5 Reasons Why Talent Leave our Businesses

December 30, 2011

5 Reasons Why Talent Leaves Businesses

Retaining talented people is an important role of both line management and human resources. There are without doubt 100s of excuses people give when leaving a company, especially in “exit interviews”.

Exit interviews are great for the business and HR, but lets get real – most employees do not want to risk their reference on saying the boss was an idiot, or that it was a controlling environment and that the style of management actually stopped people from performing… now do they?

No – so the reality is – if you want real honest reasons for leaving – give an open regference first – then ask for “reasons for leaving!

In the mean time I have found this useful infographic on the reasons why people leave. Post your thoughts as comments below.

5 reasons why top talent leave their jobs

by visually via visually

5 Reasons Why Talent Leave
  • Boss is a jerk
  • Lack of empowerment
  • Internal politics
  • Recognition
  • The company is going under

leadership-and-management-models-download-page-3

March 4, 2011

Leadership and Management Models Download PowerPoint Slides – page 3


At RapidBI we use many management and leadership models and through the process of using them we have developed a library of 100′s.

These pages have proved so popular that we now offer unbranded PowerPoint slides for you to download and use.

Please note many of the models on the slides are copyright – please use appropriately.

Go back to page 1 of the models

Go back to page 2 of the models

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Normans reaction cycle

Norman’s Reaction Model

Organizational effectivness

Organizational Effectiveness Under Change

Pace of product production model

Product Placement – Change

Performance management system

Performance Management System

Performance model

Performance Management Model

Change reaction model
Product lifecycle
Performance management system
Performance Management

personal change model, curve transition

Personal Change/ Transition Curve

personal competence awareness model

Personal Competence Awareness Model

Power influence model

Power Influence Model

Price quality model - 9 box model

Price Quality Model

PRIMO-F organizational development model

PRIMO-F Holistic Review

PRIMO-F SWOT analysis model – culture and values

 

Project management cycle

Project Management Cycle

Risk Assessment Model

Risk Management / Assessment

Risk assessment model

Risk Management / Assessment

Risk spend effort model

Spend Effort Model

s-curve model

S-Curve

Project Management model
Risk assessment and loss control leadership
Risk, Innovation
Product life cycle

Client sales organization

Client Sales Organization

scenario analysis planning model

Scenario Analysis Planning Model

Schamner change model

Schamner Change Model

Schein culture levels

Schein Culture Levels

Service cycle

Service Cycle

Managing Change

 

Service delivery

Service Delivery

Stakeholder mapping model - 9 box model

Stakeholder Mapping Model

strategic planning model

Strategic Planning Model

Strategic planning model

Strength attractivness model

Strengths Attractiveness Model

Support challenge model

Support Challenge Model

Tannenbaum Schmidt Leadership Model

Tannenbaun Schmidt Leadership Model

Technology Learning Model

Technology Learning Model

Leadership continuum

 

Training team integration model

Training Team Integration Model

Transactional Analysis TA OK

Transactional Analysis OK

Transactional Analysis TA PAC model

Transactional Analysis PAC

Trust risk model

Trust Risk Model

Tuckman Team Development Model

Tuckman Team Development Model

TA.. i’m OK you’re ok
TA… Parent Adult Child model
Team development model

Turner model

Turner Model

U-Curve presentation planning

U-Curve Presentation Planning tool

Management model - Process map RapidBI disgnostic 

RapidBIDiagnostic Process Map

Presentation planning curve

Marketing and strategy

 

undefined  

 

Lewin Change Model

Marketing and strategy Talent Management – nine box grid Talent Management – nine box grid Lewin Change Model
Kotter eight step change undefinedKotter change model undefinedThe J-Curve undefinedThe dynamics of flow – Csikszentmihalyi The map of every day experience
Kotter eight step change Kotter Change Model The J-Curve The dynamics of flow – Csikszentmihalyi Csikszentmihalyi – The map of every day experience

 


 


leadership and management models download- page 2

March 4, 2011

Leadership and Management Models Download PowerPoint Slides – page 2


At RapidBI we use many management and leadership models and through the process of using them we have developed a library of 100′s.

These pages have proved so popular that we now offer unbranded PowerPoint slides for you to download and use.

Please note many of the models on the slides are copyright – please use appropriately.

Go back to page 1 of the models

[wp_eStore_fancy1 id=1]

conceptual model

Conceptual Model

continuous improvement cycle

Continuous Improvement Cycle

core quadrants model - 4 box model

Core Quadrants

Creativity cycle

Creativity Cycle

culture presentation model - 4 box model

Culture Presentation
Creativity in Innovation
Organisational Culture

 

Deming cycle

Deming Cycle

debrief cycle

Debrief Cycle

Developing consulting skills  - 9 box model

Developing Consulting Skills

development cycle ritchie morrison

Development Cycle

development cycle

Development Cycle

 

 

consulting model

 

 

 

development cycle

Development Cycle

dilts logical levels

Dilts Logical Levels

dunn dunn learning model

Dunn Dunn Learning Model

dynamic coaching model - 4 box model

Dynamic Coaching Model

effectivness morale model - 4 box model

Effectiveness

NLP model
Coaching framework
Management effectiveness

effort reward model

Effort Reward Model

energy motivation model

Motivation Energy Model

entreprenurs balance model

Entrepreneurial Balance

Firo-b model

FIRO-B

Force field analysis

Motivation
FIRO-B psychometric model
Force field analysis model – Lewin

 

Goal setting model comfort stretch panic

Goal Setting – Comfort Stretch Goals

GROW coaching model

GROW Coaching Model

GROWing winners

Growing Winners

Growth cycle model

Growth Cycle Model

Guilford learning model

Guilford Learning Model

Coaching Model goal setting model
GROW Coaching Model
NLP model
Business and individual growth
Learning Theory

Hertzberg motivational model

Hertzberg Motivation

Peter Honey Alan Mumford learning styles cycle

Honey and mumford learning cycle

Byrds innovation drivers

Byrd’s Innovation Drivers

Byrd Innovation equation creativity risk

Creatrix Innovation Model

Motivation theory
Learning Cycle
Learning cycle

 


innovations paradigm model

Innovation Paradigms

IT services management model

IT Services Management Model

Johari Window

Johari Window

Kirkpatrick training evaluation model

Kirkpatrick Evaluation Model

knowledge transfer model

Knowledge Transfer Model

Innovation Model
Outsourcing
Training Evaluation model – ROI – Return on Investment
Innovation and knowledge transfer

Kolb learning cycle

Kolb Learning Styles

Kolb learning theory

Kolb Learning Theory

Kubler Ross change curve

Kubler Ross Transition curve

leadership model - will skill

Leadership Model – Will-Skill

Learning Delivery model

Learning Delivery Model

Learning cycle
Learning cycle
Managing Change Kubler Ross change model
Leadership models
Learning Delivery

 

Management cycle

Management Cycle

managing incidents near misses

Managing Accidents

managing multiple=

Managing Multiple Change

managing Risk model

Managing Risk

Learning Model
Management Cycle
Health and safety, risk and loss control leadership
Risk and Innovation

Maslow hierarchy of needs

Maslow Needs

MBTI model framework

MBTI styles

McGregor theory X theory Y

McGregor Theory X Y

Urgent important time management model

Managing Time

Urgent Important

Noelle neumann spiral silence

Noelle Neumann

Motivation Theory

Psychometric test model

Myers Briggs Type Indicator

Motivational theory

Time management

Next set of modules>>>

 


History of Coaching – A True Insight into Coaching

November 29, 2010

History of Coaching

History of CoachingCoaching is everywhere. It is the hot topic of management, leadership and people development. This article explores the history of coaching through the ages.

There are as many forms of coaching methodologies are there are coaches, so is there a “right” way? Or is the term “coaching” a generic word for one-to-one guidance, help or support?

A True Insight into Coaching

The origination of the term ‘Coaching’ started in the later part of the 1880s and this term has been mostly associated with the sports profession through its varied forms. The first thought which rushes to our mind when we think about coaching is about sports coaching as this profession is very well-developed in the sports arena. The term ‘Coach’ was initially started in 1830 and the Oxford University put forth the meaning of this term as slang for a tutor. Coaching can be defined in several ways and methodologies depending on the area where it is utilized but the need is to define it in layman’s term so as to understand the gist of the subject. A very simple definition to this broad term is the fact that Coaching is a true methodology which concentrates on directing, instructing and training either an individual or a group of people with the only aim to attain certain goals and objectives.

Coach –

Meaning “instructor/trainer” is c.1830 Oxford University slang for a tutor who “carries” a student through an exam; athletic sense is 1861. The verb is from 1610s, “to convey in a coach;” meaning “to prepare (someone) for an exam” is from 1849

 

Coaching through the Ages

The emergence of coaching was a very gradual and slow process and there are several theories which support the initiation of this methodology and the Grounded Theory of the Roots is one significant theory which commemorates the foundation of coaching. Strong roots of coaching have been noticed in several perspectives such as psychology, social sciences, business and several others. Let us split up this journey into the significant time periods in which this method emerged into a major stream as in the current times.

History of Coaching – Prior to 1900

During the end of the 18th century and towards the start of the 19th century, it was noticed that philosophy emerged as a separate branch from social sciences and thus exclusive studies were carried out to study the intricacies of the human society and the individual as such. Psychology emerged in its initial form during this period wherein which there were vague descriptions of mental functions and perceptions. In 1879, Wundt and James carried out exclusive work on philosophical traditions and during this period, psychology did experience growing pains just as what coaching seems to be experiencing as of now. The contemporary branch of modern management certainly had its roots put out in the 19th century and it was towards the middle of this era, that theories and structuring such as training, motivation, organizational structure, etc. were laid out and brought to notice during the industrial revolution. Personnel management also emerged during this period along with consulting and it was in between 1880s to 1950s that the first variety of management consultants came into picture. There were not many changes which occurred in other disciplines during this period such as sports, performing arts or also in the field of education.

History of Coaching – 1900s through 1920s

This was the period for technological advances and the scientific perspective was at its peak at this time. In fact, you can even perceive that the root disciplines of coaching were even founded during this period. Industrialization took an advanced turn during this period and the discovery of the theory of relativity in physics played a great role during this time. In fact, this time was actually referred by Goldman as a ‘shift from mechanical model to the organic model of the world’. Freud who took up an enhanced interest in Psychology became the first person who interpreted psychotherapy during this time. By the end of this century, there were five sub-disciplines from psychology which is a huge achievement in itself. From the 1900s, there was a marked difference in how managers utilized scientific theories in managerial functioning which was to a greater degree in response to Industrial Revolution which certainly demanded work specialization, unity of command, proper hierarchical chain and coordination of activities. In fact, in the 1910s, one observed scientific and classical management perspectives started to emerge and in the 1920s, the human relations movement also initiated. The famous Hawthorne studies were developed in the 1920s and business theories and practices also started adopting psychological theories and models to run the business.

History of Coaching – 1930s through 1950s

Advances in technology continued during this period as well and objects of modern production started invading our lives and almost all the aspects of life such as management, education, consulting and even development started to accept the military model of control and command. This time period actually saw a difference of opinion in the field of psychology and in fact many of the Freudian theories were opposed during this period. The second force of psychology, Behaviorism, also rejected the theories of Freud and actually offered an empirical approach through scientific methods. In fact, the emergence and establishment of behaviorism during the 1910s to the 1950s was as a reaction to the Freudian theories. It was in the 1950s that Maslow and Rogers came up with a humanistic approach in psychology which is known as the third force of this sector wherein personal and phenomenological aspects of human experience were given great precedence. During this time, Perls also popularized the Gestalt therapy and Cognitive psychology also took shape during this time.

History of Coaching – 1960s through 1970s

The humanistic movement took place in the 1960s and it advised employers that people need to be treated well and it was during this period, that there was predominant importance attributed to coaching in business literature as well. In fact, references to coaching evolved out from human resource journals and started appearing more in training and management journals. In the time period from 1960 to 1979, 15 of the 23 articles written on the topic of coaching were published in training journals. Coaching began to get primary importance and there were four management books which were published on coaching and the main subjects captured in the essence of these books were on how managers can utilize coaching to improve performance. Before the 1970s, the term ‘Executive Coaching’ was not in use but rather the term ‘Counseling’ was exclusively used in the business domain. Initially, companies used to recruit Counseling executives who were like psychologists so that managers could have one-on-one sessions with them. The coaching approach was later introduced and was unanimously accepted in the business use.

History of Coaching – 1980s

It was in between the 1970s and 1980s when the United States understood the potential of the coaching process in the business sector and concluded that coaching is essential to support and aid managers so that they can attain their performance requirements and can also contribute directly towards the survival of the business. It was Kinlaw who emphasized that all forms of coaching necessarily includes two main features which are one-on-one conversations and concentration on performance or subjects related to performance. In Britain, the subject of coaching received a fresh meaning and referred to the process wherein which you can conduct direct discussions with your colleagues in an attempt to solve problems and thereby complete the required tasks. Coaching and counseling were often used interchangeably. The 1980s definitely saw the growth of coaching and its complete domination in to the business literature. Discipline journals greatly accepted the success of coaching and published numerous articles on this concept and it was during this time as well that the inception of coaching was traced to its roots of leadership development training and management practice of learning skills and understanding. Even the collaborative model of consultation was referred to have certain similarities to that of coaching.

History of Coaching – 1990s through 2004

It is surprising to note how the concept of coaching progressively spread during the nineties and references to coaching were continuously mentioned in journals and the increase of such articles drastically increased during this period. The development in the coaching industry has been tremendous and has reached a maturation level during this point with respect to the accumulated coaching experience, increase in the number of coaching professionals in various arenas and the enhancement of sophistication in management and human resource professionals. Several coaching books hit the market at this time and journal articles written on coaching started getting flooded in the various publications and this number rose drastically in the early 2000s. 39 books on coaching were also published in the 2000s and contributed heavily towards the strong development of coaching. Whitmore in 1992 his book “Coaching for Performance” popularized the GROW model and made coaching more accessible to the workplace.

History of Coaching – 2004 to 2010

In the recent years, the sphere of coaching has adapted several models wherein which the root disciplines of coaching can be employed in the various business sectors and theories in the psychological section have been exclusively utilized for the purpose. There were also influences of coaching from disciplines such as sociology, linguistics and anthropology and the coach-client relationship is being extensively studied and monitored as well. Business coaching has become a must in the corporate world and companies understand that they cannot progress in the correct direction without including coaching in their development. Organization psychology further strengthened coaching by offering numerous strategies and also supported developmental counseling for key management personnel.

As we can see coaching is not new, we do not need “specialist” training or accreditation, what we need is experience.

References used include:

The Inner Game of Tennis By Tim Gallwey 1974
The Power of Positive Thinking By Dr Norman Vincent Peale, first published in 1952
Freedom and the college By Alexander Meiklejohn 1923
Coaching for Performance By John Whitmore 1992
Educational review, Volume 60 Doubleday, Doran, 1920 Vols. 19-34 include “Bibliography of education” for 1899-1906, compiled by James I. Wyer and others
The Journal of the National Education Association, Volume 1 National Education Association of the United States, The Association, 1916


Sample template for Training Needs Analysis – Management & Leadership

September 22, 2010

Identifying Management & Leadership Needs

Training Needs analysis graphicThe sixth in our series of sample templates of Training Needs Analysis templates – this one for looking at management and leadership skills.

TRAINING NEEDS ASSESSMENT – For  Management And Leadership

 

Introduction

An organization is basically constructed for a purpose. Business is (usually) to make profit; education is to touch the heart and teach the minds of its students, health care is to take care of the wellness of its patients, etc. These organizations comprise human resources that work on the fulfillment of its purpose. The attainment of the vision and mission of any organization depends on the direction of its leaders. Managing the organization’s business and leading its people would be a difficult task to an un-prepared individual assigned to be, as they say, “captain of the ship”. The purpose of this TNA is to make an analysis of your competency as managers and leaders/supervisors of your respective departments.

This is to help you nourish your strengths, improve your limitations and bring out your potentials.

Instruction: Kindly fill out the necessary information being asked. Encircle the number corresponding  your response in each item following the legend below.

5        – Excellent                        3    – Satisfactory                    1    – Needs

4    – Very Satisfactory          2    – Fairly Satisfactory                Improvement

 

Name: __________________________________   Department:____________________

Current Job Position:______________________________

No. of Years holding the position:____________________

Service Record in the Company:

Position Inclusive Dates No. of Mos/Yrs
     
     
     
     
     

Highest Educational Attainment: ____________________________________________

 

Managerial Capability

1. Planning:  (1.1) sets company goal for the fiscal year                 1     2     3     4     5
                     (1.2) identifies work to be done to attain the goal  1     2     3     4     5
                     (1.3) identifies who is accountable for the various
                              work in attaining company’s goal            1     2     3     4     5
                     (1.4) projects the needed resources in attaining
                              the goal                                    1     2     3     4     5
                   
                     (1.5) provides contingency plan in case of plans
                              projected does not work                     1     2     3     4     5
                     (1.6) sets evaluation tool for the company’s
                             performance                                  1     2     3     4     5
 
2. Organizing: (2.1) assigned person responsible for a
                             particular task                              1     2     3     4     5
                     (2.2) identifies responsibility of each personnel    1     2     3     4     5     
                     (2.3 sets time frame of the work to be done of
                            each personnel                                1     2     3     4     5
 
3. Leading:   (3.1) gives direction to the subordinates in
                             attaining the company’s goal                 1     2     3     4     5
                     (3.2) sets a good example for his subordinates
                              to emulate                                  1     2     3     4     5
                     (3.3) make decisions and direct the work of
                              others                                      1     2     3     4     5
                     (3.4) builds a harmonious working relationship
                              among its subordinates                      1     2     3     4     5
                     (3.5) nurture a pleasant culture of the organization 1     2     3     4     5
                     (3.6) maintains a harmonious working relationship
                              with fellow manager                         1     2     3     4    5
                     (3.7) supports the decision of the higher authority  1     2     3     4    5
 
4. Coordinating: (4.1) conducts regular meeting with the
                             accountable person                           1     2     3     4     5
                     (4.2) makes follow up of the tasks to be done        1     2     3     4     5
                     (4.3) assess company’s performance according
                              to plan                                     1     2     3     4     5
                     (4.4) assess departments’ performance based
                              on the given responsibility                 1     2     3     4     5
                     (4.5) provides feedback on individual,
                              department and company’s performance        1     2     3     4     5
 
5. Controlling: (5.1) delegates work to others                            1     2     3     4     5
                     (5.2) sets a standard of subordinates level of
                              performance in her/his job                  1     2     3     4     5
                     (5.3) maintains the quality of service/product
                              that the company offers                     1     2     3     4     5
                     (5.4) ensures that the tasks are done according to
                              schedule                                    1     2     3     4     5
                     (5.5) work to accomplish the task within the
                              budget allocation                           1      2     3     4     5
 
6. Staffing:   (6.1) identifies the needed staff in a department          1     2     3     4     5
                     (6.2) sets the standard competency of staff to be
                              hired                                       1     2     3     4     5
                     (6.3) hire an applicant staff based on the
                              competency she/he could perform             1     2     3     4     5
 
7. Motivating: (7.1) provides a conducive atmosphere at work              1     2     3     4     5
                     (7.2) recognizes the needs of its staff/workers      1     2     3     4     5
                     (7.3) supports the recreational activities of its
                              workers/staff                               1     2     3     4     5
                     (7.4) listen to its staff/workers grievances         1     2     3     4     5
                     (7.5) recognizes the efforts of workers/staff
                              in attaining organizational goal            1     2     3     4     5
                     (7.6) share the blessing of the company to its
                              workers/staff                               1     2     3     4     5
 
Coping with Stress
Instruction: Kindly tick the box(es) that you do as your recreational activities following the legend below.
4 – Often                        2 - Occasional
3 - Regular                      1 - Never
                                                                      1             2             3            4
 
1. Watch Television program.                                        [     ]       [     ]       [     ]      [     ]
2. Watch a movie.                                                   [     ]       [     ]       [     ]      [     ]
3. Read magazine or books.                                          [     ]       [     ]       [     ]      [     ]
4. Listen to favorite music                                         [     ]       [     ]       [     ]      [     ]
5. Practice deep breathing                                          [     ]       [     ]       [     ]      [     ]
6. Goes to the gym                                                  [     ]       [     ]       [     ]      [     ]
7. Visualizes herself/himself as a healthy
     and relaxed person                                             [     ]       [     ]       [     ]      [     ]
8. Do yoga meditation                                               [     ]       [     ]       [     ]      [     ]
9. Writes in the journal to account the days’
    activity, blessing, accomplishment, etc.                        [     ]       [     ]       [     ]      [     ]
10. Play games (basketball, chess……)                                [     ]        [     ]      [     ]      [     ]
11. Take a walk in the park                                         [     ]        [     ]      [     ]      [     ]
12. Visit a SPA                                                     [     ]        [     ]      [     ]      [     ]
13. Tend the garden, plant trees                                    [     ]        [     ]      [     ]      [     ]
14. Have a good talk and laughter with someone                      [     ]       [     ]      [     ]      [     ]
15. Have a good sex with wife/husband/partner                       [     ]       [     ]      [     ]      [     ]          
 

Training Evaluation

This section focuses on the planning and evaluation aspects of the specific trainings that were identified for management and leadership skills. This can be used to present the idea for approval by upper management.

Estimated budget

(Breakdown of projected expenses for duration of training)

Resources

(Presentation materials, physical facilities, etc.)

Documentation

(Consolidation of digital and hard data for presentation)

Evaluation

(Focused on trainers,  trainees, organizers,  and training program)

 

 

- Use a separate sheet if possible -

 

 

 

- Use a separate sheet if possible -

 

 

 

- Use a separate sheet if possible -

 

 

 

- Use a separate sheet if possible -

 

Conclusion

 

 

How will this assessment tool help identify the training needs and motivation needed by the staff under management and leadership units for future training?

 

 

 

 

 

 


An Overview of Organizational Leadership and Management – Walonick

March 19, 2010

An Overview of Organizational Leadership and Management

David S. Walonick, Ph.D.

Power

The quest for power has dominated human history. One of the earliest works on the management of power was written by Niccolo Machiavelli, a political advisor to nobles during the early sixteenth century. In The Prince, Machiavelli laid out a set of principles that would help the nobles maintain their leadership and control over the populous. A few of the most important of Machiavelli’s assertions are:

· It is better to be a conservative rather than liberal spender.

· It is better to be feared than loved. One can be feared without being hated.

· The end justifies the means.

· Cunningness is preferable to integrity.

· Take opportunities to give dramatic rewards or punishments so they will be talked about.

· Offer help to parties that are less powerful than you.

· Do not take common cause with parties more powerful than you.

· Use counselors that are truthful, but who have a narrow focus.

· Acting impetuously is preferable to cautiously.

· Seek a reputation of severity instead of softness.

· Use care not to offend the powerful or those subservient to you.

Modern theories of management reject the underlying ethics of Machiavelli’s power principles. Power is maintained through fear, which is unacceptable because it involves the repression of the human spirit.

Yukl (1989) defines power “as an agent’s potential influence over the attitudes and behavior of one or more designated target persons” (p. 14). Yukl proposes a taxonomy to classify power in organizations according to its derivation–position, personal, or political.

Position power is frequently called “legitimate power” (French and Raven, 1959). It is derived from a person’s position in an organization and includes control over rewards, punishments, information, resources, rule-making, work assignments, and decision making. Subordinates comply with this form of power out of obedience to authority, loyalty to the organization, or respect for the hierarchical structure. In some way, they recognize the legitimacy of the authority. Membership in an organization can be viewed as a form of a “social contract”, where members agree to the rules in return for the benefits of membership (March and Simon, 1959).

Power derived from personal attributes comes from the interactions of a person with other members of the organization. One form of this power, dubbed “expert power” (French and Raven, 1959), comes from an individual’s expertise in solving problems or performing a particular task. Another form of personal power is derived from loyalties and friendships developed over a long period of time. French and Raven (1959) referred to this as “referent power”. Personal charisma is a form of referent power. People tend to be attracted to and identify with charismatic leaders. In a review of eighteen studies, Podsakoff and Schriesheim (1985) concluded that effective leadership is strongly associated with the use of referent power.

Political power involves deliberate attempts by groups or indiviudals to increase or maintain their existing level of power. It encompases actions to gain control or influence over decision making processes. Coalitions and alliances are often formed as part of the political process, and they often involve deliberate attempts to undermine the opposition to the coalition. For example, “co-optation” is a political strategy where an influential individual from the opposition might be allowed to participate in a decision making process, knowing that this will increase their commitment to the decision (Yukl, 1989).

French and Raven’s (1959) power taxonomy is similar to Yukl’s (1989) except that position power is subdivided into reward and coercive powers. In addition, French and Raven stressed that the different types of power are likely to be related in complex ways.

Social exchange theory (Hollander, 1958, 1979; Jacobs, 1970) attempts to explain how power is won and lost by understanding the interaction processes between individuals. The theory looks at how leaders emerge in groups as a result of their interactions with other members of the group. The weakness of the theory is that it only attempts to understand interactions after the fact, and it does not offer any guidelines for leaders on the acquisition or use of power.

Motivation

Psychologist Abraham Maslow (1954) focused on motivating forces in individuals, and established a “hierarchy of needs.” According to Maslow, individuals would move to satisfy their needs in a hierarchical manner. Once a need was satisfied, it no longer would have the ability to motivate. At the bottom of the hierarchy, were physiological needs, such as food, shelter, and sexual gratification. These were followed by safety needs (protection from environmental dangers), social needs (love and belonging), and esteem (self-respect and the approval of others). The highest need was self-fulfillment, which involved deriving a sense of value and satisfaction from one’s work. While people generally filled these needs in order, Maslow recognized that the hierarchy was flexible within individuals, and that priorities could vary. Maslow did not include money in his schema because of the ambiguity in the meaning of money. For some people, money is a way to achieve the basic requirements of food and shelter. Others view money as a measure to satisfy their need for self-fulfillment.

Herzberg, Mausner, and Snyderman (1959) interviewed 200 engineers and accountants to explore what factors were motivating. They concluded that many factors that were thought to be motivating, such as pay and managerial style, were not motivating at all. Herzberg (1966) proposed that job statisfaction and dissatisfaction are not opposite ends of a continuum, but rather represent two distinct variables. Intrinsic motivational factors (called “satisfiers”) included achievement, recognition, and responsibility. Extrinsic factors (called “hygiene factors”) consisted of things like pay, status, job security, and management style. Herzberg theorized that a lack of satisfiers would not cause dissatisfaction. The presence of hygiene factors would not cause satisfaction, but their absence would cause dissatisfaction. While Hertzberg’s two-factor theory generated considerable research, “repeated factor analytic studies of job attitudes have failed to demonstrate the existence of two independent factors corresponding to motivators and hygienes” (Campbell, 1970, p. 381).

During the early 1960′s, managers began to recognize that money, working conditions, and punishment were not effective long-term motivators. Douglas McGregor (1960) theorized that the emotional climate of work was an important motivating factor. He postulated two opposing theories. Theory X views people as lazy and unmotivated. It argues that people naturally avoid responsibility, and therefore, need to be controlled and directed. Threats of punishment and deprivation are compelling motivators. Theory Y, on the other hand, states that work itself is a gratifying motivator. People will use self-control to achieve a goal, and they will accept (and even welcome) responsibility. Evidence exists to support both theories, although most modern managers favor theory Y (Drucker, 1974).

McGregor was dissatisfied with the either/or interpretation of his theories, and in 1967 proposed Theory Z as a way for management to embrace the paradox by simultaneously accepting both points of view. McGregor’s Theory Z was never accepted or popularized. As Pascale (1990) points out, when Ouchi’s book Theory Z was published in 1981, very few people even remembered that McGregor had previously used the term.

Expectancy theory attempts to understand motivation as a process where workers rationally decide how much effort to devote to a job at any given time (Georgopolous, Mahoney, and Jones, 1957; Porter and Lawler, 1968; Vroom, 1964). According to the theory, workers weigh the desireable outcomes (e.g., higher pay, promotion, recognition, etc.) against the undesireable outcomes (e.g., reprimand, layofff, stress, etc.). The probability of a perceived outcome is referred to as an expectancy, and the desirability of the outcome is its valence. A workers motivation is affected by the combination of expectancies and valences for each of the outcomes.

The reinforcement theory of motivation (also called contingency theory) is an outgrowth of the behaviorist school of psychology. Skinner is the most well-know proponent of the theory. The basic principles of the theory are: 1) reinforced behavior tends to be repeated, 2) reward is more effective than punishment, 3) feedback is necessary for improvement 4) rewards should be given without delay, and 5) rewards should be given for successive approximations of the desired behavior (Schneier, 1974).

Collins and Porras (1989) believe that motivation is the result of people doing a job that they think is worthwhile. They assert that motivation is not something that needs to be cultivated directly. Instead, it is a natural outcome of workers’ who believe in the mission, vision, and purpose of an organization. The “purpose” of an organization is a set of broad, enduring, inspirational, and fundamental reasons for the existence of the organization. The purpose provides a clear sense of direction by stating what members of the organization want to contribute to the world. The “mission” is a clearly defined and achievable goal. It provides a focal point of motivation. The “vision” is usually defined as being able to foresee the future, and developing a plan to meet the future needs. Collins and Porras (1989) define vision as “the ability to see the potential in or necessity of opportunities right in front of you. . . vision isn’t forecasting the future, it is creating the future by taking action in the present.” (p. 87)

Approaches to the Study of Leadership

Yukl (1989) identified four approaches for studying leadership. The “power influence approach” attempts to understand leadership effectiveness in terms of the amount and type of power possessed by the leader. This approach would examine how power is acquired, lost, and maintained. The “behavior approach” looks at the actual tasks performed by leaders. This involves evaluating daily activities and behavioral characteristics of leaders. The “trait approach” looks at the personal attributes of leaders, such as energy, intuition, creativity, persuasiveness, and foresight. The “situational approach” examines leadership in terms of its relationships with environmental factors, such as superiors, subordinants, and peers. This approach is often referred to as contingency theory because the role of the leader is contingent on the situation.

Another consideration in the study of leadership is that most theorists believe that managerial and leadership skills are different. “Leaders create and articulate vision, managers insure it is put into practice” (Syrett and Hogg, 1992, p.5).

Kotter (1990) elaborates on the differences. Management focuses on dealing with complexity, while leadership involves dealing with change. Management is committed to planning and budgeting, while leaders formulate and vision and set an organizational direction. Management is concerned with organizing and staffing, and leadership involves aligning people to a shared vision. Management is controlling and problem solving; leadership is motivating and inspiring.

Bennis (1990) also makes a strong distinction between leading and managing. A leader is a conceptualist with an entrepreneurial vision. A leader needs to be concerned with the big picture and the long-range future of an organization. Managers, on the other hand, are concerned with day-to-day routine operations, and part of their objective is to isolate leaders from these operations.

Are the qualities of managers and leaders mutually exclusive? Can a single person possess both leadership and management skills? Kotter (1990) believes that “smart companies value both kinds of people and work hard to make them part of the team.” Even more importantly, “they can begin to groom their top people to provide both.” (p. 16-17)

Vision

Vision “periodically provides an organization with a feeling of unity in its sense of direction” (Dilenschneider, 1992, p. 24). Dilenschneider argues that even in the best organizations, unity of purpose only occurs for brief periods of time. “It’s self-interest that drives moment-by-moment behavior in almost all organizations, unless you’re talking about a band of saints.” (p. 25)

According to Dilenschneider (1992), there are three ways for a leader to develop a vision. The first is for the leader to develop a personal vision and to then communicate it to the organization. This relies heavily on the leader’s ability to communicate the vision to the organization, and to persuade the members of the organization to accept it. The second is to buy a vision by hiring a consultant. According to Dilenschneider, the disadvantage of this method is that it often results in a “canned solution” that has been watered down so that it is adaptable to many organizations. In contrast, Kotter (1990) states that “what’s crucial about a vision is not its originality but how well it serves the interests of important constituencies — customers, stockholders, employees — and how easily it can be translated into a realistic competitive strategy.” (p. 19) The third way to develop a vision is to assemble the top managers to create a consensus vision. Dilenschneider argues that the collaborative creation of vision “probably leads to the most durable and effective results.” (p. 17) In effect, Dilenschneider is proposing a variation of the Delphi forecasting method as a way of creating a vision.

Communicating a vision is obviously as important as its creation. This involves more than simply articulating its message. A vision must be communicated through clearity of action. Dilenschneider (1992) emphasizes that need to know “inside-out” communications, where managers examine the communication process itself. (p. 20)

Sustaining a vision may be more difficult than its creation. Conviction is the glue that gives a vision staying-power. Dilenschneider (1992) points out that sucessful leaders “have recognized how important it is to sell rightness emotionally, not just intellectually.” (p. 24) This provides the fuel for sustained focus (i.e., conviction).

Vision and organizational culture are linked, each having an effect on the other. Dilenschneider (1992) writes that the vision of a leader in a new organization shapes the culture, while in mature organization, the leader must choose a vision that accomodates the exisitng organizaitonal culture. Unlike many theorists, Dilenschneider believes that corporate culture is “shaped by lore” (p. 26), and thus requires generations to make significant changes. Ritualized behavior, established over long periods of time, are especially immutable to change. Dilenschneider recommends that leaders find ways to support positive rituals, and to keep the vision in harmony with the organizational culture.

Leadership Style

Psychologist Kurt Lewin (1951) studied leadership methods by designing an experiment to compare autocratic and democratic leadership styles. As the experiment progressed, one of the democratic leaders was recategorized as laissez-faire. The autocratic leaders groups tended to be quarrelsome and work progressed at a modest rate. When the leader was not present, work came to a halt. The laissez-faire group ran haphazardly and work progressed at a slow rate. The democratic groups ran smoothly even when the leader was absent, and the relationships of group members were more friendly. Democratic leaders openly discussed issues with group members and encouraged them to join in making decisions. Uris (1964) argues that effective managers use all three methods of leadership depending on the particular circumstance.

During the 1950s, leadership studies were conducted at Ohio State University and the University of Michigan. The Ohio State leadership studies (Fleishman, 1953; Halpin and Winer, 1957; Hemphill and Coons, 1957) resulted in the creation of the Leader Behavior Description Questionnaire (LBDQ), a commonly used instrument to assess leadership behavior.

The Ohio State studies used a 150 item questionnaire to examine how subordinants perceived their supervisor’s behavior. Factor analyses of the questionnaire revealed two behavior constructs, which were later labeled “consideration” and “initiating structure”. Consideration included those items that indicated a leader’s friendliness, supportiveness, and compasion. Initiating structures were items that indicated the degree of structure that a leader imposed on subordinants (e.g., deadlines, assigning tasks, and following standard procedures). In a large correlational study, Fleishman and Harris (1962) reported that turnover rate was negatively correlated with consideration, and positively associated with initiating structure, although they emphasized the nonlinearity of the relationships. “There appear to be certain critical levels beyond which increased Consideration or decreased Initiating Structure have no effect on turnover or grievance rate.” (p. 53) In a summary of literature, Yukl (1989) reports that the effect of consideration has been confirmed, but the results of studies on initiating structure have not been clear or consistent.

The University of Michigan leadership studies (Katz and Kahn, 1952; Katz, Maccoby, and Morse, 1950; Katz, et al., 1951) were a series of correlational studies to examine the relationships between leadership behavior, group processes, and group productivity. Manager effectiveness was equated with group productivity. In a summary of these studies, Likert (1961) writes that three types of leadership behavior were found to be good predictors of management effectiveness: task-oriented behavior, relationship-orientated behavior, and participative leadership. Task-orientated behaviors are the same as the initiating structures in the Ohio studies, and relationship-orientated behaviors are similar to the consideration construct in the Ohio studies. The difference between the two studies was that the Michigan study viewed participative leadership as separate from the other relationship-orientated behaviors.

Participative Leadership

Participative leadership refers to the degree that to which other people can influence the leader’s decisions. It is interesting to note that this is nearly the opposite of the definition of power. Yukl (1989) presents a taxonomy of four decision making procedure categories. 1) The autocratic decision is where the manager seeks no input from other people. 2) The consultation decision is where the manager seeks opinions from others, but makes the decision alone. 3) The joint decision is where the manager and others discuss the problem and make a joint decision. 4) The delegation decision is one where the manager gives others the authority to make the decision. Yukl is careful to point out that decision making is actually a continuum instead of discrete categories.

The first studies on participative leadership were conducted by Lewin, Lippitt, and White in 1939. Hundreds of studies have been conducted since that time with mixed results. Claims have been made that participative management results in improved decisions, facilitation of change, identificaiton with leadership, and a high level of achievement (Williams and Huber, 1986).

Recent literature reviews and meta analyses have been inconclusive (Miller and Monge, 1986; Schweiger and Leana, 1986; Wagner and Gooding, 1987). Sometimes participative leadership works, and other times it doesn’t. Generally, studies that used questionnaires to assess employee satisfaction found positive results, while those that used objective measures of productivity were weaker and inconsistent. Most research in participative leadership has consisted of short-term field studies. Yukl (1989) argues that many of these studies may have been actually measuring the “Hawthorne effect”, a temporary positive effect from being the focus of attention.

Situtational Leadership Theory

Situtational leadership theory refers to belief that the relative importance of leadership behaviors depends on the situation. Aspects of the situation that modify the importance of behavior are called situational moderator variables.

Fiedler (1964, 1967) proposed the LPC contingency model to predict leadership effectiveness from a measure called the least preferred coworker score. The leader is asked to grade their least favorite worker on a series of bipolar adjectives (e.g. pleasant versus unpleasant, friendly versus unfriendly, gloomy versus cheerful). The scales are arranged so that the most lenient learder would recieve the highest LPC score. Fiedler’s rationale was that leaders who received high LPC scores were primarily motivated to have positive relationships, and that the achievement of task objectives was secondary. The degree to which LPC scores correlated with effectiveness was modified by a “situational favorability variable”. The situational favorability variable consisted of three aspects of the situation: leader-manager relations, position power, and task structure. Leadership effectiveness was associated with good leader-manager relations, high postion power (authority), and high task structure. Fiedler’s LPC theory was originally well received, however, empirical support for the model has been weak (Yukl, 1981).

Another contingency model was proposed by Fiedler in 1986. Cognitive resource theory attempts to examine the conditions whereby intelligence, experience, and expertise become predictive of leadership effectiveness. Fiedler proposed that the effect of cognitive resources becomes significant only when the leader is directive, when there is little stress, and when the leader has some expertise that cannot be performed by subordinants. The theory predicts that in low-stress situations, the leader’s intelligence has an strong impact on effectiveness, and in high-stress conditions, the leader’s expertise is more important.

Managerial Traits and Skills

Early studies on managerial traits were limited to standardized intelligence and apptitude tests. Stogdill (1948) reviewed 124 early studies on managerial traits. The review concludes that “a person does not become a leader by virtue of the possession of some combination of traits. . .” (p. 64). More recents studies have also tested for job-relevant technical knowledge and administrative skills. In a 1974 review of 163 more recent studies, Stogdill reversed his earlier position, and concluded that:

The leader is charaterized by a strong drive for responsibility and task completion, vigor and persistence in pursuit of goals, venturesomeness and originality in problem solving, drive to exercise initiative in social situations, self-confidence and sense of personal identity, willingness to accept consquences of decision and action, readiness to absorb interpersonal stress, willingness to tolerate frustration and delay, ability to influence other persons’ behavior, and capacity to structure social interaction systems to the purpose at hand. (p. 81)

Bass (1981) has pointed out that certain leadership traits increase the likelihood of a leader’s effectiveness, however, they do not guarantee it. He advocates a contingency model, where to a large degree, the importance of a particular trait depends upon the nature of the leadership situation.

Most theorists have a unique list of competencies which they believe are important to leadership success. While there is some overlap, the diversity of opinions is surprising. As revealed by the following examples, there seems to be little agreement on the most important leadership attributes.

Bennis (1990) identifies four leadership competencies. 1) Management of attention through a compelling vision; 2) Communication skills necessary to transfer a vision to others; 3) Being able to establish trust through reliability and constancy; and 4) Knowing one’s skills and employing them effectively.

Giblin (1990) defines a four-attribute framework for assessing leadership qualities: 1) resourcefulness, 2) astuteness, 3) compatibility, and 4) knowledge. An individual posessing these qualities is likely to be perceived as a leader by others.

Dilenschneider (1992) cites five ingredients for leadership: 1) vision and focus, 2) practical values, 3) awareness and use of time, 4) empowerment and motivation, and 5) objectivity and judgement. According to Dilenschneider’s theory, there are five core organizational values (integrity, accountability, diligence, perseverance, and discipline). Leaders derive power by adopting a set of values consistent with those deemed worthwhile by the organization.

Rolf Osterberg (1987) identifies five “components of awareness” essential for business leadership. 1) Hierarchies based on power are detrimental to personal development, and must be eliminated. 2) The managers role becomes one of “coordinating a self-organizing, self-renewing and self-transcending system.” (p. 69) 3) Problems are not deferred to higher levels (since there are none), but instead are solved by the workers who have the problems. 4) Goal setting is eliminated because it does not encourage exploration and personal development. 5) Profits are reinvested in the company and not used to support other processes. Osterberg admits that these premises will be a threat to established organizations. He also acknowledges that attempts to persuade them will be futile. Instead, he recommends that documented examples “will speak much more loudly than any statistics. Every such example will be a stone thrown into the water spreading its ripples. Let us trust the ripple effect which has its own life and its own power.” (p. 71)

Conflict and Stress

A common misperception is that the long hours and demands of higher levels of authority are associated with higher levels of stress. However, research has shown that nonexecutives experience more stress than executives, and that blue-collar workers have the most stress of all (Williams and Huber, 1986).

Conflict within organizations is a source of stress. Classical theorists believed that conflict could be dealt with by exercising a strong dose of authority. Neoclassical theorists attempted to eliminate conflict through improved communications and understanding. Neither approach is entirely acceptable to modern theorists.

Today, organizational researchers recognize both the positive and negative contributions of conflict. It is simplistic to think that conflict in organizations can be eliminated. Power struggles, disagreements over goals, competition among workers, overlapping and abiguous responsibilities, personality clashes, and labor-management polarizations are all potential sources of conflict. The negative aspects of conflict are readily apparent, resulting in violence, stress, insomnia, and a host of other delaterious effects. In contrast, Schmidt (1974, p. 5) reported several positive outcomes from conflict:

· Better ideas were produced.

· People were forced to search for new approaches.

· Long-standing problems surfaced and were dealt with.

· People were forced to clairfy their views.

· The tension stimulated interest and creativity.

· People had a chance to test their capacities.

Confilict can serve as an catalyst for change. It can inspire people to search for new solutions to problems. Conflict creates stress, which can be destructive and painful (distress), or invigorating and motivating (eustress).

During the early 1950′s, Daniel Funkenstein (1957) conducted a series of experiments at Harvard to study how people deal with stress. He looked at peoples’ emotions after they had been scolded and chided. Funkenstein found that people reacted differently to stress. Some directed their anger inward, while others directed their anger at others. Stress manifested itself in negative ways (e.g., fright, panic, and apprehesiveness), and positive ways (e.g., performance anxiety). People also differed in the degree of emotion evoked by the stressful situation. Funkenstein reported that the most successful way of dealing with stress was either with no emotion, or with performance anxiety.

Karl Albrecht (1979) argues that stress is basically a negative emotion that manifests itself through body signals, such as a nervous stomach, clammy hands, perspiration, and headaches. Albrecht maintains that body signals provide access to our inner feelings that are not available through intellectual analysis. Deep relaxation techniques are recommended as a way of eliminating stress.

Peter Serge (1990) views some forms of tension as a positive factor, and states that “people with high levels of personal mastery have a great tolerance for living with creative tension.” (p. 132) He also recognizes that “emotional tension” can occur when we are honest with ourselves about the gap between where we are and where we want to be. These manifest as sadness, disappointment, hopelessness, and anger.

Obsolescence

Obsolescence is an important issue in today’s working environment. Prior to the industrial revolution, the training that one received as an apprentice would last for their lifetime. Increasingly rapid technological changes have made it necessary for many people to update their training every ten or fifteen years. (Uris, 1986) For example, until recently graphic designers’ produced layouts by “keylining” (i.e., cutting and pasting). Many years of training were needed to acquire the requisite precision. In the last five years, desktop publishing has replaced keylining to such a degree that nearly all graphic design is now done on the computer. Those designers who have not updated their training find less work available, and those who have updated their training find themselves being replaced by newly-trained younger workers who are willing to work for less wages. In addition, younger workers cost less in medical and pension expenses.

Quality of Work Life

The quality of work life (QWL) is an outgrowth of the human relations movement. Its goals are to increase productivity, while at the same time improve employee satisfaction by addressing the emotional needs of workers. The purpose of QWL management is to create an atmosphere of freedom, participation, and autonomy in which the worker is a partner in sharing a common objective.

Richard Walton (1985), one of the founders of the QWL approach, identified eight factors to improve the working life of employees. These are:

1. Fair compensation – Workers should receive sufficient pay and benefits to reach an acceptable standard of living, and the pay should be similar to others performing equivalent work.

2. Safety and health – The work environment should not pose any physical or environmental dangers to workers.

3. Self-development – Management must find ways that enable workers to develop themselves.

4. Growth and security – Training should be provided to avoid obsolescence, and workers should be encouraged to make use of their advanced skills.

5. Social integration – Management needs to provide an atmosphere of encouragement and openness that is free from prejudice.

6. Constitutionalism – Management must recognize that workers have rights, and workers need to be assured that they have a way to protect those rights.

7. Life space – Management must recognize that employees have life outside of work, and they should look for ways to minimize the impact of working life on the workers’ families.

8. Social relevance – The company maintains high ethics, and acts responsibly with respect to its products, marketing, and the environment.

Many companies have adopted the QWL approach, but it has not been without problems. Implementing QWL procedures has often been troublesome. Some workers, and even top management, have been slow to integrate these changes into their thinking. Initial enthusiasm sometimes diminishes when immediate results of the QWL approach are not recognized. Workers occasionally feel that their new roles and status have been diminished as a result of QWL implementation.

Resistance to Change

One of the problems in implementing new ideas in companies is that both workers and management are often resistant to even minor changes. Psychologist Kurt Lewin (1951) developed a “field” approach to evaluate the positive and negative factors affecting change. Lewin observed that change involved a three-step process: unfreezing, moving, and then refreezing on a new level. Lewin reported that behavior would frequently return to the previous level unless a “force field” was created to stablize the behavior on the new level.

There are three major factors that make change threatening in organizations (Uris, 1986). The first is that sudden announcements and unexpected developments make people feel like they have no control. Resistance is a way of coping with an unexpected situation. The second is that people often see change as threatening to their positions of authority. The third is that people fear that change will result in some kind of loss, such as status or privileges.

Management can counteract these fears by implementing a program that includes the people who will be affected by the change. This begins with an announcement that clearly justifies the need for change. Management seeks the cooperation and acceptance of the workers by minimizing the negative effects and maximizing the positive effects. Most importantly, management should seek the participation of the workers in the planning process. Requesting workers opinions and suggestions will provide valuable information to management, and it will also make workers’ feel a part of the process (Uris, 1986).

Empowerment

According to Jaffe and Scott (1992), “empowerment means that the organization shifts from limiting the power to determine its future and how it will get there to a few top executives, to include every level of the organization in the process.” (p. 140) They believe that human resources like creativity, innovation, and motivation are the keys to successful organizations

Unlike many theorists, Jaffe and Scott (1992) do not equate empowerment with the maximization of personal freedom. On the contrary, they stress that freedom is constrained by a commitment to organizational visions, and that workers knowingly and willingly accept the organization’s need to control the resources and information. They argue that “empowerment is not an individual process” (p. 141), but rather, it requires an organization willing to make structural changes to create a context for new behaviors.

Effective leadership manifests itself throughout an organization by empowering its members. Bennis (1990) list four themes of empowerment.

· People feel they are making a difference.

· People regard learning and competence as important.

· People feel they are part of a community or family.

· People believe their work is exciting.

Haas (1990) describes an empowered organization as one that has “shed the traditional authoritarian practices.” (p. 106) The manager becomes a facilitator rather than a decision maker.

Trust is critical to the process of empowerment. (Dilenschneider, 1992) A leader must have a genuine trust in the organization and its workers. Ouchi’s (1981) book on Japanese management practices stresses the importance of supervisors who have a high level of trust in their subordinants.


© Dr. David Walonick – used with permission
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CIPD factsheets – an A-to-Z of HR topics & resources

January 9, 2010

CIPD factsheets – essential information for any manager & practitioner

CIPD Annual Conference 2009 - Jackie Orme ©RapidBI 2009An A-to-Z of HR and management related factors is an easy to read and easy to apply style.

The CIPD produce a wonderful set of regularly updated and reviewed factsheets on a wide range of HR and management based topics., While some are available to members only, the majority are available to all.

This pages lists those available as at January 2010. Please note all links open in new windows.

UPDATE MARCH 2011

The CIPD have now put these pages behind a gateway requiring registration. This registration is free.

To go to the CIPD Fact-sheet home page

CIPD Fact-sheet on: 360 feedback
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Absence measurement and management
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Action learning
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Age and employment
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Age discrimination: reward policies and procedures MEMBER ONLY
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Aligning learning to the needs of the organisation
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Assessment centres for recruitment and selection
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Basic pay settlements: data sources
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Bonuses and cash incentives
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Business gifts
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Career and outplacement consultants
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Change management
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Coaching
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Company car policies
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Competency and competency frameworks
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Contracts of employment
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Corporate social responsibility
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Costing and benchmarking learning and development
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Creative learning methods
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Data protection
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Development planning for individual employees
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Disability and employment
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Discipline and grievance procedures: key changes from 6 April 2009 MEMBER ONLY
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Discipline and grievances at work
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Dismissal
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Diversity: an overview
CIPD Fact-sheet on: E-learning: progress and prospects
CIPD Fact-sheet on: E-recruitment (previously called Online recruitment, and Recruitment on the Internet)
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Emotional intelligence
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Employee benefits
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Employee communication
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Employee engagement
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Employee relations
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Employee share ownership
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Employee turnover and retention
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Employee voice
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Employer brand
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Employer support for learning qualifications
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Employing overseas workers
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Employing people with criminal records
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Employing people with criminal records: risk assessment
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Employment law developments in 2009 and 2010 (previously Legal developments in…)
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Employment law: key differences between Northern Ireland and Great Britain MEMBER ONLY
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Employment tribunals
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Evaluating learning and development
CIPD Fact-sheet on: The environment and people management
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Equal pay
CIPD Fact-sheet on: EU employment policy – formerly called EU social policy
CIPD Fact-sheet on: European Works Councils
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Flexible benefits
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Flexible working
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Harassment and bullying at work
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Health and safety at work
CIPD Fact-sheet on: High performance working
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Hiring consultants
CIPD Fact-sheet on: History of the CIPD
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Homeworking and teleworking
CIPD Fact-sheet on: HR business partnering
CIPD Fact-sheet on: HR outsourcing
CIPD Fact-sheet on: HR policies: which to consider
CIPD Fact-sheet on: HR policies: why and how to introduce them
CIPD Fact-sheet on: HR shared service centres
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Human capital
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Human rights
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Identifying learning and development needs
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Immigration law changes: what employers should know MEMBER ONLY
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Induction
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Interim managers
CIPD Fact-sheet on: International management development: an overview
CIPD Fact-sheet on: International recruitment, selection and assessment: an introduction
CIPD Fact-sheet on: International reward
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Internet and e-mail policies
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Investors in People
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Job evaluation
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Leadership: an overview
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Learner-centred courses
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Learning and talent development: an overview
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Learning and talent development strategy
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Learning styles
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Local pay: approaches and levels
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Management development
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Managing international assignments
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Market pricing: approaches and considerations
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Maternity, paternity and adoption rights
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Mediation at work
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Mental health at work
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Mentoring
CIPD Fact-sheet on: National Minimum Wage
CIPD Fact-sheet on: NLP at work
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Non cash incentives
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Occupational health
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Occupational pensions
CIPD Fact-sheet on: On-the-job training
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Organisation development
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Outdoor development
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Pay and reward: an overview
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Pay progression
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Pay structures
CIPD Fact-sheet on: The people and performance link
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Performance appraisal
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Performance management: an overview
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Performance-related pay
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Personnel management: a short history
CIPD Fact-sheet on: PESTLE analysis
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Promoting learning and development in small businesses
CIPD Fact-sheet on: The psychological contract
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Psychological testing
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Quality standards and approaches
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Race, religion and employment
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Recruitment: an overview
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Recruitment of people working with children and vulnerable adults
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Recruitment outsourcing
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Redundancy
CIPD Fact-sheet on: References
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Relocation
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Retention of personnel records
CIPD Fact-sheet on: The role of front line managers in HR
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Salary review process
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Secondment
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Selecting candidates
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Selection interviewing
CIPD Fact-sheet on: The self-employed HR consultant
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Sex discrimination, sexual orientation and gender reassignment and employment
CIPD Fact-sheet on: The skills agenda in the UK
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Smoking at work
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Strategic human resource management
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Stress at work
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Succession planning
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Swine flu and bird flu (formerly Bird flu)
CIPD Fact-sheet on: SWOT analysis
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Talent management: an overview
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Team reward
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Team-working
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Total reward
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Trade unions: a short history
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Training: a short history
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Transfer of undertakings (TUPE)
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Understanding the economy and labour market
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Voluntary benefits
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Whistle-blowing: an overview
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Work-life balance
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Working hours in the UK
CIPD Fact-sheet on: Working time and leave: an overview

Please note the CIPD may remove or update these at any time. In the event of a failure; go to the home page for CIPD Fact-sheets

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SWOT analysis for schools and education

January 2, 2010

SWOT analysis for teachers, schools and education

Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threads in an educational environment.

A SWOT analysis is a tool that can provide prompts to the governors, management teachers and staff involved in the analysis of what is effective and less effective in the schools systems and procedures, in preparation for a plan of some form ( that could be an audit, assessments, quality checks etc.). In fact a SWOT can be used for any planning or analysis activity which could impact future finance, planning and management decisions. It can enable you (the governors and management) to carry out a more comprehensive analysis.

Definitions

  • Strengths – Factors that are likely to have a positive effect on (or be an enabler to) achieving the school’s objectives
  • Weaknesses – Factors that are likely to have a negative effect on (or be a barrier to) achieving the school’s objectives
  • Opportunities – External Factors that are likely to have a positive effect on achieving or exceeding the school’s objectives, or goals not previously considered
  • Threats – External Factors and conditions that are likely to have a negative effect on achieving the school’s objectives, or making the the objective redundant or un-achievable.

Before starting any planning or analysis process you need to have a clear and SMART goal or objective. What is it that you need to achieve or solve? Ensure that all key stakeholders (relevant to the issue being explored) buy into this objective or goal.

Then undertake a PESTLE analysis (or PESTLE in Schools), this will provide you with the external factors (OT).

Use the PRIMO-F model to ensure all internal factors are considered

Conducting a SWOT analysis in a school

One of the most effective ways to conduct a SWOT analysis is not in isolation, but with a team effort. When the goal is shared, then a brainstorming session can be run.

Ensure than when running such a session it is facilitated by a person not involved with the content – this is best with an independent person. If budgets do not allow this – then talk to another establishments head, and arrange a contra deal.

Do this activity in a number of phases:

1) Share the goal

2) Data collection (no filtering or comments – record verbatim) consider all areas of PRIMO-F

3) Take a break of at least 1 hr

4) Filter, sort and analyse into the 4 areas – SWOT – be critical and SMART avoid ambiguous statements or ideas at this stage

5) Prioritise the elements

Have a second session where the planning phase takes this data and puts it into a realistic plan.

IMPORTANT TIP,do not hide or underestimate threats or weaknesses – if you ignore them or underplay them now they will come back to haunt you at some stage – probably when they can do most damage!

The goal of any session like this is not necessarily to neutralise any weakness or threat – that is impossible – but to have it on your radar – and where possible take avoiding action. To some extent it is all about risk.

What sort of tasks and issues can this be used for?

At its most complex and comprehensive, it can be used for business planning, however it is also of value to solving localised issues and challenges.

An Example

We will use an example of a teacher working within a first school who want to improve the relationships with parents of his pupils.

TASK

  1. Define the goal and measurable outcomes – i.e. to have more than 50% of parents spending one day in class per term

  2. Consider the current activities you have in place to encourage parent-partnerships within your class/ school.

  3. Complete a SWOT analysis, identifying your current strengths and realistically appraising your current weaknesses. This can only be done involving other teachers, pupils and parents.

  4. From the current analysis identify factors which could be improved

  5. Identify opportunities that could be created

  6. Put a plan and set of measures in place.

The school identified the following objective:

  • To improve parent-partnership by encouraging parents to visit the school and become active members of the community.
  • Outcome – to have more than 50% of parents spending one day in class per term

Currently, the school holds an open day once each year. It uses this as a way to encourage parents to visit the school and engage with school staff. The following is the initial SWOT Analysis.

Strengths

  • Highly-skilled teachers.
  • History of successful Open day events
  • School has a strong ethos of openness, sharing and commitment to increasing parental confidence
  • Parents wanting to get involved
  • PTA willing to participate
Weaknesses

  • Teachers not available to meet parents often enough
  • Current open days events not increasing voluntary activity
  • Not enough staff time to plan more events
  • Staff not clear of their role in the parent relationship
  • Narrow focus on open events not partnership activities
  • Curriculum too stretched for additional activity
Opportunities

  • Active volunteer committee willing to plan and organise events
  • Pupils active in the school’s Pupil Participation Project can be asked for their opinions and suggestions.
  • Head Teacher is willing flex curriculum to free up teacher time
  • Use parents to contribute to curriculum delivery
Threats

  • Confidentiality is at risk
  • Pupil coercion to do things they do not wish to do

The next step is to develop a plan with interested stakeholders

SWOT Analysis templates for schools & education

SWOT Analysis Template/ Worksheet – use these templates to start your SWOT process

 

SWOT Analysis on ____________________ (organisation name or product/ service/ project)

School/ establishment/ organisation Background/ situation ____________________________________________________

__________________________________________________________________________________________

__________________________________________________________________________________________

(usual business partners, relationships, channels to market, assumptions etc…)

Date PESTLE completed ____________________

Date of SWOT Analysis ____________________ ____________________v

   

INTERNAL

 

Under each of the PRIMO-F factors list the relevant strengths and weaknesses.

List the Opportunities and threats from your PESTLE analysis below.

Then considering the combination of these factors generate some options or alternative strategies for action.

Strengths (PRIMO-F)

  • People (teachers, parents, PTA etc)
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • Resources
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • Innovation & Ideas
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • Marketing (communications)
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • Operations (day to day running)
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • Finance
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________

 

Weaknesses (PRIMO-F)

  • People (teachers, parents, PTA etc)
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • Resources
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • Innovation & Ideas
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • Marketing(communications)
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • Operations(day to day running)
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • Finance
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________

E
X
T
E
R
N
A
L

Opportunities

  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
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  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________

SO Alternatives / Strategies

  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________

WO Alternatives / Strategies

  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________

Threats

  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________

ST Alternatives / Strategies

  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
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  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________

WT Alternatives / Strategies

  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________
  • ___________________

Try our business SWOT analysis tool for free NOWOr return to our main SWOT analysis page

SWOT Analysis Template / Worksheet 2

 

SWOT Analysis on ____________________ (School/ establishment organisation name or product/ service/ project)

Background/ situation________________________________________________________________________

__________________________________________________________________________________________
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

__________________________________________________________________________________________

 

(usual operational partners, relationships, channels to market, assumptions etc…)

Date PESTLE completed ____________________

Date of SWOT Analysis ____________________v

   

INTERNAL

 

Under each of the PRIMO-F factors list the relevant strengths and weaknesses.

List the Opportunities and threats from your PESTLE analysis below.

Then considering the combination of these factors generate some options or alternative strategies for action.

Strengths

  •  

 

Weaknesses

  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  

E
X
T
E
R
N
A
L

Opportunities

  •  
  •  

 

SO Alternatives / Strategies

WO Alternatives / Strategies

Threats

 

ST Alternatives / Strategies

  •  

WT Alternatives / Strategies

Try our business SWOT analysis tool for free NOW - Or return to our main SWOT analysis page

SWOT Analysis Template / Worksheet 3

SWOT analysis – Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and threats
Date  
Company/ Department name  
Internal Factors  

Our Strengths

 

Ways to exploit Our Weaknesses

 

Ways to reduce
External factors  

Our Opportunities

 

Ways to exploit Our Threats

  •  
Ways to reduce

Try our business SWOT analysis tool for free NOWOr return to our main SWOT analysis page

A SWOT analysis in a school, college or other educational establishment can be a simple and yet effective tool for ensuring that all appropriate factors are considered. In this environment it is particularly important to use the PRIMO-F template to ensure that all elements have been considered. Indeed ensure that under People – teachers, support staff, parents and children are considered along with third party people (police, local health etc that can form a part of your community.

Teachers, Tutors, PTA (Parent Teacher associations) management committees etc all have a valuable contribution to make

Under Resources, remember to include IT, and consumables that can be used as part of the process


What is Performance Management? CIPD Research

December 17, 2009

Performance Management – why do we do it?

The term performance management has been with us for some time, developed out of “appraisals”, Performance Management remains one of the consistently used phrases in the human resources and management field. Recently the CIPD has conducted some research into performance management recently and the responses from 507 people are interesting.

This short article looks at three of the outputs from that research and explores the potential meaning for HR, OD and managers involved in Performance Management.

what-is-performance-mgt

From the graph it can be seen that different organisations appear to have a different meaning.  For some it is about appraisal for others it is about 360s and competence.

Why do Performance Management?

This was one of the questions asked in the survey, and to me there is one main reason – to ensure people have the skills required and deliver the required performance – so you can guess I was very surprised to see the survey results:

CIPD-who-benefits-performance-management

As most seem to be saying that it is intended as a benefit for the individual – why do so many individuals dislike the process?  have you ever spoke to a “typical employee” and they said you you in a happy tone “I have my appraisal today” – it does happen, but it is the exception rather then the norm. Indeed a few minutes on the web and you can find page after page of results listing why staff dislike the process, and that performance management is a good thing for the organisation.

So why the mis-match with this research?

Maybe it is down to understanding. In the survey, professionals were asked what they considered Performance Management to be:

what-does-performance-mgt-mean

With such diverse answers as “regular review meetings”, appraisal, 360 feedback, I can only hope that managers and HR professionals in a given organisation all agreed as to what the process is, and who it is for.

Judging by this research we should stop the process. If it is not adding value to the organisations bottom line through ensuring a sensible level of performance through clear objectives and appropriate skills and knowledge, why do it?

Performance management however you describe it is costly from both a line management point of view and a time perspective. In difficult trading and economic conditions we need to ensure that we all focus on what is important. As this seems to be an area where there is confusion and lack of clarity, then maybe it is time to drop this long standing approach, it was after-all only introduced to cover the non performance of managers managing their people in the first place – so if the managers aren’t managing and the process is not covering the ‘gap’ why bother?

What does Performance Management mean to you, your managers and importantly your people?  Who is it for, and how do you measure the results?

This research can be downloaded from the CIPD site Performance management in Action


New Management/ Leadership & Coaching Models

December 14, 2009

More… more… you wanted more so here they come…

models-2010-set2-020Thanks to the success of our 100 management models, RapidBI is proud to announce the launch of set #2 – another 100+ management models. Again in a simple graphical form you can use in your presentations and training courses.

As 2010 is almost upon us the old set have been updated and refined. A new cleaner style has been developed by one of our designers.

The new set contains more models covering:

  • Management
  • Leadership
  • Training
  • Learning
  • HRM
  • Change management
  • Project management
  • Talent management
  • Brainstorming
  • Organizational Development

Purchasers of the current set will be sent a discount code to purchase set 2 early in 2010 – so watch this space.

Also being developed to show off these models and graphics is a new gallery – come back just before Christmas ;)

In addition to this exciting addition to our downloadable products, RapidBI will be launching an e-book which will contain not only 50+ of our most asked for models, but guidance as to how to use the models in your practice. Watch this space.


Fad surfing – the worst form of change management

December 5, 2009

Chasing the shiny new things

Last week in a tweet I mentioned fad-surfing and some of my followers were not aware of this and requested an article – so here it is! Fad surfers are the management or  leadership equivalent of the magpie, they love collecting shiny new things from other people. A management or leadership style where there is a lot of sizzle but little substance

What is “fad surfing”?

In simple terms

Adopting one fashionable management style or strategy after another.

The term was first brought into print in 1993 in an article by T. George Harris called “Fad-Surfers, Risk-Dodgers, and Beloved Companies,”  in the Harvard Business Review. Harris quoted Eileen C. Shapiro as saying “Too many consultants and clients end up fad-surfing together rather than working on the real problems…”. Subsequently Shapiro went on to publish the book “Fad surfing in the board room” in 1995.

To me fad-surfing is one of the worst traits of a leader, manager or consultant. It is one where management jumps on to the latest bandwagon of ideas, thoughts and concepts to initiate change. It has become commonplace, although the term “fad-surfing” has been conveniently forgotten. Fad-surfing is going from idea to idea because the previous concept has not delivered what was expected, as fast as was expected. Much like this change model:

Where there is pressure for change >>> Implement initiative >>> Results fall below expectations >>> A new “fad” is sort to resolve the under-performance >>> leads to more work…. and the cycle continues.

Some of the historical management fads have included:

  • Visioning
  • Flat organizational cultures
  • Matrix management
  • Empowerment
  • Open environments
  • Open door policies
  • Customer focus
  • Upside-down pyramid
  • Just-in-time
  • Lean
  • Six sigma
  • One minute manager
  • Situational leadership
  • Re-engineering
  • FISH
  • Benchmarking
  • Helicopter view
  • Blue-sky thinking
  • Competencies
  • Excellence
  • Learning organizations
  • Paradigm
  • Participative management
  • Reality check
  • Retreats
  • 360 feedback
  • Value proposition

Well you get the idea! And its not just business that we have fad surfers – Bottled water, food/ cooking, TV producers, fashion, automotive, building design, software, social networking… etc.

Shapiro defines fad-surfing (n) as: the practice of riding the crest of the latest management panacea and then paddling out again just in time to ride the next one; always absorbing for managers and lucrative for consultants and frequently disastrous for organizations.

Leaders which have their own goals and vision may well seek out a model, theory of approach to support the implementation of their idea, however they do not attempt to implement a strategy because they read about it in their preferred journal or heard an idea at a conference. Riding an idea is not in itself a bad thing – it is what we do next that counts. Implementing a culture change or management style can take many months or years to embed properly. As the saying goes practice makes permanent – so practice right!

We know from cognitive studies that habits take time to learn and unlearn. the same is true when implementing a new idea or concept. It is not just a simple logical change. We want people to change and adapt their behaviours, often physical and mental habits. For that we need to give people the tools and the time.

To change a habit

To change habits at an individual level according to Professor Ian Newby-Clark there are five things that we each need to individually do:

  1. Work on One Habit at a Time. If you work on changing more than one habit at a time you run a serious risk of overwhelming yourself and changing no habits at all.
  2. Create a Plan and Write it Down.
  3. Refine Your Plan. Now you need to refine your plan.
  4. Make SMART Mini-Plans.
  5. Repeat! Repeat! Repeat!

This of course is on the assumption that we want to change – this is not always the case when the organization insists on a change!

Change your habit in 21 days…

Well maybe not… There is an often repeated statistic that you can change your habits in 21 days, Oliver Burkeman wrote recently about: How long does it really take to change a habit? In addition according to a recent study, a daily action like eating healthily or running for regularly took an average of 66 days to become as much of a habit as it would ever become.

Just how long it takes to change a habit has so many variables that it is difficult to say with any precision, we are after all human and there are 3 important things to remember about employees and managers:

  1. People are different
  2. People are different
  3. People are different

What we do know is that for people to change, they need to understand and buy-in at an emotional level to the changes being imposed.

Back to fad-surfing – as a habit is is not productive, but does buy a few years for a leader before they are eventually “found out”.

Much better to have a vision, communicate it, stick with it (providing the evidence keeps saying its the right thing to do), repeat, repeat, repeat, and practice, practice, practice. It is consistency that always rules the day.

The only panacea for effective leadership is consistant hard work and a clear vision…


25 great tips on employee engagement – morale boosters

September 29, 2009

25 great tips on employee engagement – morale boosters

In difficult and tough economic times we still need to engage with our employees. While the big budgets may not be available any more there are lots of things that we can do which are effective.

The strategy for boosting employee morale – fast, is based on Abraham Maslow’s hierarchy of five basic human needs. He arranged these needs in the shape of a pyramid with each level forming the foundation for the next level.

Maslow hierarchy of needs

Maslow hierarchy of needs

  1. Self-Actualization needs – realising personal potential, self-fulfilment, seeking personal growth and peak experiences.
  2. Esteem needs – self-esteem, achievement, mastery, independence, status, dominance, prestige, managerial responsibility, etc.
  3. Belongingness and Love needs – work group, family, affection, relationships, etc.
  4. Safety needs – protection from elements, security, order, law, limits, stability, etc.
  5. Biological and Physiological needs – air, food, drink, shelter, warmth, sex, sleep, etc.

Below are ten ideas to start your thinking. many of these are obvious, but they are good to have in your employee engagement and morale-building tool-kit:

  1. Praise people – look to “Catch People Doing it Right”, rather than trying to catch people out
  2. Welcome Ideas – employee morale improves when people feel they are valued. Share and implement their innovations and ideas
  3. Say thank-you. Even when there’s no money that changes hands, it can be extremely rewarding for an employee to know that his/her boss appreciate the work he/she is doing. Use the SMART approach – be specific about what you are thanking people for
  4. Write a letter or email of appreciation. This doesn’t have to be expensive or even on a greeting card that is bought from a shop
  5. Award a certificate of appreciation. The real value to the employee is in the realisation that their contribution is recognised and appreciated
  6. Take the employee to lunch or out for a cup of coffee. Simply spending time together with the opportunity to say thanks and to exchange ideas is valuable
  7. Buy a scratch-card or a lottery ticket (assuming doing so is compatible with everyone’s values) and give it along with a short note or card. Lottery tickets are fairly inexpensive, but can be fun and (in some instances) financially rewarding
  8. Bring in donuts (or a selection of fruit if you’re health-conscious) for your people
  9. Have a pot-luck breakfast or lunch. This is something that everyone can participate in and enjoy. The cost is manageable and it provides an opportunity for some enjoyable interaction
  10. Hold a silly contest. In an office context, for example, you could award a prize for the most cheerful office or around holiday time in December for the most brightly decorated office or office-space
  11. Give a new, interesting assignment. The key here is to make sure it’s something interesting to the employee. Sometimes all that’s needed to boost morale is a little bit of variety and a change of pace
  12. Do a short employee survey to find out what employees like and don’t like about their jobs – and take action (where possible and sensible) to minimise the dislikes
  13. Ensure that all senior managers spend a day on the ‘shop-floor’ or customer-facing once a month
  14. Have senior managers have lunch/ breaks with staff on a regular basis
  15. On hot days arrange for ice-creams or iced drinks to be provided
  16. Have senior people say ‘sorry’ publicly when something has gone wrong (I am sorry – not we are sorry – needs to be personal)
  17. Make time for fun. Incorporating some fun into your workday is a terrific morale booster
  18. Encourage peer recognition. “People like to be recognised personally by their peers”
  19. Encourage people to ‘decorate’ or personalise their working space – people perform better in comfortable surroundings
  20. If deadlines or targets have been met then let people go home early on a Friday (not every week – its supposed to be a reward not an expectation)
  21. Offer stress relief activities. Hire a local massage school to offer free 10-minute chair massages
  22. Help people feel valuable.  Talk with employees about the types of projects, training, or experiences they would like to have. Times may be difficult and tough for people to get jobs, but your best people are also the most marketable
  23. Celebrate peoples birthdays. Empower managers to ‘do something different’ for each person, help them feel special
  24. Measure It, keeping a watch on the levels of morale in your business/ organization/ firm by regularly measuring employee satisfaction
  25. Fire Staff. Sometimes the root cause of low employee morale can be an employee whose negativity brings down the team. Even a top performer can bring down staff behind your back (didn’t see this one coming… or  did you?)

Remember these are meant to be boosters – so the effects they will have are short term individually – but a culture of going the extra mile and doing the ‘little things’ builds engagement. These techniques work best when they are not done to a formula – this feels impersonal and will defeat the objective.

For information on RapidBI’s cost effective on-line (customisable) employee engagement and satisfaction survey - The EESS. Prices between just £19.99 & £1000 for a whole company!

Feel free to add your top morale booster tips as comments:


Brainstorming technique for innovation, creativity and problem solving – a business strategy

May 8, 2009

Introduction to Brainstorming

 
Brainstorm imageBrainstorming as an approach or technique can be an effective way of generating many ideas on a specific issue which can then be filtered and reviewed to determine which idea or approach is the most appropriate.

Brainstorming as a technique is most effective with groups of between 8 and 12 people performed in a relaxed environment.

 

History of Brainstorming

Brainstorming is a technique often used by groups, but can be done alone (although this is not as effective) to generate a large number of ideas for the solution of a problem.

The technique was first documented in the late 1930s by Alex F Osborn in his book called Applied Imagination. In this publication Osborn proposed that groups could double their creative output with brainstorming.

While brainstorming has grown over the years to become a popular group problem solving and creativity technique, there has been little evidence of its effectiveness for enhancing either quantity or quality of ideas generated.

Although traditional brainstorming does not necessarily increase the productivity of groups (as measured by the number of ideas generated), it often provides benefits, such as boosting morale, enhancing work enjoyment, and improving team work.

 

Purpose of Brainstorming

Creative group facilitation technique that encourages participation from all group members.

Graphical representation of Brainstorming

 

Brainstorming

 

Description of an approach

A typical brainstorming session will require:

  • A facilitator
  • A suitable brainstorming space – light, plenty of space, natural daylight
  • Something to write ideas on, preferably a white-board, flip chart or Brown Paper. 

The responsibilities of the facilitator include:

  • Guiding the session,
  • Encouraging participation
  • Capturing (in writing) the ideas.

Brainstorming works best with a varied group of people. Even in areas involving specialists people from outside of the sector or industry can often bring a fresh idea or approach that inspires the thinking of the experts.

 

Ground Rules for effective brainstorming
In the classical approach to brainstorming there are four basic rules. These rules are designed to reduce social inhibitions among groups members, stimulate idea generation, and increase overall creativity of the group:

  1. Focus on quantity: It is not the quality or practicality that is important – just sheer number of ideas. It is believed that quantity breeds quality. The greater the chance of producing a radical and effective solution.
  2. Withhold criticism: Any judging at this stage inhibits lateral thinking and may inhibit some group members from participation.
  3. Welcome unusual ideas: New perspectives are welcomes and assumptions suspended.
  4. Combine and improve ideas: This also encourages building on the ideas previously generated. In this case “1+1=3″.

Conducting a brainstorming session

The facilitator leads the brainstorming session and ensures that ground rules are followed. The steps in a typical session are:

  1. A warm-up session, to expose novice participants to the criticism-free environment. A simple problem is brainstormed
  2. The facilitator presents the problem and gives a further explanation if needed
  3. The facilitator asks the brainstorming group for their ideas
  4. If no ideas are forthcoming, the facilitator suggests a lead to encourage creativity
  5. A nominated person (s) capture the ideas in real time – using the words of the person presenting the idea (to avoid filtering)
  6. All participants present their ideas, and the idea collector(s) records them
  7. To ensure clarity, participants may elaborate on their ideas
  8. When time is up, Everyone takes a break (of at least 15 minutes.
  9. The facilitator organizes the ideas based on the topic goal and encourages discussion
  10. Ideas are grouped and categorized
  11. The whole list is reviewed to ensure that everyone understands the ideas
  12. Duplicate ideas and obviously infeasible solutions are removed (or parked for use in another session)
  13. The remaining ideas are considered and where possible built upon
  14. The group work through the remaining ideas and prioritize possible solutions for implementation
  15. The facilitator thanks all participants and gives each a token of appreciation.

 

Some of the techniques and vehicles to which brainstorming can be used:

Classic brainstorming

The group is responsible for focusing its attention on a problem or question for a limited period of time, no longer than 90 minutes. The objective is to generate as many solutions as possible. With the group select the five best ideas, the criteria for judging them and score them on a scale of 1-5. The best idea is the one with the highest score.

The Challenge

The problem is exaggerated or made more difficult than it really is which forces the problem to be addressed from a different perspective and gets the group to think creatively about solutions.

What If?

Each member of the group is asked to pose a minimum of three “what if?” questions about the problem/question/topic. For example, the question is, “How do we reduce employee turnover”, “what if we doubled everyone’s salary?” This technique enables the consideration of hypothetical solutions that are not part of everyday thinking.

Role Playing

Ask colleagues from a different department, other firms or countries how they would solve the problem. An original solution may be developed by viewing the problem from a different professional perspective.

The Wrong Way

Instead of generating ideas or solving problems, the group deliberately tries to generate poor ideas or ways to make the problem worse. For example if trying to improve client retention, ask “What could we do to ensure clients never purchased from us again?” By focusing on poor client service, the focus is on the issues that matter most to the client, which generate ideas that are better positioned to solve the problem.

Metaphors

A metaphor is a word or phrase that symbolizes something other than its literal meaning. An example of using metaphors when brainstorming is, when seeking to energize the maintenance team visualize them as a football team, how would you improve their performance? By applying metaphors, you may gain a fresh perspective on the problem.

Word Associations

Instead of generating specific solutions or ideas, the group simply generates whatever word or phrase that comes to mind. For example, if the group is discussing ways to improve the interior appearance of the main office, they might generate words like: “fabric”, “colour”, “paint”, and “texture”. Later these key phrases can be used to develop action plans.

Risky Options

This brainstorming technique encourages wild and risky approaches to problems. Normally members of the group may be afraid to suggest unusual or risky options because they are overcome by the fear of failure or group criticism. You may even provide a prize for the riskiest option.

The Hunter

Group members play “the hunter” by scanning through newspapers, magazines, literature etc. hunting for random ideas that might have a bearing on the problem they are trying to solve. This technique can be used equally well with small groups and individuals.

Brainstorming and epilepsy – political correctness run amok

In the press some have claimed that the term “Brainstorming” may be derogatory to epileptics. The word ‘brainstorming’ is not offensive to the vast majority of people with epilepsy, according to a survey carried out by the National Society for Epilepsy.

The word has been used since the 1940s to describe the method of problem-solving or generating ideas where all present at a meeting make spontaneous suggestions.In the survey, 93 per cent of people with epilepsy did not find the term derogatory or offensive in any way and many felt that this sort of political correctness singled out people with epilepsy as being easily offended.

Ref http://www.epilepsy.org.uk/node/1078

Alternative words thought-showers, blue-sky thinking, Boardblast


How to write a Critical Success Factor CSF

May 5, 2009
 

What are Critical Success Factors (CSF’s)?
Being practical when using CSF’s
Academic Background/ History
Types of Critical Success factors
Definitions
Five key sources of Critical Success factors
How to write a good Critical Success factor
Key Performance Indicators (KPI’s) and Critical Success factors
The Critical Success Factor (CSF) Method
Using Critical Success factors for Strategic and business planning
Examples of Success factors
Sample Critical Success factor templates
Critical Success Factors for Projects

What is a Critical Success Factor?

Critical Success Factors (CSF’s) are the critical factors or activities required for ensuring the success your business. The term was initially used in the world of data analysis, and business analysis.

Most smaller and more pragmatic businesses can still use CSF’s but we need to take a different, more pragmatic approach.

Critical Success Factors have been used significantly to present or identify a few key factors that organizations should focus on to be successful.

As a definition, critical success factors refer to “the limited number of areas in which satisfactory results will ensure successful competitive performance for the individual, department, or organization”.

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Being Practical

As you read this and many other resources on the internet you will discover that there are potentially a confusing variety of definitions and uses of Critical Success Factors.

Before you start the journey looking at CSFs it is important to realise that the specific factors relevant for you will vary from business to business and industry to industry. The key to using CSFs effectively is to ensure that your definition of a factor of your organizations activity which is central to its future will always apply.

Therefore success in determining the CSFs for your organization is to determine what is central to its future and achievement of that future.

This page is primarily written for students of management and business, to keep things simple for application in smaller organizations remember to only have 5-7 critical factors for YOUR organization, and I am sure one of those will be cashflow!

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How are they important to your business?

Identifying CSF’s is important as it allows firms to focus their efforts on building their capabilities to meet the CSF’s, or even allow firms to decide if they have the capability to build the requirements necessary to meet Critical Success Factors (CSF’s).

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Academic Background/ History

The principle of identifying critical success factors as a basis for determining the information needs of managers was proposed by RH Daniel (1961 Harvard Business Review – HBR) as an interdisciplinary approach with a potential usefulness in the practice of evaluation within
library and information units but popularized by F Rockart (1979 Harvard Business Review – HBR). In time many academics have applied the methodology increasingly outside the educational establishment.

The idea is very simple:

in any organization certain factors will be critical to the success of that organization, in the sense that, if objectives associated with the factors are not achieved, the organization will fail – perhaps catastrophically so.

The following as an example of generic CSF’s:

  • New product development,
  • Good distribution, and
  • Effective advertising      

Factors that remain relevant today for many organizations.

The actual development or history of the approach

With a phrase like Critical Success Factors having ‘common usage’ within technical environments it is difficult to identify its true history in the context of business, management and human resources.  One test for originality is the use of the TLA (Three Letter Acronym) of CSF. And one of the earliest uses of this is by

Chief executives define their own data needs. By: Rockart, John F.. Harvard Business Review, Mar/Apr79, Vol. 57 Issue 2, p81-93, 13p

In this earlier work:

MANAGEMENT INFORMATION CRISIS. By: Daniel, D. Ronald. Harvard Business Review, Sep/Oct61, Vol. 39 Issue 5, p111-121, 11p

Ronald does not use the term CSF or even the phrase Critical Success factors, but does discuss critical elements and non critical elements of a business leading to “controlling competitive success” Daniel also uses the term “success factors” in the context that we would understand today.

Predating these pieces is a short entry:

THE CASE STUDY METHOD AND THE ESTABLISHMENT OF STANDARDS OF EFFICIENCY.By: Lebreton, Preston P.. Academy of Management Proceedings, 1957, p103-103, 1p

In which students looking into the efficiency of businesses for case studies are recommended to look at “the factors which
seem to be paramount in determining success in this industry”
this is bay far the earliest mention of what we today know as “Critical Success factors”

To our mind the first published work of this approach is by Rockart. This pages reproduced from RapidBI.com

Other sources of research:

Management Control Systems: Text, Cases and Readings
By Robert Newton Anthony, John Dearden, Richard F. Vancil
Published by R. D. Irwin, 197
2 p151

This publication seems to be one of the earliest and widest cited books in the early days of CSFs.

10 problems that worry presidents. By: Spencer, Lyle M.. Harvard Business Review, Nov/Dec55, Vol. 33 Issue 6, p75-83, 9p

In this article Spencer asks the question: “What are the essential factors that
produce success in my company?” which for 1955 is getting close to the beginnings of CSFs – so for those interested in the early beginings worth a look.

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Types of Critical Success Factor

There are four basic types of CSF’s

They are:

  1. Industry CSF’s resulting from specific industry characteristics;
  2. Strategy CSF’s resulting from the chosen competitive strategy of the business;
  3. Environmental CSF’s resulting from economic or technological changes; and
  4. Temporal CSF’s resulting from internal organizational needs and changes.

Things that are measured get done more often than things that are not measured.

Each CSF should be measurable and associated with a target goal. You don’t need exact measures to manage. Primary measures that should be listed include critical success levels (such as number of transactions per month) or, in cases where specific measurements are more difficult, general goals should be specified (such as moving up in an industry customer service survey).

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Definitions

Critical Success Factor

an element of organizational activity which is central to its future success. Critical success factors may change over time, and may include items such as product quality, employee attitudes, manufacturing flexibility, and brand awareness. This can enable analysis.

Critical Success Factor

any of the aspects of a business that are identified as vital for successful targets to be reached and maintained. Critical success factors are normally identified in such areas as production processes, employee and organization skills, functions, techniques, and technologies. The identification and strengthening of such factors may be similar. ..

Critical Success Factor (CSF) or Critical Success Factors

is a business term for an element which is necessary for an organization or project to achieve its mission. For example, a CSF for a successful Information Technology (IT) project is user involvement.

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Five key sources of Critical Success Factors

MAIN ASPECTS OF Critical Success Factors and their use in analysis
CSF’s are tailored to a firm’s or manager’s particular situation as different situations (e.g. industry, division, individual) lead to different critical success factors. Rockart and Bullen presented five key sources of CSF’s:
 
  1. The industry,
  2. Competitive strategy and industry position,
  3. Environmental factors,
  4. Temporal factors, and
  5. Managerial position (if considered from an individual’s point of view). Each of these factors is explained in greater detail below.

 

The Industry

Critical success factor

Industry: There are some CSF’s common to all companies operating within the same industry. Different industries will have unique, industry-specific CSF’s

An industry’s set of characteristics define its own CSF’s Different industries will thus have different CSF’s, for example research into the CSF’s for the Call centre, manufacturing, retail, business services, health care and education sectors showed each to be different after starting with a hypothesis of all sectors having their CSF’s as market orientation, learning orientation, entrepreneurial management style and organizational flexibility.

In reality each organization has its own unique goals so while thee may be some industry standard – not all firms in one industry will have identical CSF’s.

Some trade associations offer benchmarking across possible common CSF’s.

 

Competitive strategy and industry position

Critical success factor

Competitive position or strategy: The nature of position in the marketplace or the adopted strategy to gain market share gives rise to CSF’s Differing strategies and positions have different CSF’s

Not all firms in an industry will have the same CSF’s in a particular industry. A firm’s current position in the industry (where it is relative to other competitors in the industry and also the market leader), its strategy, and its resources and capabilities will define its CSF’s

The values of an organization, its target market etc will all impact the CSF’s that are appropriate for it at a given point in time.

 

Environmental Factors

Critical success factor

Environmental changes: Economic, regulatory, political, and demographic changes create CSF’s for an organization.

These relate to environmental factors that are not in the control of the organization but which an organization must consider in developing CSF’s Examples for these are the industry regulation, political development and economic performance of a country, and population trends.

An example of environmental factors affecting an organization could be a de-merger.

 

Temporal Factors

 

 

Critical success factor

Critical success factor

Critical success factor

Temporal factors: These relate to short-term situations, often crises. These CSF’s may be important, but are usually short-lived.

Temporal factors are temporary or one-off CSF’s resulting from a specific event necessitating their inclusion.

Theoretically these would include a firm which “lost executives as a result of a plane crash requiring a critical success factor of rebuilding the executive group”.

Practically, with the evolution and integration of markets globally, one could argue that temporal factors are not temporal anymore as they could exist regularly in organizations.

For example, a firm aggressively building its business internationally would have a need for a core group of executives in its new markets. Thus, it would have the CSF of “building the executive group in a specific market” and it could have this every year for different markets.

Managerial Position

Critical success factor

Critical success factor

Managerial role: An individual role may generate CSF’s as performance in a specific manager’s area of responsibility may be deemed critical to the success of an organization.

Managerial position. This is important if CSF’s are considered from an individual’s point of view.

For example, manufacturing managers who would typically have the following CSF’s: product quality, inventory control and cash control.

In organizations with departments focused on customer relationships, a CSF for managers in these departments may be customer relationship management.

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How to write a good Critical Success Factor – CSF’s

In an attempt to write good CSF’s, a number of principles could help to guide writers. These principles are:

  • Ensure a good understanding of the environment, the industry and the company – It has been shown that CSF’s have five primary sources, and it is important to have a good understanding of the environment, the industry and the company in order to be able to write them well. These factors are customized for companies and individuals and the customization results from the uniqueness of the organization.
  • Build knowledge of competitors in the industry – While this principle can be encompassed in the previous one, it is worth highlighting separately as it is critical to have a good understanding of competitors as well in identifying an organization’s CSF’s Knowing where competitors are positioned, what their resources and capabilities are, and what strategies they will pursue can have an impact on an organization’s strategy and also resulting CSF’s
  • Develop CSF’s which result in observable differences – A key impetus for the development of CSF’s was the notion that factors which get measured are more likely to be achieved versus factors which are not measured. Thus, it is important to write CSF’s which are observable or possibly measurable in certain respects such that it would be easier to focus on these factors. These don’t have to be factors that are measured quantitatively as this would mimic key performance indicators; however, writing CSF’s in observable terms would be helpful.
  • Develop CSF’s that have a large impact on an organization’s performance – By definition, CSF’s are the “most critical” factors for organizations or individuals. However, due care should be exercised in identifying them due to the largely qualitative approach to identification, leaving many possible options for the factors and potentially results in discussions and debate. In order to truly have the impact as envisioned when CSF’s were developed, it is important to thus identify the actual CSF’s, i.e. the ones which would have the largest impact on an organization’s (or individual’s) performance.

Finding information for writing Critical Success Factors (CSF’s)

For the organization following the CSF method, the foundation for writing good CSF’s is a good understanding of the environment, the industry and the organization In order to do so, this requires the use of information that is readily available in the public domain. Externally, industry information can be sourced from industry associations, news articles, trade associations, prospectuses of competitors, and equity/analyst reports to name some sources. These would all be helpful in building knowledge of the environment, the industry and competitors. Internally, there should be enough sources available to management from which to build on their knowledge of the organization. In most cases, these won’t even have to be anything published as managers are expected to have a good understanding of their organization Together, the external and internal information already provides the basis from which discussion on CSF’s could begin.

The information mentioned above can largely be accessed through the internet. Other sources which would be helpful, and not necessarily accessible through the internet, are interviews with buyers and suppliers, industry experts and independent observers.

CSF as an activity statement:

A “good” CSF begins with an action verb and clearly and concisely conveys what is important
and should attended to. Verbs that characterize actions: attract, perform, expand, monitor,
manage, deploy, etc. (“poor CSFs” start with: enhance, correct, up-grade, …)

Examples: “monitor customer needs and future trends”

 

CSF as a requirement:

After having developed a hierarchy of goals and their success factors, further analysis will lead
to concrete requirements at the lowest level of detail

CSF as a key influence factor:

Some CSFs might influence other CSFs or factors such as markets, technologies, etc.

Such CSFs could be rephrased into “key influence factors” For example: “physical size” or “trained staff”

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Key Performance Indicators (KPI’s) and Critical Success factors

A critical success factor is not a key Performance Indicator (KPI). Critical success factors are elements that are vital for a strategy to be successful. KPI’s are measures that quantify objectives and enable the measurement of strategic performance.

For example:

  • KPI = number of new customers/ response time
  • CSF = installation of a call centre for providing quotations

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A Critical Success Factor Method

Start with a vision:

  • Mission statement
  • Develop 5-6 high level goals
  • Develop hierarchy of goals and their success factors
  • Lists of requirements, problems, and assumptions
  • Leads to concrete requirements at the lowest level of decomposition (a single, implementable idea) Along the way, identify the problems being solved and the assumptions being made
    Cross-reference usage scenarios and problems with requirements
  • Analysis matrices
  • Problems vs. Requirements matrix
  • Usage scenarios vs. Requirements matrix
  • Solid usage scenarios
  • Relationship to Usage Scenarios
  • Usage scenarios or “use cases”; provide a means of determining:
    • Are the requirements aligned and self-consistent?
    • Are the needs of the user being met as well as those of the enterprise?
    • Are the requirements complete
  • Results of the Analysis     

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Using Critical Success Factors for Strategic and Business Planning

CSF's for Strategic and business Planning

For other strategic business planning models please see our management models page

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Examples of Critical Success factors

Statistical research into CSF’s on organizations has shown there to be seven key areas.  These CSF’s are:

  1. Training and education
  2. Quality data and reporting
  3. Management commitment,
    customer satisfaction
  4. Staff Orientation
  5. Role of the quality department
  6. Communication to
    improve quality, and
  7. Continuous improvement

These were identified when Total Quality was at its peak, so as you can see have a bias towards quality matters.  You may or may not feel that these are right or indeed critical for your organization.

The Critical Success Factors we have identified and us in the BIR process are captured in the mnemonic PRIMO-F

  1. People – availability, skills and attitude
  2. Resources – People, equipment, etc
  3. Innovation – ideas and development
  4. Marketing – supplier relation, customer satisfaction, etc
  5. Operations – continuous improvement, quality,
  6. Finance- cash flow, available investment etc

Following is a sample list of the more common success factors.

This list should serve only as a guide to get you started. Some of these factors will be irrelevant in a particular industry or competitive situation; others may need to be added, as appropriate.

The factors are grouped into three categories of organizational competency, you will use your own differentiators.

Examples of Success Factors:

Understanding of Market:

  • Sensitivity to changing market needs
  • Understanding of how and why customers buy
  • Innovative response to customer needs
  • Consumer loyalty
  • Linkage of technology to market demand
  • Link marketing to production
  • Investment in growth markets
  • Knowing when to shift resources from old to new products
  • Long-term view of market-development and resources
  • Ability to target and reach segments of market
  • Identify and exploit global market
  • Product-line coverage
  • Short time to market for new products
  • Lack of product-line overlap
  • Identification and positioning to fulfill customer needs
  • Unique positioning advantage
  • Strong brand image and awareness
  • Understanding of competitors’ capabilities and decision rules
  • Sensitivity to cues for co-operation
  • Prevention of price wars
  • Aggressive commitment when required
  • Willingness to form inter company coalitions
  • Maximizing payback from marketing response to resources

Marketing Variables:

  • Distribution coverage, delivery speed, and prominence
  • Co-operative trade relations
  • Advertising budget and copy effectiveness
  • Promotion magnitude and impact
  • Sales force size and productivity
  • Customer service and feedback
  • High product quality
  • Patent protection
  • Low product cost
  • Ability to deliver high value to user
  • Large marketing resource budget

Decision making:

  • Marketing research quality
  • Information system power
  • Analytic support capability
  • Develop human resources
  • Attract the best personnel
  • Managerial ability and experience
  • Quick decision and action capability
  • Organizational effectiveness
  • Learning systematically from past strategies

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Sample Critical Success Factor templates

Critical Success Factor analysis – Template 1

Critical Success Factors for __________________ Dated ____________
Critical Success Factor Source of CSF Primary Measures& Targets     

  Industry,
Strategy,
Environmental,
Temporal
[delete as appropriate]      

 
  Industry, Strategy, Environmental, Temporal [delete as appropriate]  
  Industry, Strategy, Environmental, Temporal [delete as appropriate]  
  Industry, Strategy, Environmental, Temporal [delete as appropriate]  
  Industry, Strategy, Environmental, Temporal [delete as appropriate]  

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Critical Success Factor analysis – Template 2

Critical Success Factors for __________________ Dated ____________
Success Criteria Potential Benefit Approach
     
     
     
     
     
     
     

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Critical Success Factor analysis – Template 3

What do you want to be?Vision / Mission / Strategic Goals / Critical Success Factors 
Vision / Mission / Profile
What do we want to become / what is our purpose:

Mission:

 

Vision:
 
 
 

 

Strategic Goals
What do we have to do to get there:
Strategic Goal #1:
Outcomes / Critical Success Factors
How we will get there:
1.1
1.2
1.3
1.4
Strategic Goal #2:
Outcomes / Critical Success Factors
How we will get there:
2.1
2.2
2.3
2.4
2.5
Strategic Goal #3:
Outcomes / Critical Success Factors
How we will get there:
3.1
3.2
3.3
3.4
3.5
Strategic Goal #4:
Outcomes / Critical Success Factors
How we will get there:
4.1
4.2
4.3

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Critical Success Factor analysis – Template 4

What should you measure?

Measure Identification Worksheet
This worksheet is helpful in creating the list of measures to support each Critical Success Factor

 
 
 
 

 

 

Critical Success Factor
Measures                
Supporting Measure Name Definition / Formula Is it a true indicator of this CSF?
What is it telling you?     

Owner(who’s accountable?)    

Is Data Available? If yes, Data Source?
If no, is it possible to collect?    

 

Quality of Data?High / Low    

Targets Available?Yes / no    

Discard?
Future?Keep?    

 

                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
Initiatives / Activities  
Supporting Initiative / Project Unit / Person Responsible Implementation Team Member Assigned Target Start Date Target Completion Date Budget/    Resources
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 

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Critical Success Factor & their analysis in projects

Research has shown that to complete a project successfully the following critical success factors apply:

  1. Match Changes to Vision
  2. Define Crisp Deliverables
  3. Business Need Linked to Vision
  4. Have a Formal Process to Define Vision
  5. Organizational Culture Supports Project Management

You can have all of the above elements, but if you lack an engaged and involved business sponsor, your chances for success are greatly lessened.

According to a recent Gartner Institute study, 50% of all projects were delivered above schedule and/or budget.

Many projects were delivered with significant functionality missing, often cancelled after requirements definition.

In 2001, the Gartner group updated their research to include lack of executive sponsorship as a major contributor to project failures.

According to a 2000 Standish Group Report, the top success factors for projects were as follows. The list is in decreasing order of percentage factors responsible for success.

% – Success Factors

  • 18% Executive support
  • 16% User involvement
  • 14% Experienced project manager
  • 12% Clear business objectives
  • 10% Minimized scope
  • 8% Standard software infrastructure
  • 6% Firm basic requirements
  • 6% Formal methodology
  • 5% Reliable estimates
  • 5% Other criteria

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Other useful pages on the RapidBI website include: BIR Creatrix Employee Engagement

See more articles on our articles micro site.

 

  


GROW into a coaching model

March 30, 2009

GROW — Goals – Reality – Options – Will


The GROW model in coaching has been around for some time. It was first made popular by Sir John Whitmore and described in his book Coaching For Performance in 1992. It is widely believed that GROW was originally developed by Graham Alexander, who worked with Whitmore.

The GROW model has been used successfully by coaches in sport and business as well as by many organizations as part of a change towards a coaching style of management.

How to use the GROW model:

G – Goal – Establish the Goal:
First, with your team member(s), you must define and agree the goal or outcome required. You should help your team member define a goal that is SMARTer (Specific, Measurable, Appropriate, Realistic, Time based, Exciting, Rewarding).

R – Reality – Examine Current Reality:
Ask your team member to describe their Current Reality. This is a very important step: Too often, people try to solve a problem without fully considering their starting point, and often they are missing some of the information they need to solve the problem effectively.  This step is often required before clarification of the goal.

O – Options – Explore the Options:
Once you and your team member have explored the Current Reality, you need to explore what is possible. This means all the many possible options you have for solving the challenge or problem in hand. Work with your team member generate as many good options as possible, and explore each appropriately.

W – What & Will – Establish the Will and Wrap-up:
What is to be done, When, by Whom and have the Will to do it.

By examining Current Reality and exploring the Options, your team member will now have a good idea of how they can achieve their Goal. This a a good start but this may not be enough. The final stage is to support the team members  to commit to specific action. This will enable the team member establish their will and motivation.

 

Some proponents of the GROW model add Wrap-up to the W – that is to Wrap up the action planning phase and gain commitment to action.

Typical questions that may be used as part of the coaching session to utilise GROW effectively:

  • Goals - What do you want to achieve? What will be different when you achieve it? What’s important about this for you?
  • Reality - What is happening now? Who is involved? What is their outcome? What is likely to happen in future?
  • Options - What could you do? What ideas can you bring in from past successes? What haven’t you tried yet?
  • Will/ Wrap-up/ Way forward – What will you do? When will you do it? Who do you need to involve? When should you see results?

Application of GROW as a coaching model

It is often said that GROW, without the context of AWARENESS and RESPONSIBILITY, and the skill of questioning to generate them, has little value. GROW as a coaching model is used in performance coaching, executive coaching and by line managers in a coaching role.

Variances

T-GROW – some coaches add a T to the front of GROW for coaching sessions – where T= TOPIC, this helps to put context around the goals and current reality

Occasionally people change the O to Obstacles (great for ‘away from’ motivated individuals)


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