Tag: growth

  • Scaling Effectiveness – From Individual To Team

    Scaling Effectiveness – From Individual To Team

    Whether you are an employee, entrepreneur, contractor, or other, there comes the point where you need to scale your abilities.  We can only do so much on our own.  Thus, the need for extending effectiveness arises as soon as we try to do anything of substance.  The trick is in finding ways to train others to produce a quality that is close enough to ours.

    A Specialist Problem

    It goes without saying that this problem is one faced by specialists and those in skilled positions.  If your work is measured by time put in and the quality of your work is not a factor, then you scale by adding more resources.  Thus, we can build assembly lines of low-skilled labor and scale that to create millions of products.

    In the world of business and IT, there are very few low-skill positions (if any).  There are a few positions that are low-skilled that amount to data entry, but even those often require knowledge and experience to get the job done faster or better.  Therefore, to grow our business, we need to be able to develop our people.  We need to find ways to peel off some of the skilled labor we do, convert it to something that takes less skill, and pass it on to someone else.

    An Age Old Challenge

    Good News.  There is nothing new about needing to pass on skills to others or even the next generation.  However, we do seem to forget about that as something that requires our attention.  Our days are full, and we quickly fall into the trap of being “too busy” to think about how to delegate.  We need only look back a few decades to see industries driven by apprentice programs.  These were the first way we looked into scaling our skilled labor.

    Dissect How You Work

    The first step in delegating those things that only you can do is to examine your tasks closely.  There is often some form of “finishing touch” we put on our work while most of the functions could be done by anyone.  Even a software developer can have someone else write their code.  This procedure is quite a challenge as it amounts to putting your thoughts down in a document.  Nevertheless, it can be done, and the process is an excellent insight into delegating almost any responsibility.

    I recently wrote a tutorial on how to automate almost anything.  The beautiful thing is that this process is practically the reverse.  You have a method you follow as part of delivering a product or service.  We can dissect it by reducing it to the steps we take.  There will be steps that are hard to define like “think about the problem I am solving.”  That is ok for now.  We will parse that more another time.

    Once we have the first pass of steps, there are going to be concrete actions, and probably some “magic happens here” areas where we struggle to define our process.  Those specific actions are where we move next.

    Actions Reduce Skill Requirements

    Those concrete actions are where we can most quickly scale out our process.  The operations may require some level of skill.  However, a well-defined task can be done with more ability through practice.  We may be able to perform the work faster or at a higher quality than someone else.  Fear not, that is a temporary setback.  When we pull out that step and hand it off to someone else to do the work, we will also spend the time to review and assess their work.  This is an investment in making the worker better at the task.  At some point, we will be able to have our investment pay off in a job we can reliably hand off to another.

    Once we have a task or two pulled out to hand off, we can work on adding more to that list.  This allows us to scale as others do those tasks better (through training or experience) and as we take things off of our plate.

    Scaling Effectiveness Is That Simple

    So, we define the actions we take, find some we can hand off, and then do so.  We scale by repeating the process.  Is it that simple?  Yes, the procedure is not hard at all.  It is the definition of the tasks that is often a challenge.  Do not take my word for it.  Where are you invaluable to your job?  Spend some time to find at least one task you can hand to others and see how easy it is.

  • Making 2018 Your Best Year Yet

    Making 2018 Your Best Year Yet

    The beautiful thing about a new year is that it gives us an excellent milestone for change.  Of course, there are always resolutions to make this the best year ever.  However, we will look beyond declarations.  This article presents a more intentional approach to improvement based on thoughtful consideration.  We are not just picking a popular trend and jumping on or an obvious, but broad, improvement.

    Careful Assessment

    The first step in planning our best year is to assess where we are.  Take some time to look at the trends and challenges of the last twelve months.  This action is not a cursory glance like checking the scale and deciding to lose weight.  It is a deeper dive into not only the results but the causes.  We want to treat the core problem, not the consequences.  Thus, build a list of issues and then review whether they are problems or symptoms.  Dig down to create a list of challenges that are slowing your progress down.

    Simple and Specific

    The scope is always a challenge when changing course or solving problems.  We want to go for the big wins.  However, that has the negative impact of keeping us from gains that quick wins can provide.  A few little successes often outweigh a big win, particularly when you consider the time for those wins to “bake in.”  For example, if I can save a dollar a day now or ten dollars a day in a year I will have missed out on 365 dollars of savings before I get that more significant win.  Keep that in mind while looking at the problem list you created.  Maybe there are some easy wins or partial improvements that can be completed in the first quarter.  Move these up on the priority list and allow the more significant enhancements to wait.

    Avoid being vague in your goals and improvements.  A good list will have deadlines, milestones, deliverables, and be measurable.  This list will help you be held accountable from the very start.  A plan has been created.  Thus, get to work on it.  When you leave things vague like, improve sales this year, the lack of details makes it hard to get started on that goal.  Your first step, in that case, is to decide what the first step is.

    Finding The Clues

    Sometimes things look ok on the surface.  The problems you are facing can take some extra research to see them.  A good approach for this task is to look at where the money went.  We often can find out a lot when we “follow the money,” even when it is our own spending.  When you have useful metrics on resource utilization that is another potential clue in how to improve your business.  The math is simple.  Look for ways to reduce costs, improve productivity, or increase revenue.  When you attack these areas, you will see a business grow.