Thursday, May 31, 2012

Business Innovation and Change Is the New Business Normal

Business Innovation and Change Is the New Business Normal

change management process change management plan

We've all witnessed new businesses gain traction over their competitors. As success breeds more success they came to dominate their markets. What did these businesses do to take customers from somewhere else? Why couldn't their competition stop their customers from leaving? Amazon, iTunes and Netflix (for example) without a doubt succeeded because they found and offered more of a needed service or product. These businesses successfully forecasted the next opportunity and then moved to take advantage of it. They found the technologies, tools, the access to the market, and capital or resources needed to take advantage of a strategic business opportunity or improvement. They began with an assessment of the "whole" business, product or service that included due diligence of the opportunity. They then defined, developed, integrated, achieved client acceptance, and even anticipated the associated sustainment opportunities and customer expectations of the new product or service. They used value innovation, significant insight, experience and analysis of the opportunity to exceed expectations for both the customer and themselves.

This rapid need for change is our new business normal. Our businesses today must take frequent value innovative diagnostic action so that their new opportunities (yes, we all have them) can go from an idea to delivering your products and services in a new strategic direction. The target is taking a new and unique idea or improvement to providing value at an unmatched level to your clients. You need to know where you want to go to be the "best" so that you can then define the direction of the opportunity and then move to achieve it. This is a different mindset where you move from satisfying your customers' and own needs to creating new valuable needs; from meeting expectations to exceeding expectations and from observing and listening to your competition and clients to introducing new and needed products and services. Value innovative products and services provide unique and best value to reach success.

Today's businesses must understand value to their customer. We have so many options today and being the best is an option. The businesses that use Value Innovation will be the businesses of the future who make opportunities happen. Your due diligence today should include the questions: Are we the best at what we do? If you are not, "How do we get there?" and if you are, "How do we stay there." Your customers are searching for the best and they will be loyal to them when they find them.

Jim Fogarty is a loving husband, son, brother and proud father to 5 children: Eric, Scott, Kasey, Diana and Robert. He is also a Program Manager, Systems Engineer, Author and owner of Absolute Consulting Solutions, LLC.

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Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Creating Successful And Sustainable Changes

Creating Successful And Sustainable Changes

Life is change. Growth is optional. Choose wisely.

- Anonymous

Big changes can be really scary. And achieving successful outcomes through change is not easy. My clients get the best results when they get very clear on their issues or challenges and can envision successful outcomes. This helps to end the fears that usually accompany important change. In order to eliminate or shift unproductive patterns of behavior or ways of working ineffectively, it helps to understand exactly what's not working, and to get crystal clear on what could be. And that's not always as obvious as it might seem. Sometimes the issues causing the biggest problems are the most difficult to see and define.

If you are looking to make personal leadership or business changes in 2012, I've included some ideas and tips to help increase your chance of success.

Can you clearly define the issue/challeng e or change you want to make? It's not always easy to clearly define the change you want, so you may want to take time to look at it from a number of different perspectives to ensure clarity. Try writing down all aspects of the situation, including how you would be different as a result of the change.

Can you visualize the positive results from making the change? If you were to wave a realistic magic wand, what would this change create for you in the next six months? Think about what it would do for you if it were just the way you visualized it. What would be the best parts about it? What else could be possible?

Have you addressed this change before? If you have, identify what stopped you from achieving success in the past. What were the challenges that held you back or prevented you from moving through the change to the results you wanted?

Expect some resistance. Anytime we move out of our comfort zone, it takes much more effort, thinking and energy, and it is tiring. We naturally move back to our default behavior, and unless we continue to challenge the "old stories", we can lose sight of the original goals. As change and transitions expert William Bridges reminds us, we must be willing to move through the discomfort of letting go of the old and familiar before we can create a new beginning.

Do you have a network of support? It's very important to have the support of others when we're making important changes. Whether it's business or personal change, it's helpful to have a few key relationships that can remind us why we're making these changes, and to let us know when we are slipping. We all have blind spots that can prevent us from creating the results we really need and want!

I wish you all the best if you are contemplating making some important changes in 2012. And if you find that you need more help in your change journey, please co nnect with me for a complimentary "2012 Goal Exploration" session to help you clarify your thoughts and give you some ideas on moving forward.

The things that sustain change are not bold strokes, but long marches.

- Rosabeth Moss Kanter

Terri Hughes is the owner/principal of Terri Hughes, LLC, a leadership development & executive coaching business.

Terri's recent clients include leaders and teams in manufacturing, technology, retail, health care, government, small business and higher education industries. She works with individuals and teams in a variety of situational change arenas including: leadership behavioral shifts, new role transitions, career changes, organizational and life changes.

Terri has a BS degree in communications from Ohio University and has completed post-graduate work in strategic thinking and leadership development through E-Cornell, Harvard, & BSU. She is a graduate of the Coaches Training Institute (CTI) and holds ma ster certifications in multiple change & transition processes.

Visit her website http://www.terrihughes.com/ for details, free resources and to schedule a complimentary consultation to discuss your needs.

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3 Things To Remember When Leading Change

3 Things To Remember When Leading Change

change management process change management plan

A lot of the work that I do with businesses revolves around helping them manage change. If a business plans to be successful for longer than a month or two, change will be necessary at some point. One of the first things I do is help them stop thinking about managing change and start thinking about leading it. Managing sounds like it's just about sending out a memo, changing a few processes and completing some tasks. A business can do all of that well and fail miserably at making any change happen.

Leading change implies that there is much more to it and that it relates more to the people in the company than the activities. If the people don't change, the company won't either. Once business leaders have the right outlook on what it takes to lead change, there is still a lot of work to be done, but the outcome is more likely to be the one they want. Here are 3 things that many businesses overlook as they work to build a business that adapts to the needs of tomorrow.< /P>

1. Change is personal, not just professional

We often think about change as something that is mechanical or methodical just because the change we are leading happens to be in an organization. The truth is that for change to be successful, many if not all of the people in your organization have to change their own individual behaviors. That's not easy, but it can be done with the right focus on culture, coaching and the individual goals of the employees. Yet we won't go anywhere near those things if we think we can just put a new process in place and have people do something different tomorrow than they did today. The moment we believe that's possible, we've already failed at leading change.

2. Change takes time; set your expectations accordingly

Most businesses experience a burst of momentum as they begin to implement change. Everyone gets excited about a new direction and new opportunities, especially at the top of t he company. Then, when the hard stuff hits, like change resistance, leaders get frustrated and resort to strong-arm tactics. They say things like "this train is leaving whether you're on it or not". Then they wonder why they actually slow the change rather than speed it up. Set your expectations so that there's reasonable time to communicate, coach, and support. It's true that violence is the quickest way to change behavior, but it's not sustainable. You will get a brief shift in behavior and call it a win. Yet, shortly following that, everyone will return to yesterday's behaviors and then resist change even more.

3. Leaders have to go first

I was working with a leader recently who said, " I knew the change would be hard for others but I didn't know that it would be this hard for me". She was articulating the challenge many leaders face. If you expect others to change their behavior but you aren't willing to change yours first, don't count on muc h change happening. When we refuse to change how we operate when leading and supporting a change we have asked others to engage in, we give them permission not to change their actions either. Changing how we work is one of the biggest ways we actually cause change. If we don't go first, there's nothing to follow.

Most companies do a great job of crafting the communications, putting the posters up, sending out the memos and issuing the instructions. What they forget is that change is a much more individual job and we have to engage our people in ways that help them lead the change, too. Just pointing to a new destination won't necessarily make people want to go there, even if you do sign the paycheck. We may wish that were different but we are better off learning how to lead change the right way, rather than hoping human behavior suddenly becomes a simple equation. The good news is that most organizations, including your competitors, are terrible at leading change. Lear n how to do it well and you have a competitive advantage second to none.

Randy Hall is the founder and principal of 4th Gear Consulting. He is passionate about developing amazing leaders and thriving, principled organizations. He believes that nothing will have greater impact on our economy, our communities, our lives and our kids' lives.

For more than a decade Randy has worked for and with organizations to help them realize more of their potential. His most recent roles in the corporate world were Senior Vice President of Learning and Leadership Development at Bank of America and Global Director of Learning and Development at Pfizer. Prior to moving into leadership development, he spent several years in sales and led his own high performing teams.

You can contact Randy at randy.hall@4thgearconsulting.com or visit him on the web at http://4thgearconsulting.com/ You can also read more of Randy's articles at http://4thgearconsulting.com/blog

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Sunday, May 27, 2012

3 Ways To Be Filthy Rich

3 Ways To Be Filthy Rich

change management process change management plan

Should you create savings, be patient, lay up first and then indulge or should you dive into it all by maxing your credit cards? Remember we are driven by the relentless advertising all around us. We are told to 'live it up' or clamber aboard /go up to the life or lifestyles flaunted and made delicious in the ads. We are driven and rushed into concluding that life will be more exciting if only we can have 'all those things'. Here are some options you may want to think of before your money bag slips into deep comatose:

1. Be Curious: Curiosity helps you learn, look out for, be alert to, to trends, fads and niche markets on which you can launch a start up business to fill the public need and make money off of. Curiosity ergs you to stay awake to and look out for ways you can earn in a region, country or a niche market.

2. Take Risks: We hear a lot about reinventing in business, politics, science and technology. It's the mantra o f our times. Reinvent or die. Move on or your service or product becomes irrelevant. Risk takers are self starters. More so than others they push themselves off their comfort zones and try new ideas. While others tank, risk takers keep experimenting. They throw away the user's manual and tread out onto new turf, play with new ideas, new ways to doing things.

3. Buy An Endowment Insurance Plan: While most people think of coming into a pile of money when they are 60 or 70, why not plan to be in funds when you are 30? Take out a 10 year endowment as soon as you start working, from your first pay check. Save dutifully. Save on it through thick and thin. See your plan through all the carnage that adversities can snare your life with and never let go of it. When you are 30 and have cashed your insurance funds you can launch your financial life or that start up, debt free, without the funding snares and burden that so often slays some dream.

However, as a back up plan or to be wise to the times we are going to live through in the coming years, use a little of your free time to learn the one thing that's spinning the world now: marketing including marketing online across borders to the world - through your own site. It costs practically nothing and who knows someday it could be the goose that lays the golden egg!

The writer is a college instructor and a trained marketer. Check out a self starter's opportunity or two or for more information at http://earneverydayfromhome.com/

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Saturday, May 26, 2012

Develop Your Successful Management Style

Develop Your Successful Management Style

Each individual in any management position has developed a management style, a behavioral approach to managing others. There are basically 3 styles addressed in this article which are the Autocratic style, the Democratic style, and the Catalytic style. Let's define each and the most outstanding single characteristic of each style.

The Autocratic Style (natural style): Dictator, My Way OR the Highway approach, I'm in Charge here and you are to do as I detailed, don't think, just act and do it NOW, demands respect from everyone even if it has not yet been earned, call me MR or MRS or SIR/Madam.

The Democratic Style (natural style): Close friend, father figure, no one ever makes a mistake, any and all results are acceptable, take your time we'll get it done, accepts any and all suggestions from subordinates even if the suggestion may be wrong, does not discipline or control the staff, staff control s the manager, has a great need to be liked by everyone at every level, call me by my first name.

The Catalytic Style (Learned/developed blended style): Teacher style, trainer, developer of subordinates, coaching style, teach what they know and show as they go style, strives to achieve results above expectations, explains plans, details expectations, maintains control but expects input from all subordinates, is respected by subordinates and by all management because respect has been earned through performance.

At first glance you might believe that the only style that is best of the 3 styles is the Catalytic.

Each style has its appropriate time and place and each can be successful under specific circumstances. Management styles are developed by the individual and are natural tendencies. We are all influenced throughout our business career by those around us who have managed us as we ascend into management position ourselves. Our developed style can begin as early as grade school level and further develop in high school and college. When we enter the work force and begin to report to our first supervisor/manager our future management style begin to evolve even further.

When the time comes and we are promoted into our first management position many want to be like their first manager. This could be a positive evolution or perhaps a negative one. Let's assume, for this exercise, that our first manager was a really wonderful person, very friendly with the entire staff, and displayed a father figure management style. People who report to this manager, including you, may not have performed as well as you could have because your boss was such a nice person almost any type of performance was considered acceptable even less than expected results.

This management style, although comfortable to all of the direct reporters, may not be as effective as it could be and the results achieved may be found to be unacceptable to upper management.

You recognize that this is an example of a Democratic management style and although well-liked by all may not have an extended shelf life as a manager due to the lack of acceptable performance but the unit this manager is managing.

Let's address another example of a different management style, the Autocratic. This manager has very high almost unreasonable expectations which you are to live up to at all times and if you don't it becomes a watch-out environment. This manager usually raises his voice when speaking to any person on their staff, pounds his hand/fist on the table at meetings, criticizes in public and rarely shares any praise to any member on the staff. This style usually doesn't explain plans of action or details of expectations. Dictates duties and responsibilities, usually does not welcome input from the workers, rejects suggestions and uses verbal force at every turn. Remember under certain circumstances and conditions this may be the m anagement style needed.

Example: Upper management has a department filled with very qualified, experienced and talented employees who, under their present democratic manager are performing below acceptable results. Now it is time for a change. Consider someone who has a natural autocratic management style. Why? A drastic change in results are necessary and critical to the overall performance within the organization and a person who is going to go into this department with the sole mission of cracking the whip and get the job done and quickly turn results around. The downside danger is employee fallout. There may be some fallout because of the sudden change in management style but the best of the staff will rise to the demands of the new manager IF their goal is to stay with the organization and to move forward and upward.

We can readily recognize a severe change in the sports world. A football team has had the same coach for several years and in the last year or so the team has not had a winning record, has not qualified for any playoff games and ownership is now faced with a coaching change. You have witnessed a change from a long term democratic coach to a dictator autocratic style head coach and staff. The very next season the team is now a winning organization and goes to the playoffs. Keep in mind an autocratic style manager/coach usually has a short shelf life, perhaps 2-3 seasons and then another change will have to be made and now ownership is looking for the blended management style coach, the Catalytic coach.

The Catalytic manager/coach due to the fact that this is a blended style of both the Autocratic and the Democratic styles will now have a long shelf live with the department/team and will produce winning results on a consistent basis.

Can an autocratic and democratic management style change to become a catalytic manager?

Yes. The catalytic is not a natural style like the other two styles. The catalyt ic style is learned and developed style over a period of time. What is needed to develop the catalytic style is proper training and direction from a strong catalytic manager who is willing to take the other style individuals under their wing and spend time changing their approach to managing subordinates which is to include training and developing to cause a change in their behavior tendencies and approach to others.

There are several additional principles, skills and techniques in learning how to Develop Your Successful Management Style. For more information, visit our website to enroll in one of our many training and development programs at http://www.mgmtdevgroup.com/ link.

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Are You a Powerful Leader? - Don't Let People Walk All Over You!

Are You a Powerful Leader? - Don't Let People Walk All Over You!

change management process change management plan

Just last week, in one of my management and leadership class, a General Manager of a SME was lamenting to me how difficult it was to get his team to work independently as a group. How resistant these people were to change and to work from their own minds, some being in the company for more than 20 years, much longer than he had been (10 years). And "when people has been working too long in a company, they tend to be complacent about their work environment and after some time, have fixed mindsets that are almost impossible to unfix" - that's what he said.

And anyone who has been working for some time, will certainly agree with this General Manager; how true the way people condition their mind in search of 'comfort'. In most cases, whatever a person does is motivated either to move towards pleasure or to move away from pain; so unconsciously their minds continuously searches for a 'comfort zone' to settle in, every day and perhaps... even every moment.

But being a General Manager myself for 5 years in a MNC and later running and leading organization and businesses for more than 20 years, I have come to the realization that: 'we are indeed the causer of almost everything that happens to us; or we are the maker of our environment.' - James T Allen. To explain this simply: we can't be where we are if we did not choose to be. For instance, being married to this woman, have these children; or married to our job and have a team that does not..... listen, work independently or so, on.

Listen to what leaders of companies say as they lament about their people, conditions or circumstances in their office. When they are doing it, it's undeniable that they can't see that they are indeed the causer of the environment around them. And as such, has lost their powers, as leaders, to do something about it; because if you are not fully responsible for a person, a thing or even the condition, you have 'NO' power over it!

It's a pity to be a leader without power - no wonder, so many couldn't lead their companies well. But how do we lose powers as leaders? Here, I will share with you one BIG causal factor:

THEY DON'T STICK TO THEIR WORD

When a leader does not adhere to their commitment, they lose their powers BIG TIME! Some simple examples are: NOT turning up for a meeting or pay their suppliers/ contractors on-time or rewarding their staff after making a commitment to do so. Then, they rationalize for their misdeeds by saying: Ah! My assistant can handle without me or... the client also delay our payment, why should we pay on-time... or my staff will understand, they have been with me long enough... and so on.

Let me share with you how the words of billionaires like: Warren Buffet, Bill Gates or Donald Trump are so powerful. Many are tempted to say: of course, "their words carry power because they are billionaires!" A word from them, in public, can shake the market! Well, T Harv Eker, a guru of the millionaire mindset, says: 'Their words have power, not because they are billionaires. They are billionaires because they gave power to their words!' They say what they mean and mean what they say. And what they say.... they DO!

So....., DO YOU DO WHAT YOU SAY?

In my next newsletter, I will share with you the BIGGEST causal factor: 'how leaders become powerless and how to regain that power.' Or if you are very excited to learn more how to be an excellent leader or manager, not just to improve your working conditions but also to enhance your personal life, do visit: http://www.ceostation.com/

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Thursday, May 24, 2012

How Is Change Management Changing Business?

How Is Change Management Changing Business?

change management process change management plan

Change management is one of the most innovative new management styles on the market. It has been around for quite some while though, but it is just started to being adopted as a mainstream management methodology. There are now lots of scholarly books and papers on the subject. Change management is causing quite a change in the management industry. Managers are taking notice and starting to change their philosophy because of it.

Change management adds a level of structure to the shift and transition of people, teams, and groups from the existing state that they're in toward a wanted future date. It is a process that helps people organize employees better in order that they accept the changes that are happening in their work environment. When this management style refers to project management, it can be just about new changes that are introduced and approved in the project. It is the adoption of basic building blocks and structures to get a grip on change effort. It h elps to minimize the effect of change on workers and keep their distractions comfortably at bay.

The management of change can refer to changes in mission, strategy, operation, technology, attitude, and behavior. All of these changes are critical and important to employees, and people need to really focus on them in order to manipulate them correctly as far as change goes. That's why there are dedicated change managers now that can help with the process. The management of change has become its own science, and there are a lot of people that are starting to adopt it as a big part of their organizational efforts to make sure the team works and functions better. There are always volatile and sometimes hostile changes in a company, project, team, or setting, and workers need to be able to adapt to these changes in order to better work in their environment of choice.

They don't want to have to deal with a whole lot of changes that are really going to slow them down in life. They need to be prepared to shift from one change to the next with ease. They need to be able to move fluidly between changes. That is one of the most important things for people to focus on and worry about when they are working in a new business environment, and managers are taking notice, because they want to make sure workers are happy and comfortable.

Change management is changing rapidly due to new regulations and technologies; find out more on our web sites.

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Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Your Workers Are Ready to Storm the Bastille! Can Management Stop the Revolt?

Your Workers Are Ready to Storm the Bastille! Can Management Stop the Revolt?

change management process change management plan

The workplace has trouble brewing. According to a study done by the job-placement firm Manpower, 84% of those surveyed wanted to change their jobs in 2011. A Gallop poll from the same year found that 71% of employees are either "not engaged" or "actively disengaged" at work. Any way you cut it, that's a lot of unhappy people at work.

Since the economy's rate of improvement has been slow, I believe it's safe to assume that many current workers are simply biding their time until they believe the recovery is back to a relatively safe growth level. At that point, the exit doors may be blown open by a stampede of unhappy employees looking for greener pastures.

While everyone has the typical gripes about work every so often, these surveys, and several others with similar results, should serve as a huge signal to employers that things must improve soon, or their staff may dwindle to unhealthy levels. However, before employees head for the doors, there will be noticea ble adverse affects. Lost sales, decreases in productivity, and, quite possibly, lost time due to an increase in the susceptibility to stress-related illnesses.

Obviously, many people are not inspired. I believe their despair isn't their fault. I believe they're losing, or have lost, the enjoyment and pride in a job done well because of a lack of real leadership in management. While the rank-and-file aren't looking for the next John Paul Jones or Douglas MacArthur, they do want, and deserve, more than what has been foisted upon them in recent years.

People need to know that what they do is not only good for the company, but also good for their community, whether it's their neighborhood, or the world. They need those in charge to effectively communicate with them in a way that the company's goals become a cause that they can rally around. They need to see, and believe, that everyone in the company has a purpose and that they're all working together.

If you'r e in senior management, I have three recommendations that you should take very soon to avoid the coming exodus:

1. Survey your workers

Your employees will be wary of taking a survey about their attitudes about their work and the company. I know that I wouldn't believe that the results were anonymous. However, it's a step that must be taken. Have your technical department make a survey similar to the ones found online. Those are secure and the identities of the respondents are kept secret. For the bolder worker, put in a section where they can add comments and if they wish, add their name.

Note - if they add their name, you must ensure that their opinions will not be used to adversely affect their position in the company. I'm sure your lawyers will attest to that.

You can also look through the blog sites to see what people are saying about your company. It's amazing what people will say when they can use an alias.

2. Take a stroll around the work floor

Depending on your organization, this may be figurative or literal. When was the last time you took a walk through your facility or your stores and just talked to the workers? When was the last time you experienced what they're dealing with on a daily basis? What's it like to deal with a jaded public in 2012?

If you've been spending all of your time isolated from the day-to-day activities of your company, it's time to get a dose of reality. I'm sure you've had numerous courses on communication. It's time to use those skills and find out what's on their minds.

3. Look in the mirror

People want leaders in management positions. Are you the type of person that people willingly follow? Are you describing the vision of your firm in a way your workers can feel? Has your leadership training made changes in your persona, or was it all fun and games? Do you truly believe in your company's vision, or are y ou there to do your daily tasks and get a nice paycheck?

The mood of the workers today isn't good. There are danger signals everywhere. It's up to you to get your employees back on course. You can do that by being a true leader and give them a reason to stay with you. Help them understand the company's goals. Show them that what they do truly matters. Become an inspiration to them.

They're counting on you.

Leon R. Scott is a Certified Master Life Coach specializing in Career Transitions for veterans, upwardly mobile employees, and those wanting to change career paths.

Get free access to Leon's advice and tips about changing careers in the report entitled "So You Want To Change Careers. Are You Sure About That?" Go to http://www.youtimestwoonline.com/services.

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There's No Such Thing As Organizational Change

There's No Such Thing As Organizational Change

It is everywhere...

... Political leaders promoting changing policies.

... Organizational leadership touting new products or strategies.

... Team leaders outlining a process improvement.

Leaders everywhere think their job is to create change across their team, organization or industry.

And they are all wrong.

You can create broad change across people and distance, but you can`t do it by changing the organization.

You can only achieve by helping individuals make the choice to change.

In other words, organizations don`t change, people do.

In the political arena, you`ve heard the phrase, "all politics is local." For our purposes today let me modify it to say "All change is individual."

So, if you agree with my assertion, how can you use that insight to get to your desired end goal of new processes, projects, products and behaviors?

Here ar e five things you can do.

Start with yourself

How easily are you influenced to change by someone who isn`t changing themselves? An Android user isn`t likely to convince you to buy an iPhone and a couch potato won`t be a compelling advocate for reading more. If you want to influence others to change, you must begin with yourself - your level of belief is critical to your success.

Open conversation

Too many changes are introduced with PowerPoint and polished, practiced presentations. Stop that approach! Introduce the situation and the need for change as you see it and have a conversation with people about their concerns, fears and ideas. Recognize their initial resistance not as a threat, but as energy to be used. Telling won`t work. Selling is limited in application. But a conversation that allows people to understand and express themselves moves people more quickly towards a change.

Pick the easy fruit first

If you hav e ever needed to pick the apples off of a tree, you probably started with the fruit closest to the ground. Picking all the apples doesn`t mean you have to start at the top of the tree! In order to influence the entire group, start with individuals most likely to be open to the change. Notice those who seem most receptive. Think about who has been open to similar changes in the past. Going to these people first will help you build your confidence, and build a cadre of people to help influence others.

Engage their help

Politicians do this well. Once they begin to build support they enlist the help of early supporters to help the influence others. They know they can`t do it alone and they understand the power of momentum. You don`t have to, and if you are trying to change a group of any size, you can`t, do it yourself. Engage those who are excited about the change. Support them with the same approaches you are using; encourage them to influence change on pers on at a time. The power of the extra help, plus the emotion of the momentum, will move you closer to your goal quicker.

Be patient

Have you been influenced to change quickly in every past situation? Have you ever seen an entire group of people all ready to change at the same moment? Change isn`t always easy. Just because you have some early adopters on board today doesn`t mean everyone else will jump on the bandwagon tomorrow. When you realize that all change is individual, you see that it will take some time. Remember that if your change is important, your patience will be rewarded.

There is lots more to creating change for individuals (and certainly how that ripples to organizational change) than can be shared in one brief article. But, if you combine these five strategies with what you already know, and let all of your change leadership be guided by the premise that all change is individual, you will be on a path to more successful and more lastin g change.

The best leaders know they are in the change business - both for themselves and their teams. If you want to have an ongoing plan to help you and your team adjust to the changing needs of the environment around you, join leaders from around the world as a member of the Remarkable Leadership Learning System. This one skill at a time, one month at a time approach to becoming a more confident and successful leader is a flexible way and effective way to build these skills - and not conventional (it just works!). This system allows people to learn without travel and allows them to learn in multiple ways whenever works best for their schedule - and encourages them to learn by teaching others too! Get $916.25 worth of leadership development materials including two complimentary months of that unique system as part of Kevin Eikenberry's Most Remarkable Free Leadership Gift Ever today at http://mostremarkablefreeleadershipgiftever.com/. Kevin is a bestselling author, s peaker, trainer, consultant and the Chief Potential Officer of the Kevin Eikenberry Group http://www.kevineikenberry.com/.

change management - source: via web

Monday, May 21, 2012

Roll Up Your Sleeves And Exceed Expectations Using Opportunity And Change

Roll Up Your Sleeves And Exceed Expectations Using Opportunity And Change

change management process change management plan

It is necessary for our businesses to proactively know where our customers are going and how we can best exceed their expectations in getting there. Providing our customers, value, innovation, quality and uniqueness of our products and services has to be our focused and achievable objective as anything less is unacceptable to them. Why do many of our businesses struggle with exceeding expectations? They struggle because they fail to see, listen and be proactive. Instead they choose to wait, fail and react. Businesses are complex systems where changes are mandated by our environment. We celebrate our wins and learn from our mistakes. Instead of waiting, we all need to be on the alert so that we may discover and take advantage of opportunity. We need to continually watch for nagging problems that rob us of both capability and resources while reducing or limiting our ability to be successful. And, the longer problems remain in our systems the more our clients notice, the mor e waste is being created and, importantly, the less our peers and employees respect us for wasting our resources and theirs.

Knowledge, experience and leadership, much like our business organizations, roles and processes are separate pieces of a whole and must collaborate together to be successful. Our businesses are basically divided activities of many operational and support segments that provide focused services and capabilities to our customers. Still, our business focus must always be on a personal level with our customer and how we provide value, innovation, quality and uniqueness of our deliverable to them.

It is important to frequently step back and look into our businesses to assess our products and services from many vantage points so that we may better discover opportunities to exceed our customers' expectations. The most effective and proven assessment approaches use phases of shoulder-to-shoulder assistance that finds problems and opportunities for i mprovement and then causes these improvements to be integrated into your business and sustained. During the initial phases, knowledge and experience is used to pinpoint gaps between your current results and the results that you desire.

This business assessment should initially compare business, customer and supporting results as this approach most quickly gets to what we most care about. It isn't how hard we try, or how much money we spend or even who we have assigned to fix a problem. We care most about results during this initial business assessment as concerns that impact these results are identified and managed later in the process.

Once the initial assessment results are identified and organized they should then be discussed with your managers and other experienced stakeholders. This is needed to not only seek out the improvements you desire, but also the details needed to weigh the value, cost and adoption methods of these improvements. Change is sometimes culturally and otherwise difficult and it is often necessary to assist or coach resistant stakeholders to ensure changes are fully effective and sustainable. Opportunities are discussed by your business team and evaluated based on mission, customer and service improvements and the desired direction you need to take the business.

Once the direction and future state of the business is determined, you then gather the knowledge you need to move and motivate the organization to the desired improvements if your more detailed due diligence finds that the details support the initial decisions. This requires your most experienced stakeholders and may require experiences outside your organization. It is critical that leadership be both invested and involved in both the direction, key decisions and changes required. Without leadership's participation and encouragement, many opportunities will be lost and changes will not be sustained. Every piece of this checklist is important an d no piece can be left out so that the solution is identified and then systematically implemented into operations and sustainment.

Then what? Unfortunately it isn't enough to just follow this checklist and declare victory once you are done. The opportunities may be within reach and the problems may be fixed, or not, and new problems are probably now known or old problems are now of higher priority. Problems must be dealt with immediately to limit their impact to the business and your stakeholders so not to derail the new opportunity or change process. If the problem is a member of the team, try to help them overcome their concerns or weakness so that they too can exceed expectations. It is far better to improve an employee than it is to start over with a new one when possible. Success is infectious in an organization and the credit for it is best shared. Share success along the way and confidence for change will grow.

Your business is only as good as the last del ivered product or service and will only grow if that product or service is the best available. Only these products are valuable today so if your products and services fall short of this you still have a very big problem and this should be of concern for you. So roll up your sleeves, and exceed expectations because anything less is unacceptable to your customers (and should also be unacceptable to your business).

Absolute Consulting Solutions is a highly qualified IT professional and PMI PMP certified Project Managers organization. We are highly experienced business analysts and systems engineers experienced in leading programs, projects and system execution. We keep our promise to our clients and have earned their trust for delivering "Maximized Results that Exceed Expectations." We turn our clients' strategic visions into real results while improving services and customer/partner satisfaction. Visit us at http://www.absoluteconsultingsolutions.com/ to read our testimo nials. We will help you and your clients grow your program, save time and improve customer loyalty. Our direct phone number is 703.346.5824.

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Sunday, May 20, 2012

The Goal Overview

The Goal Overview

change management process change management plan

"The Goal" is a business novel written by Eliyahu M. Goldratt. In the book the author uses an easy-to-read story line to explain the Theory of Constraints (TOC) as it applies to the problems of meeting demand at UniCo, the manufacturing plant run by the protagonist, Alex Rogo. The book opens with the division vice president, Bill Peach, visiting the plant to investigate a late order. His visit brings to light the problems of late shipments, massive backlogs, and production inefficiencies at the plant. The pressure to turn the plant around is exacerbated because it is rumored that the company plans to close one of its under-performing plants to cut costs. Consequently, Rogo has 90 days to turn the plant around to avoid being the plant that is closed. He gets help from an old friend, Jonah, who imparts his wisdom throughout the novel.

Jonah is a physicist who consults with corporations to make process improvements. He is a very busy man who appears sparingly in the bo ok but each time he imparts a little nugget of knowledge for Rogo to use at the plant. Rogo and the reader are forced to figure out how to apply this knowledge to the problems at the plant. In the forward of the book, Goldratt states that he uses the Socratic Method to explain the main points of the book because he believes that it is an effective teaching and learning tool. These occasional pronouncements form the "take a ways" from the book and are what I will attempt to discuss in this paper.

The first point Goldratt makes through Jonah is that the number one goal of an organization is to make money. Everything else that an organization does should be a means to achieve that goal. Accountants express that goal, i.e. making money, as increasing net profit, ROI, and cash flow. For example, Goldratt explains that when UniCo installs robotic machines in the plant that results in a 26% increase in productivity of an operation but does not result in a 26% increase in cust omer orders, the company is not making any more money. Further, what appears to be a productive piece of machinery is causing inventory to increase with out sales, hence, the company is not making money.

The goal of making money in a manufacturing environment can be expressed in the following three measurements:

(1) Inventory (money already in the system) is all the money that the system has invested in purchasing things it intends to sell, i.e. investment that the organization has already made.

(2) Operating Expenses (money going out of the system) is all the money the system spends in order to turn inventory into throughput, i.e. scrap, tooling, supplies, direct and indirect labor.

(3) Throughput (money coming into the system) is the rate at which the system generates money through sales.

Goldratt further states that if inventory is made but does not sell the firm is not making money. This is what is happening at UniCo. Inventory is going up b ecause the work-in-process (WIP) is increasing for the sake of machine efficiencies as a result of inflated batch quantities. The conventional wisdom is that less set ups (a fixed cost) on the machine results in a lower cost per unit, which accounting equates to improved efficiency. Also the warehouse is filling up with products the firm cannot sell which means throughput is decreasing. Eventually the inventories in the warehouse become throughput. As inventory sits, it increases carrying costs and overhead, there by increasing operating expenses. Further, if UniCo is making inventory/products it cannot sell; those products it does sell have to be made on an expedited basis. As a result the expedited orders cost more then they should. All three of these measurements are interdependent, which means that changing one will result in a change to the others. Thus, to improve an organization's processes using Goldratt's TOC one must consider all three measurements at the same time .

This introduces the second point that Jonah discusses with Rogo. The TOC is a principle which provides that all processes have impediments in the system. It is important to recognize the impediments or constraints and develop a plan to minimize their impact on the entire system. TOC also states that the output of a process which consists of multiple and independent operations are limited to the least productive or most constrained operation. The book illustrates constraints on a system with two examples; (1) a linked chain that is only as strong as the weakest link in the entire chain and (2) taking scouts on a hike.

On the hike Rogo is the leader of a bunch of boys that need to get from point A to point B in time to make camp for dinner. On the first half of the hike the boys get spread out over time because the faster boys are way out in front and the slower ones get farther behind. The boy who is restraining the whole operation is Herbie. He is overweight an d carrying more then his physical capacity allows. Rogo realizes the whole scout troop is only as good as the weakness link in the entire chain which is Herbie. By placing the bottleneck, Herbie, at the front of the line and off loading some of what is in his pack to other boys with more capacity, Rogo can level the load on the whole system. The result is that the whole group makes it to camp in time for dinner. Rogo takes this knowledge back to the plant and applies it to the production process from one operation to the next.

The third major point that Jonah imparts are the two phenomena found in every plant. The first phenomenon is that there are always dependent events in any process flow. This is an event or series of events that must take place before the next event can happen. Thus, each successive event or downstream event is dependent on what has already occurred. The second phenomenon is statistical fluctuation. This is when different outcomes occur even thoug h the same process is followed. Thus the results or the process are not absolutely predictable, but rather they are within a range of outcomes that can be forecasted to get a general idea of the most probable outcome. Unfortunately, most of the factors critical to running a plant successfully cannot be determined precisely ahead of time.

Fourth, Jonah instructs that there are impediments within the process flow of dependent events, which are called bottlenecks. A bottleneck is any resource whose capacity is equal to or less than the demand placed on it. Conversely, a non-bottleneck is any resource whose capacity is greater than the demand placed on it. The plant should not balance individual resource capacity with overall market demand for its product. Rather, it needs to balance the flow of product through the plant with overall market demand for its product. To be more precise, the flow should be slightly less than the demand. If the flow is equal to market demand an d the market shrinks, then the plant have too much excess capacity. Fundamentally, the bottleneck(s) should be on par with the market demand. Additionally, working at maximum efficiency can result in excess inventory, and a plant that is working at maximum efficiency all the time is very inefficient. Use of plant resources means taking into consideration the entire system when making process decisions.

At UniCo, Rogo finds that he has two bottlenecks in the middle of the process. Unlike the hike example where Herbie can be moved to the front, Rogo is unable to move the bottlenecks at the plant to the front of the chain. Instead Rogo must find other solutions to improve throughput at the two bottlenecks. The first bottleneck is at the NCX-10 machine. The potential solutions to improve process flow and capacity at this operation are: (1) place quality control upstream from NCX-10, which will ensure that all work being done at this operation is on known good parts; (2) us e old machines to increase capacity, which are not as efficient but which prove their worth by getting parts through the bottleneck; (3) assign a full time set up crew, to the NCX-10, which eliminates any downtime on the machine; and (4) mark orders to be processed through a bottleneck, which makes all the upstream operations aware of the order's importance. The second bottleneck is at heat-treat. The solutions to improve process flow and capacity at this operation are: (1) use outside venders for extra capacity; (2) use time during baking cycle to set up parts in queue for the next run; and (3) remove heat-treat routing from parts that do not need it.

Focusing on these bottlenecks is the key to solving a lot of what is wrong with the processes at the plant. Jonah tells Rogo that to increase the capacity of the plant he must improve the capacity of the bottleneck. If it loses one hour in the bottleneck, it is lost forever and may not be recovered elsewhere in the syste m.

Jonah also instructs that Rogo can get into trouble by focusing too much on the bottlenecks and ignoring the rest of the process. He explains that activating a resource and utilizing a resource are not synonymous. Utilizing a resource means it is being use in a way which mirrors the overall goals of the whole system. Activating a resource means turning it on and running it without regard to whether it is needed. Activating a resource and increasing throughput can cause additional bottlenecks to appear. However, most plants have enough extra capacity that the increase would have to be large to make an impact.

In the book, both bottlenecks provided Rogo and his team a place to focus their energies and refine some of the plants' processes. One of these processes is the four stages that a work order goes through when it travels from one operation to the next. These stages are:

(1) Setup is the time the part spends waiting for a resource, while the resource i s preparing itself to work on the part.

(2) Process time (run time) is the amount of time the part spends being modified into a new, more valuable form.

(3) Queue time is the time the part spends in line waiting for a resource while the resource is busy working on something ahead of it.

(4) Wait time is the time the part waits, not for a resource, but for another part so they can be assembled together.

Also, the economic batch quantity (EBQ) is a critical decision made by the shop planner. However, the EBQ only takes a single work center or operation into consideration, not the whole system. A large batch will reduce set up time and increase inventory. The small batch size that Rogo switched to has several benefits, such as; smoother work flow, decreased inventory, reduced process flow times, improved machine utilization, and increased product quality.

Jonah points out that cutting order quantities increases the flow of product through the syste m which increases throughput and the company makes money. The additional set up time that a non-bottleneck performs because of the smaller batch size would not add to the overhead cost because the non-bottleneck has idle time anyway. An hour saved at a non-bottleneck is an allusion. With the increase in throughput a company can market its significant cut in lead-time, to obtain new business.

The easy sell to sales and marketing is a hard sell to accounting. The accountants are used to the traditional method of accounting, which is a total of the raw material costs, direct labor costs, and burden (which is direct labor times a determined factor). With the decrease in batch sizes the part cost increase using this method because the additional set ups have added to the direct labor charge. But this thinking does not take the entire process into account. It assumes that all workers in the system are working at full capacity all the time. Hence, the added set up time does n ot require additional workers as accounting would have you believe.

The result of the smaller batch sizes is a reduction in finished and WIP inventory and increased sales, which means more money coming in. Consequently, the same direct labor cost spread over more product. By making and selling more products with the same costs the system makes money and the shareholders are satisfied.

By following Jonah's advice and addressing the bottlenecks Rogo was successful at turning around his failing plant. He improved throughput, cut inventories, and reduced operating expenses, which translated into making money. He got the promotion to run the division and, most importantly, his wife moved back home.

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Friday, May 18, 2012

From a Present Clinician to a Prospective CFO: A Shift in Professional Paradigm

From a Present Clinician to a Prospective CFO: A Shift in Professional Paradigm

change management process change management plan

Approximately 7 years ago, I began my professional career in the Drug and Alcohol treatment field in an entry-level capacity with a relatively large and well-respected organization. I was 21 years of age and eager to learn and grow within the ranks of the organization. I was grateful that I was given the opportunity to be amongst experienced staff that were willing to teach me how to deliver services to the vulnerable populations that were served by this organization. At that time, I had absolutely no idea of the professional journey I would be embarking on.

As time went on, my commitment to the organization's core values, philosophy, and vision/mission statements were matched by the management's commitment to continue to expand my skill set. I also took it upon myself to reinvest in my pursuit for Higher Education and returned to college to complete my Undergraduate Degree. By the time I had been employed with the organization for 3 years, I had been promoted twice . The first time was to a higher counselor position and the second time was to a position in which I became the liaison between the individuals being served and the funding sources. Until the time I moved into that position, I was relatively clueless about the monetary aspects of treatment, but it broadened my perspective tremendously.

For the first time, I was able to see that there were more individuals being served then the ones that we saw every day in the program. There was a whole new set of clients that the program served as we had to explain, rationalize, and advocate for the clients to ensure that they could receive the treatment that they needed. I was able to see the billing and accounting aspects of treatment and quickly came to realize that without this revenue that I was responsible for monitoring, tracking, and ensuring that it was obtained and maintained, the services that we provided would potentially cease to exist. I was able to see the importance of understanding various internal control systems, in this regard, that helped me to stay on top of these things because without them, the magnitude of the losses and potential continued losses would have been devastating.

Still not thinking about pursuing future education in business management, I completed my Bachelor of Social Work Degree. However, prior to the completion of that degree, I took interest in policy classes that were elements of the Social Work curriculum. I took note again to the fiscal elements of policy and thought about my work. I thought about the challenges that programs and businesses face, especially in tough economic times. In hindsight, I was really asking one of the fundamental questions of economics. How does an entity work to increase the quantity and/or quality of output (goods and/or services) when the resources are fixed or, at times, declining?

It was then that I began to think more about business and how it relates to the social s ervices field. I also began to think about the importance of managerial accounting and how it can be used to direct the services being delivered. It was at this point, that I thought about pursuing a Master of Business Administration degree because I do expect that someday I will be moving into middle/upper management and with the training and perspectives offered by understanding the business side of various entities, including non-profits, I would be more effective as a manager.

When I share with some of my friends that I have decided to pursue this degree, they look at my with a look that screams confusion. I share with them that one of the things that I have noticed in the time that I have been in the social services field, that I see a lot of managers/directors that understand how to deliver quality treatment, but they do not know how to use business skills to influence the delivery of treatment. Essentially, the social service field is a business, it just so happ ens that the area of focus is a business of helping individuals to save/change their lives. I plan to be a manager or prospective CFO that understands both sides of the equation the treatment aspect, as well as, the business aspect and as of right now, in an entry level supervisory clinical position and enrolled in a MBA, I am well on my way.

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Thursday, May 17, 2012

End-To-End Supply Chain Management Optimization

End-To-End Supply Chain Management Optimization

End-to-end supply chain management optimization leads to organic performance. This helps supply chain management system to improve its forecasting and inventory management, fulfill commitment with more efficiency, become more effective in handling sourcing and supplying management, streamline logistics management, and certainly help to enhance post-market supports.

In the ongoing economic scenario, business organizations are focusing on how to keep going on with their businesses and at the same time, preparing themselves for future development. This chain of a business organization represents an untapped opportunity to gain short-term and long-term cash-flows and cost-savings. Business organizations stand to justify their working capital and develop with making use of the advantages of the given business atmosphere and implementing better and streamlined end-to-end supply chain expedients by ut ilizing world-class technologies.

The companies are concentrating much on increasing cash-flows. The reason that causes them to run after the cash-flows is the given economic scenario where almost all kinds of businesses are struggling to survive due to cash-strapped economic situation. Even the blue-chip companies are being seen to have been battling in this antagonistic atmosphere. Banking institutions are reluctant or slower in processing loan advances to them, aggravating their agonies. All these factors affect adversely the supply chain system. Getting bailout of this axis is possible with replacing their supplier chain procedures with an end-to-end view. This replacement deals with the following activities.

1. Stronger inventory road-map

2. Efficient forecasting method

3. Efficient means for sourcing and procuring

4. Fulfillment of commitment

5. Planning for on-time delivery of logistics

6. Post-market support

There are three distinct unproductive supply networking procedures that impede the progress and the companies need to be careful about them. They are as follows.

1. Dynamic inventory road-map deficiency

2. Ineffectually speedy processes affect supplying process and delay timely delivery

3. Inattentive to benchmark freight rates and use low-cost carriers

Supplying chain operators are required to closely monitor over these issues. These processes siphon off cash of a company and their cumulative impact can drain out their competitiveness and productivity also. All of these processes are interlinked and if any of them is incompetently devised, the other processes will definitely get affected. To save the system from degeneration, an end-to-end supplying chain management system has to be introduced and optimized.

For making this optimization process successful, business organizations are to ensure that they have brought in comprehensive changes instead of incremental changes. They are to plan for an end-to-end optimization approach and implement it to address full-range of this chain procedures. In addition to it, the companies are to ensure that they have undertaken the changes into their own system and have combined the system with their associates who can be, for example, suppliers, manufacturers, distributors and customers. When the effective processes are driven in and the ineffective processes are driven out of the chain, the objectives of supply chain management will definitely be realized.

A business can develop to a better extent if it combines itself with the supply chain management system. This helps it to save costs and time and on the other hand, helps to optimize its profitability.

change management - source: via web

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

What Makes a Change Agent Successful?

What Makes a Change Agent Successful?

change management process change management plan

Change agents, like leaders, are not born. They are 'created' through training, coaching and experience. Sure, like leaders there are some things that will come more naturally to them then others.

So what are the top 7 skills and traits that make a great change agent?
1. Focused
2. Flexible
3. Decisive
4. Optimistic
5. Aware
6. Organized
7. Sense of Humour

Let's look at each of this in a little more detail:

1. Focused - It's important for a change agent to always be focused on the goals. It's easy to get distracted as the change moves forward and there can be a tendency to start increasing the scope of the change. One way to achieve this is to have a clear vision, goals and project plans. In addition to these, have clearly identified measures or performance indicators so that you can regularly review progress. Another way is to make sure that you continue to break things down to smaller tasks so that it minimizes overwhelm.

2. Flexible - You all know about Murphy's law - anything that can go wrong will go wrong. Flexibility means having more options and behavioral choices available to you so that you can control the system. Sure there will be some things throughout a change initiative that are 'not negotiable' but even then you can be flexible in your reactions to any obstacles or even to alternate ways to deliver.

3. Decisive - Everybody will have an opinion about the change ranging from what to do and how to do it. You need to be constantly taking in the big picture and the specifics. By all means get input from the team and the experts but then make a decision. Change is not the time for a consensus driven approach to decision-making.

4. Optimistic - As we all know, most change will meet resistance along the way. It's only natural until everyone understands what's in it for them and the compelling reasons to change for the business. If you aren't optimistic then who else will be? Being optimistic doesn't mean ignoring reality and looking through rose-coloured glasses. It means looking for the possibilities and connections and listening to the potential challenges or obstacles to find away to negate or manage them.

5. Aware - It's important you know what's going on throughout the change initiative i.e. within the project team, leadership and the broader organization because it can help you predict outcomes and reactions. Look for not only how something is useful or has an impact right now but how it might be useful in the future. Listening for what is unspoken as well as spoken and getting curious through great questions is a great way to increase your awareness.

6. Organized - This one is probably obvious but being poorly organized can really disrupt a team and the change project. There are a number of things you can do here - have clear roles and responsibilities; have a project schedule; have a clear process for recording, resolvin g and escalating issues; have specific times to work on change; make sure any meetings about it have an agenda with clear outcomes, owners and time. These are just a few things you can do to be organized.

7. Have a sense of humour - Change is 'testing' for everyone. Emotions run high, things go wrong, deadlines come up quickly. If you can't have some fun and make it enjoyable for those around you then you will be a ball of stress by the end.

So there you have it, my Top 7 skills and traits for a great change agent - Focused, flexible, decisive, optimistic, aware, organized AND a sense of humour!

Therese Wales is Managing Director of Up to You http://www.up-to-you.com.au/ providing Leadership Coaching and Organizational Change Management Services.

Want to start making a change right now? Request a no obligation, FREE 45 minute strategy session valued at $300 http://www.up-to-you.com.au/whatsup or Email admin@up-to-you.com.au for more information.

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Monday, May 14, 2012

1 Minute Wisdom Tips to Leverage the Power of Happiness at Work Part 2

1 Minute Wisdom Tips to Leverage the Power of Happiness at Work Part 2

change management process change management plan

This is part 2 of the Leveraging the power of the NEW science of Happiness at work....we offer another 15 points for HappinessShift in your workplace as 1 Minute Wisdom "Nibble Knowledge" nuggets.

There are 3 kinds or Aspects of "Happiness" that people will experience at different times of their day... Each of these types of Happiness is present in our moment to moment experience.

Emotional - Short-term, burst of positive emotionState - Relatively stable mind-set, sensitive to changeTrait happiness - Gennerally stable across lifetime

Start increasing your happiness here...Part #2

Build your Psychological Capital. Specifically your RESILIENCE; - Control, OWNERSHIP, REACH and EXTENT... Be the "Bounce-Back-Happily" Queen/Team. We have coaching, training etc to assist yo to enhance this.Smile more...Lots More. Just sommer SMILE for NO reason. Look in the mirror, look deep into your eyes, because they are the windows to your.... Soul. Make friends "inside". Time to STOP berating, beating, undermining and harming yourself. How can you honestly expect others to believe and trust in you, if you don't?Remember - The only person you CAN CHANGE.. is YOURSELF... So start to be the EXAMPLE of what you are looking for, or wanting, to experience.. If it is to be it's up to.... ME!DNH...Do-No-Harmas you create more "happiness" for yourself or others in life and at work.Set some goals and take daily baby-steps to move yourself towards them. Make sure they are YOUR GOALS and not for SOMEONE else.Stop Worrying about what others think... They have their own "stuff" to manage. Anyway... people who "try" to harm, hurt, undermine you are already hurting themselves. Use this line... "What hurts you so badly, that you think you can heal... by hurting me?" Can I give you a HUG? JDo something nice for yourself - spoil yourself at least weekly. Take a long bath, pick and smell a beautiful flower. Get your hair/nail/face etc "done"). Go for a massage. Go s ee a fun movie.Look for the "Funny side" of issues, challenges, problems. Take these "things" more lightly... Don't hold so TIGHLY. Let go a little. Let go a LOT.. Set yourself free from self-recrimination today. Decide!Get your body into shape - healthy weight. My Fianc' and I each lost around 20KG, each, over 120 days. Simple steps - Alkalise, 1 Protein at a time, 100 grams protein, 120 grams salads / veggies. 3 main meals and 2 small healthy snacks in between. Lots of WATER... Stopped alcohol. BE smart - check with a medical specialist before doing something silly PLEASE JIf you are carrying emotional baggage do a LifeShift Workshop to clear it. But it's probably time to set yourself free from the negative and past influences, beliefs and limitations of your PAST. Unhook your "Baggage Trailer". Imagine.. if you could just completely "forget" the not-so-lekker, past stuff and completely eradicate its influence and impact on your present moment of NOWStore the Wisdom - cut the cords / stop energy leaks...Housekeep...Tidy up, apologise, forgive, let go, move on. se Emotionetics to transform your energetic Blueprint. Wake Up, Show Up, STEP up to a BIGGER HAPPIER LIFE, starting RIGHT NOW!Meditate & Contemplate in a quiet space regularly. Quiet your mind-chatter, focus JUST on your breathing for 5 minutes for 2 sessions per day.You are worthy of a whole lot more than you are allowing yourself. It's TIME!!

Know this... YOU are loved, worthy and valuable... even if you don't believe it yourself.

It matters little what you have done till now...

What matters most is... what you are about to do. And WHOo you are about to BEcome.

Know this too... work for the sake of work... is a waste of activity and life energy. Make sure there is MEANING and a DESTINY in the "work" that you do. Make sure you are, or do work for, REAL LEADERS and NOT GREEDERS or BLEEDERS.

Life is tooooo short. Get your shift together... time now for a BIG SHI FT... Make it happen... with love and passion. Your happiness is in your Hands...

Worldwide Research shows that employees who are happier at work:

Are 180% more energizedAre 155% happier in their jobsAre 108% more engaged at workAre 150% happier with lifeLove their jobs 79% moreAre 50% more motivatedHave 40% more confidenceAchieve their goals 35% moreContribute 25% more

You might create a "great place to work" and be an employer of choice.

But if MINDSETS are misaligned, staff are UNCONSCIOUS and unhappy, and leadership is really greedership...then it matters naught!

A wise man, Ben Franklin once said... "People are about as Happy as they make up their minds to be...". So true.

Final warning forTeams and Tribes - Survival or Thrival.

In biology, 6% of a system can completely influence a system. either positively or negatively. How many people in your teams and tribes are Negative, destructive, dis engaged " Energy Vampires". Help them, with LOVE, to find some other company / place to be negative and destructive.

We know from the LOSADA Line research, (3:1) of the minimum required balance of Positive to Negative comments ratio in a workplace, for a system to "survive". If your positive to negative comments ratio is 1 to 1, you are in DEEP do do.

Begin today to leverage the power of the new Sceince of happiness at work to transform your workplace, productivity performance and profits for ALL.

Tony Dovale of Appreciative Team Buildings activities designs, delivers and facilitates MindShifting REAL Team Building, Tribal Leadership, Science of Happiness - coaching, consulting, Talks BEyond Motivational Speakers Gauteng

Tel: 011 467-1763, Mobile 083-447-6300. South Africa

For a free Report and Information for transforming your workplace culture to leverage happiness at work email Happiness@coachfree.com

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Changing Your Approach to Business to Meet Changing Business Demands

Changing Your Approach to Business to Meet Changing Business Demands

WHAT DO PARTNERSHIPS HAVE IN COMMON WITH MARRIAGES?

The future looks bleak for many companies in this sunny land of the cedars. In fact, many companies must feel a bit like individuals who pretended that they never wanted to get married until they had gone well past their prime. Now, they may well settle for far less than they ever would have.

Many a company, much like celebrated prima donnas, basked in the pride and glory of past achievements; became so drunk on success that they did not anticipate the advent of a future that would lack the luster of present success. There they stood: heads firmly planted in the sand, while the most unthinking and vulnerable part of the anatomy waited like a blind and mindless sentry.

Time, however, waits for no one. As we stand poised at the turn of the century, new and unanticipated threats await us. These da ngers will be met by many innovative and creative solutions. But there is no doubt that the majority will turn to traditional solutions. The first place of refuge will be various forms of partnerships or alliances designed to enlarge or strengthen companies who need to face aggressive competition from regional or international giants.

Following through on the marriage analogy, let us look at the range of possibilities:

'Strange Bedfellows 1'

The groom is a large, brawny man with a strong taste for money and pretty, naive young girls.

The bride is very wealthy but neither pretty or naive or young. However, oddly enough, she also has a taste for handsome, naive young men. The fighting begins very early in the marriage. The three options are: outright divorce, the wealthy partner pays off the other and sends him on his way or they decide to produce a brood of children to bind themselves into marital commitment.

The business partnership that paralle ls this is when direct competitors try to unite. The three outcomes are dissolution, acquisition by one of the partners, or a merger.

'Strange Bedfellows 2'

The groom is poor and often unemployed. The bride has regular employment in a low-paying job.

The wife's family offers to provide two rooms. In a short time, this couple finds itself in serious trouble.

Although it is seems obvious that such a marriage has little hope of survival from the start, many business partnerships are based on the same shaky grounds: an "alliance of the weak".

When several weak companies try to join forces in order to survive, it usually turns out that they only multiply weaknesses, and such a partnership ends in dissolution or acquisition by a third party.

'Strange Bedfellows 3'

The groom is very wealthy, very powerful politically, is 60 years old and used to having 'his way or no way'. The bride is not wealthy or at all powerful, but is 25 years old, pr etty, very inexperienced and heavily influenced by a family who considers 'money' to be the most important thing in life. Five years after the marriage, not only the wife, but her entire family are totally indebted to the husband.

Business partnerships between a strong and a weak partner usually lead to the strong becoming stronger and the weak becoming weaker. If they are in the same line of business, they become direct competitors. The outcome is that the stronger company buys out the weaker for a much smaller price that would have been yielded by an outright sale from the start.

Another scenario for weak and strong companies partnering is when the weak company manages to acquire the expertise and market knowledge to compete on its own. Such partnerships usually end in a 'break-up' when the weaker partner gains the ability to compete independently.

"Strange Bedfellows 4"

It seemed like a perfect marriage between two intelligent, educated and sociall y skilled young adults. He is an architect, firm, capable but not very outgoing. She is an interior designer, flexible, persuasive and sociable. They truly complemented one another. However, they had no children and their careers became an all-consuming interest. Trouble began to develop when the wife received more business and earned larger sums of money. The complementarity turned into competition. The tensions generated were so great that the wife preferred to work with other architects and the husband with other interior designers. After about seven years, the more successful of the partners bought out the other.

The same story unfolds in business partnerships that appear to be complementary at first, but as time passes, competitive tensions develop. The original objectives of the alliance no longer hold and the internal strain on the relationship usually leads to one partner buying out the other. According to Joel Bleeke and David Ernst who have co-authored a book on strategic alliances, the lifetime of this kind of partnering relationship is seven years.

"Perfect Bedfellows"

In the rare cases where the partners are both strong, intelligent, complementary, and robust enough to remain strong, both the marriage and the business partnership flourish. Such relationships last longer than seven years.

In "Is Your Strategic Alliance Really a Sale?", Joel Bleeke and David Ernst (Jan.-Feb. 1995, HBR) suggest two important safeguards for negotiating more permanent business partnerships. These are well worth consideration by the many companies that will be looking towards some form of partnership as a way of increasing competitive leverage. Remember though that an outright sale will fetch a far better price for your company that a forced sale after partnering when the bargaining power is not in your favor.

Recommendation 1: FLEXIBILITY: build in a clause that makes periodic re-negotiation of the partnership agreement man datory every three to five years, depending on the growth and change rate in your sector or industry.

Recommendation 2: ASSESS RISKS: look at how the relative bargaining power of the partners will evolve in time based on the specific business strengths of the partners and which of those are most critical to business success; which partner controls the customers that will be served by the venture, and which company will fill more of the top management positions. Keeping these in mind write a clear exit-clause into the agreement from the start.

CONCLUSION: Unless partnerships are built on mutual and equal but complementary strengths, they won't last. And unless the agreements build in enough flexibility to account for the inevitable changes over time and the hedging of risks in case of dissolution, they will break up in the same way as unsatisfactory marriages often do.

Fay Niewiadomski founded ICTN (International Consulting & Training Network) in 1993. ICTN provides complete management services to its clients who are among the leading regional and multinational players. Furthermore, she has worked with CEOs, Board Members, Presidents and Ministers of Government and other Leaders to help them meet the challenges of change within their organizations through creative problem solving, management interventions and powerful communication strategies. Prior to founding ICTN, she researched the subject of "Managing Change through Needs-Based Assessment' in large Lebanese Organizations" for her doctoral work at the University of East Anglia in the UK. Additionally, she also held various university positions as a professor at AUB and LAU and as Dean of the Faculty of Humanities at NDU.

For additional information on how to improve performance and increase productivity through people, decrease cost and better ensure growth and sustainability, visit http://www.ictn.com/.

Discover easy and proven techniques that will help you Guar antee Results by improving your leadership skills. CLICK this link http://www.ictn.com/english/free-articles.aspx?id=46 and receive your Free copy of Management Problems & Solutions.

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Tips On The Way In Which You Can Help Your People To Adapt Swiftly to Change

Tips On The Way In Which You Can Help Your People To Adapt Swiftly to Change

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One of the few constant things in today's business environment, management training courses tell us, is change. In some businesses although the company management realises the requirement for change, workers are reluctant to adapt or do so much too slowly. How can these lethargic organizations rid themselves of this millstone? It's people's nature to strive for harmony and stability. We are continuously looking for a safe and sound base in everyday life, which we only stray away from sometimes as a way to satisfy our curiosity or a hankering for a feeling of creativity. As a way to get an organisation to re-think and begin to learn, this secure foundation must 1st be shaken. 3 actions are actually required to do this:

1. The secure foundation needs to be shaken up. Employees need to realise that the solutions they have utilised previously are no longer effective. Face your employees with the real truth. It isn't enough to complain about dropping turnover, increasing costs or lost clients! Lay the facts and figures on the table to be able to demonstrate to your people that your resources for their secure foundation are becoming rare. Be specific.

2. Make staff feel guilty and afraid. People will only react if they feel personally affected. They must realise that their job and security are actually in jeopardy if they refuse to adjust. This fear has to be much larger than their fear of change!

3. Build emotional security. When we train our young children the best way to cross the street, we 1st take them by the hand, show them what to do and accompany them on their initial steps on this risky journey. We tell them on the danger of traffic - in other words we build fear in them but at the exact same time show them the safe solution.

This really is how you need to treat those people you want to change. If you're going to generate fear in staff, you must also take them by the hand and show them a practicable way forward. P rovide them the opportunity to become used to new ideas, take away the fear of making mistakes and reward their 1st successes and innovative thoughts!

How do you, as a supervisor, go about motivating the staff to change? Establish a Change Management Team. You'll need a team of people with whom you are able to talk about your fears and uncertainties. How much fear has to be created and just how much security should be supplied so as to motivate others to change? The team should build concrete programmes, which it'll communicate to the employees and then monitor the progress.

Finish the learning process inside the Change Management Team before launching it within the organization. The Change Management Team should be successful in absorbing the "new thinking" in order for it to have a effective germinating function. The emphasis of the learning within the framework of the team must be the "shaking up - building fear - building safety" process. The group acts as a prototype for change within the whole business. You might need to offer change management training to the group to achieve this.

Organise and structure the learning process for the whole company. Give attention to the factors which have to be modified. Establish a working group that plans concrete actions to be taken, communicates and implements these to the remainder of the organization.

Finally, don't forget for success you have to change yourself before you can change your staff. Discard traditional thought patterns and be prepared to accept new ones. Seek out new ideas outside your organization. Visit colleagues, take part in management training courses, seminars and conferences to enhance your knowledge.

Richard Stone is the Company director of Spearhead Training Group Limited, a business that supplies a full range of management and sales training courses designed for improving business and personal overall performance. It's possible to see far more ar ticles at http://www.spearhead-training.co.uk/

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Friday, May 11, 2012

The Role of Good Communication Skills While Introducing Change

The Role of Good Communication Skills While Introducing Change

change management process change management plan

It is very rare to see a company introducing change and that process be welcomed by the employees of that company. There are many factors that contribute to the resistance to change, but a leader with good communication skills can ensure the cooperation of his team.

When change is proposed, it usually comes from above - the top management - and people see it as a major threat to their style of life, comfort and even livelihood. With a little diplomacy from the leader, a resistant team can change into a willing and positive force towards that change.

People need to understand why change is necessary - Many leaders feel they do not owe it to their employees to explain why the change is necessary; they might not. But a good leader understands that without the willing participation and understanding of your team you cannot count on your people's full commitment; and without commitment your overall strength is vastly diminished.

Need to know basis information flow - good communication skills in the workplace does not mean you tell your team members everything. They might not be able to cope with such overload of information. However, to have their goodwill and cooperation you need to give your employees more than just orders. Good leaders will conduct a series of participatory meetings where he would lead his people towards the realization that change is imperatives. Enough information should be shared so they employees realize the importance of change not only for the company, but for their own growth.

Allow for fine tuning on a bottom-up approach - the best participatory methods that would bring in the employees towards accepting change is to allow them to contribute. As a leader you should be able to give them the basic direction, methods and then invite them to perfect it. When the employees feel they have a say in the matter, they would not feel as threatened and ther efore try to cooperate rather than dismiss the idea of change. Good communication skills would ensure that your employees feel in charge of the situation; when actually you remain firm in your driving seat.

Encourage change with rewards - eliminate people's fears by allowing them additional training so they can adapt to their new roles better. Monetary gains, promotions, opportunities to gain more certifications are among the possible rewards that can be offered to encourage cooperation towards change.

Great leaders often use good communication skills in the workplace as their only and most powerful tool for motivation.

© 2012 Incedo Group, LLC

Linda Finkle, CEO of INCEDO GROUP, works with innovative leaders around the world who understand that business needs a new organizational growth style. These innovative leaders know that powerful cross-functional communication is the highest priority and the strongest strategy for building org anizational effectiveness. To find out more, visit: http://www.incedogroup.com/

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Leadership Coaching: Teaching Your Employees To Cope With Change

Leadership Coaching: Teaching Your Employees To Cope With Change

change management process change management plan

Change Is Natural And Essential In A Business

Change is oftentimes scary for a lot of people. It is like a leap in an uncertain territory. Change is actually natural. It is always a part of and essential in business, and for the most part it is good. But people are likely to be scared of it. Because people tend to fear change, managing change means you have to manage people's fears.

There might be irrational and unpredictable reactions to change. Nonetheless, you can manage these fears and unexpected reactions accordingly. You have to do the management right.

What is change to your people? The occurrence is actually upsetting to them. When things are altered, people have to go out of their comfort zones and do and deal with something different. Anxiety and disarray can ensue. These reactions are potential causes of loss of productivity, declining quality of output and failure. The fact remains, however, that change is vital for the survi val of an organization. In history, you'll find a long list of organizations that became extinct because they stagnated and failed to change.

Revolution Is Progress

The organization revolutionizes. How do your people accept and cope with it? How can they adapt and suit themselves in the new environment and become fully functional? The key to this is to define the occurrence and make your employees understand.

The first reason for resisting change is fear of the unknown or an expectation of loss. Managing this fear on the front end is managing an individual's perspective. On the back end, change management entails making an individual better equipped to handle the phenomenon. As a leader, you need to address your people's resistance to change. Be aware that their degree of resistance depends on how they perceive the event. Do they see it as something good or bad? How severe do they think that impact will be on them?

Understandi ng Produces Less Resistance

Your people will have better acceptance of the occurrence if they have less resistance to it. Their acceptance also leads to them having better coping skills. Bulldozing your people's resistance is not the solution.

In as much detail as you can, define the change to your employees. As events develop, provide updates and do so clearly. For instance, you'll be moving an employee's table. Six inches to the left won't matter to them, but if you're moving the table to add another table (and a new employee) that could threaten the former employee. In this case, explain what's going on. "Our sales are up by 40%, and we need to meet more demands. Overtime does not suffice, so we need to rearrange our system a bit". Involve your employees, too. You can perhaps ask for suggestions on how the space should be rearranged and so on. This way, they will have a better understanding and will not be threatened by the change.

By the way, d o you want to learn more about leadership in your company? If so, download your FREE eBook here: Guide to Elegant Courage Leadership

Jodi and Mike specialize in executive coaching with individuals and teams. http://lighthouse-leadership.com/

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Wednesday, May 9, 2012

How to Plan a Project in Four Simple Steps

How to Plan a Project in Four Simple Steps

change management process change management plan

Planning is one of the most important aspects of successful project management. These steps will guide you through the planning process.

Step 1 Work Breakdown Structure (WBS)

To plan a project you need to be sure that you have captured all of the deliverables and tasks that make up the finished product in a Work Breakdown Structure. Get your team together and ask them to spend 10 - 15 mins listing out all of the tasks that they can think of and writing them on post-its.

When you have a plenty of post-its, write the end result of the project and place it at the top of the wall or on a white board. Underneath put up post its representing the key deliverables. For example if you are implementing some new software the final product would be the 'Software launched'. Underneath might be 'Staff trained' and 'Software installed'. Arrange the post-its in a hierarchy like an organisation chart.

Step 2 Precedence Diagram or Work Flow Diagram

Now you kno w what you need to do, you need to work out in what order the work needs to happen. Tape some flipchart paper to the wall or use a whiteboard. Put the top deliverable from your work breakdown structure on to the right hand side of the board or paper. Then, take the post-its from your breakdown structure and arrange them in the order in which they need to happen.

Work from the left until you have mapped out the dependencies between the tasks and you have a sequence of tasks running from left to right. Finally draw arrows between the tasks that link up, and make sure that there aren't any tasks sitting isolated.

Type all of the tasks into your project planning software. As far as possible, try to follow the logical sequence that you mapped out with the post-its. Most planning software will enable you to link tasks so that you can accurately reflect the sequence in your diagram.

Now we have broken down the work and identified the Project Plan Dependencies it i s time to estimate the effort for each task.

Step 3 Estimate effort

In a group session simply go through your project plan and ask your team to estimate the effort involved for each task.

Once you have entered the task effort, your planning software will automatically calculate the start and finish date for each task and provided you have entered the project logic correctly it will return an accurate possible end date.

At this point the end date can only be achieved if sufficient resource is available. That is why it is only a possible end date.

Step 4 Resource allocation

You have entered all of your tasks and task duration in your scheduling software, so now it is time to add resources. Resources are usually people, but they can also be materials, for example machinery or automated process.

Against each task enter in the name of the person, machine, or process who will be responsible for the task's completion. Where possible enter a named person, this will help you to hold them accountable for progress and to manage their work by producing to do lists, calendars and work load profiles.

The skill in project planning comes in balancing two key factors: time and resource. Plans may show a finish date that is acceptable, but resource may be overloaded to achieve that date. Alternatively resource requirements may be within limits, but the project end date is much later than your Client would like.

There are many ways to resolve scheduling issues and more detail is given in the resources section.

Summary

Thank you for reading this guide to project planning. You have probably noticed how important it is to complete each step. Step 1 ensures that you have captured all of the work. Step 2 defines the order of the work. Step 3 focuses on accurately estimating the effort and step 4 brings everything together by adding resources. By following these simple steps you can considerably increase your chances that the project will be delivered on time, on budget and to quality.

Need to plan your project? Don't know where to start? Use Ready made project plan templates used on real world projects.

Each plan comes with a detailed user guide with project planning tips and techniques for managing project planning challenges.

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