? Many trainers for example will ‘work anywhere’ – but if the client has green policies they will more likely hire a ‘green’ supplier, and one who says I only work within 75 miles of x may well get the work above a person prepared to travel. Values are becoming increasingly important. Will your name be higher in the listing than your competitors? Will purchasers see you first – or will you GRAB their attention?

TrainerBase will grow – will you grow with it?

I wish you well with your TB marketing plan.

Mike Morrison – http://www.trainerbase.co.uk/VIP/RapidBI

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Mike Morrison is director of RapidBI, an organisational effectiveness consultancy. He has been involved in HR, OD and strategic development for over 20 years. He can be contacted via www.rapidbi.com

© This article is copyright RapidBI 2008 – it may be copied providing the authors are credited, and direct links maintained


PRIMO-F Business development model

January 1, 2008

PRIMO-F Business Growth Model

The PRIMO-F model was developed as part of a SWOT analysis of an organization. It provides a consistent framework for comparison either from within the organization or to benchmark against a previous analysis or benchmark against other organizations.

The PRIMO-F model was based on some work from the Durham University Business School (DUBS), and what makes an organization and its management effective. This research demonstrated that an effective organisation needed to fulfill the following equation:

Organizational Growth Effectiveness

=

Performance to date * Potential for the future.

Where Performance to date (FiMO) included:

  • Finance,
  • Operations

and Potential for the future (RECoIL) included:

  • Resources,
  • Controls and Systems
  • Innovation and
  • Leadership

This was sometimes called FiMO/ RECoIL.

One of the problems with this method was the lack of consistent application, as a tool it is fine, however many manager, consultants and business advisors have their own priorities. For example a person who has a financial background will major on finance, a person with marketing will focus on marketing etc. After all we are all human. One of the problems with the model in the ‘field’ is that often key issues were missed. The BIR was developed to take these factors and review them consistently.

In many situations it is difficult for managers to differentiate between performance to date and potential for the future, as several areas overlapped, for example resources, operational leadership and management. To solve this problem we developed the PRIMO-F. A simplified way of showing strengths and weaknesses in the relevant areas.

The PRIMO-F Model:

PRIMO-F

People
Resources
Innovation & Ideas
Marketing
Operations
Finance

PRIMO-F business growth model

Performance of the business.

How good is it in terms of its Finance, Marketing & its Operations?

Potential for Growth
People in terms of their experience, their leadership and the controls in place in the organization.
Experience:

Age of the business

Management experience of:

  • borrowing.
  • product development
  • different types of market
  • use of external agents
  • moving sites
  • managing growth

Leadership:

Involving a senior management
age of owner manager
occupational base of owner manager
personal objectives and ambition in line vision of the future
education and training
attitude to staff development
family influence
management style
attitude to change
degree of strategic awareness and understanding of environment

Control:

Adequacy of information and control systems
Ability to use information
Degree of professionalism and Responsibilities of management
Adequacy of planning and monitoring
Level of delegation
How performance is assessed

Resources

Liquidity and availability of finance
Technology level and capability
Physical assets: age and state
Product range and life
Use of and access to appropriate external agents

Innovation and Ideas
Number and source of ideas innovation is being considered
How they are assessed
Level of development or market testing of these ideas
Level of market planning of these ideas
How creative they are.

Using the PRIMO-F model

At its most simplistic the model can be used as an agenda for change, where a facilitator works with the management team and between them they score the business and identify areas of action.

For a template on using the PRIMO-F

The BIR (Business Improvement Review) is a proven tool which take this process to the next level, with 360 feedback from managers and staff, with the option of having external feedback from customers and suppliers. The BIR process is one of the most robust and quickest strategic review processes available. Typically a whole business review can be completed in less than two days, regardless of organizational size. If a large organization also want a divisional breakdown, this will take longer. A Free version looking only at the People and leadership aspects is available For information on the three diagnostic reviews in the BIR family please visit www.rapidbi.com/bir/

Other pages of interest http://www.rapidbi.com/articles/

management models

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Mike Morrison is director of RapidBI, an organisational effectiveness consultancy. He has been involved in HR, OD and strategic development for over 20 years. He can be contacted via www.rapidbi.com © This article is copyright RapidBI 2006, 2008 – it may be copied providing the authors are credited, and direct links maintained


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