Remember last weeks’ (a) concept-type priorities, and (b) specifics, out of the total (a) through (f) list? Those two components represent the “boring”, “everyone can do them”, “there’s no break-through here”, part of this Living, Breathing, Growing Business Bible idea. From here on it gets a bit more interesting, and powerful. Next on the list is (c) tough-minded initial stack-‘em prioritization and (d) scrambled assignments. Here we go on these:
(c) The priorities you develop represent the core goals of your corporation. For illustration, let’s say you have finalized on four priorities; #1 cash creation (as illustrated last week), #2 establishing a market presence in China, #3 re-establishing our market place product quality image, and #4 reduction of expenses to match revenue projections. You say “it is imperative to do all of these to survive”. But there are many conflicts:
• #1 will require tightening customer payment terms and reducing inventories for rapid-to-market sales opportunities; in conflict with #2
• #4 will require a reduction in field personnel and technical support, in conflict with #3
• And on and on as additional uses of cash clash with the need to increase cash; if you’ve written these priorities with sufficient specificity and detail, there will be many conflicts.
So here’s where the fun and the real learning starts. Your team must force rank these four priorities. Stack ranking is an old idea applied to various lists, such as personnel, and is usually a rather lazy process. In this case, if done in a lazy, idle way, it will be easy and useless: "oh it’s 1,3,2,4 in that order". But don’t be lazy, get into real specifics and tough tradeoffs. You may have a half-day debate on the merits of gaining cash by reducing inventories vs. gaining a market presence in China via placing inventories on location. Force ranking done correctly is tough, hard work; especially if you conclude that your company cannot survive without all these priorities being implemented successfully. But the result will be astounding, measured in learning about your business’s dynamics, learning about the abilities of individual mangers to find solutions, gaining creation of new ideas, thinking through tradeoffs, and making big jumps in the very specific clarity of your overall direction. These outcome products make your organization smarter, faster, and more together in its direction.
(d) Scrambled assignments is another breakthrough. 99.9% of CEO’s would select the person on their staff most closely aligned with a given priority to be one in charge of it: #1, cash creation, would always go to the CFO. Change the paradigm. Learn many things simultaneously. Put the Operations managers in charge: what does that accomplish? How well can the manufacturing manager run a project when he doesn’t have direct authority (will need inputs and insights from all disciplines)? What insights might result from a completely different perspective? How well do other functional managers (like the CFO) deal with reporting (on this priority) to someone else? What constructive tradeoffs might be engineered? Teamwork gets enhanced when everyone participates in bonuses for achievements on all priorities combined.
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