www.1001TopWords.com |
Hidden Consultants Within Your Organization
You've all heard the old joke about a consultant being someone who uses your watch to tell you the time, and then steals your watch. There's some truth to the story: consultant recommendations are often the same things that your employees or customers have been telling you all along. But while you will listen to a consultant, you don't listen to your employees and customers. Why is that? Why do companies pay more attention to consultants then they do to employees or customers? And what should you do about it? But let's start with an even more important question: why should you listen to employees and customers? Why listen? So why don't companies listen to employees and customers? Based on my own experience, here are the primary reasons why companies don't take advantage of their hidden consultants: No Clear Summarization When I'm working as a consultant doing interviews with employees and customers, I often hear significant statements, but I notice them because I'm listening for them. My brain is focused on gathering important information, and so I'm able to separate out the irrelevant stuff from the important things. Most people don't listen that way on a day-to-day basis. Then, after I've heard an important statement and verified it with others, I'll figure out the best way to convey the statement to my client. Sometimes the issue with accepting a recommendation isn't so much the recommendation itself; it's how the recommendation is presented. Important truths have to be presented in a way that makes the client see the light without taking offense. Employees and customers don't often use appropriate summarization and presentation techniques, and so we reject their recommendations. Bias Reluctance Other reasons ? Some managers don't want to acknowledge that their own employees can be more knowledgeable about a subject than the managers are. The managers forget that the employees (a) are usually closer to everyday problems, and (b) have had a life before working for this manager, and so they have other experience to bring to the table. ? Managers sometimes feel that giving an employee a strong say in an issue will be viewed as "giving up control." We forget that we aren't in control anyway. At best we're leading and steering, and certainly we're accountable, but the employees who do the work actually have control over the process-not the managers. ? There's a feeling of "you get what you pay for," so we feel that a low-paid employee can't provide as good an opinion as a high-paid consultant. This is a narrow viewpoint, but it feeds the families of many consultants. How to use your hidden consultants 1. Help your hidden consultants learn how to focus. Provide training for your employees and customers in techniques that help them find the root cause of a problem, determine possible solutions, and put together a plan to solve the problem. 2. Provide a way to get feedback from employees without you being biased by the source of the feedback. Create a method for employees to submit suggestions and ideas anonymously, but with a way to subsequently identify the suggester if you want to provide a reward. 3. Identify someone (internally or externally) who is good at summarizing and presenting. Have that person summarize employee and customer feedback and present it in the way that an outside consultant would. 4. Have a program in which selected employees can be "consultants for a week." Having these employees think like consultants takes them outside the day-to-day process, if only temporarily, and gives the employees the opportunity to identify issues and recommend solutions. Sometimes this approach is even more effective if the employees act as consultants for different departments than their own. 5. Help your employees to learn how to differentiate between a "reason" (why you are a certain way) and an "excuse" (why you stay that way). And make sure that you understand the difference yourself. Conclusion ? Providing skills and expertise that don't exist within your organization, and ? Helping your organization develop better processes for optimizing your own skills and expertise. You have a huge pool of hidden consulting talent within your organization. You just have to focus it and use it. © 2004 MakingITclear, Inc. This article was originally published in the June, 2004 issue of the MakingITclear® Newsletter, a free monthly email newsletter published by MakingITclear, Inc. MakingITclear is a registered trademark of MakingITclear, Inc. Harwell Thrasher is an author, speaker, and coach specializing in the human side of Information Technology. His workshops show IT people and their non-IT customers how to work together to make more effective use of technology. See more on Harwell's web site at http://www.makingITclear.com. And join Harwell's free monthly email newsletter that's focused on making your IT organization (or any organization) more effective.
|
RELATED ARTICLES
10 Ways New Managers Become Great Leaders "It is a terrible thing to look over your shoulder when you are trying to lead and find no one there." - Franklin D. Roosevelt The Thick Line Between Buddy and Boss Q: One of my key employees is giving me trouble. He has started showing up late for work and has developed a bad attitude in general. The rest of my employees are complaining since they are having to take up his slack. I've tried talking to him, but he doesn't seem to listen. To make matters worse, he has become one of my best friends since I hired him five years ago, so firing him is out of the question. What can I do? -- Allen B. Communicating with Offsite Workers How do you, or would you, communicate with employees who work offsite? Look Good on Voice Mail Your use of voice mail tells others a lot about you. Here's how to make a good impression. Behavioral Interview Questions You Can Use Monday Morning If past behavior is the best way to determine future behavior then behavioral interviewing is a requirement for anyone serious about hiring top talent. This skill isn't something that should be taken lightly, but everyone's got to start somewhere. Keep in mind that you're looking for specific examples rather than vague descriptions. A good communicator can dance around the question and sound very convincing if you don't insist that they give specifics. Here are a few questions that I have found to predict the future behavior of some of the most critical personality traits. 5 Steps to Identify Core Processes Part Two of Creating Well-Defined Processes Series Employee Retention: Five Leadership Fundamentals Are your management practices on the right track? Retaining your valued or high performing employees must be a strategic issue for your company. Throwing more money at your workers is not the answer and can become very costly. The more effective way to retain top talent is to address their important needs. Try It Out On Your Team First Wow! You're brilliant! You have a great idea. You've looked at it every possible way to find holes in your logic, fallacies in your assumptions. You know it will work and you can't wait to turn your new brainstorm loose then reap the rewards of your genius. I know you're excited but before you unleash your great idea, first try it out on those around you for analysis, discussion, improvements, and (gasp!) criticism. Ten Business Reasons Why Asking for Help Works In fact, bringing your people - any of them - into your confidence and asking for help, is a very powerful tool indeed. The form of words' "I need your help", works best. Here are Ten Reasons why this is:- Cultural Differences: Making it Work Virtually Working virtually adds a whole new dimension to the phrase "cultural differences". It immediately becomes apparent how different people around the world work, live and network. Culture Management and Creativity Many concepts in the fields of managing creativity are very much applicable to culture management in general. The same concepts that foster creativity and innovation also maximise human capital potential, increase productivity, reduce costs and maintain competitive advantage etc. Some of the many commonalities between culture and creativity management follow. Tales From the Corporate Frontlines: Team Dynamics and Communication This article relates to the Team Dynamics competency, which evaluates interpersonal communication, cooperation, and productivity between members of a single team, group, or department within your organization. In today's marketplace, in order for organizations to operate efficiently, it is essential that they understand how to create and utilize effective work teams at all levels of the organization. When well managed, teams improve productivity, innovation, and the likelihood of success. Ineffective teams lead to frustration and the loss of time and productivity. Evaluating this competency can be very useful if your organization is experiencing missed deadlines or low productivity levels. Weaknesses of Wishing When you're starting a business, you might wish for a lot of things, like having more than enough customers or not having to do marketing. But wishing is weak willed, having no momentum behind it. When you wish for something, you're not coming from a place of having a strong vision. Instead, wishes tend to be dreamlike, wispy and not grounded. Wishes are future oriented. Business Intelligence & Data Warehousing in a Business Perspective Business Intelligence Performance Management - Getting The Most Out of Your Employees Managing for Best Performance How to Coach Your Emplyees and Increase Motivation It is easy to spot the difference between a work team that is "motivated" and one that just goes through the motions. The motivated team produces at or above the level expected by top management, has only occasional absences or tardiness, and low employee turnover. The second group has trouble meeting its goals, greater absenteeism, and higher turnover. In addition, members of the latter work team may be more apt to argue with one another or to band together against their supervisor. Can a supervisor who is also a good coach really make a difference? The answer is a definite "yes" with a few qualifiers. My Companys Leadership Sucks! Maybe it's the season or just a more buoyant job market; but lately I'm sure involved in a lot more discussions about leadership. Score the Rainbows Pot of Gold: Become the Boss That No One Wants to Leave Leadership is lifting a person's vision to higher sights, the raising of a person's performance to a higher standard, the building of a personality beyond its normal limitations.Peter Drucker Reprimanding Marginal Employees THE MARGINAL PERFORMER: Every manager must, from time to time, deal with a marginal performer - an employee whose work, for the most part, is satisfactory, but who regularly fails in some specific area or areas to maintain a satisfactory level of performance. The work of the marginal performer can be classified as substandard in some cases but not so poor as to warrant immediate termination. The Seven Cs: Partnership Danger Signs - The 4th C: Cumulative Money Problems A series of articles exploring the seven critical areas that can indicate a partnership is in trouble. |
© Athifea Distribution LLC - 2013 |