We only have so much time, energy, and emotional drive; we need to
deploy it wisely. It is much harder to regain momentum in the organization
after a false start than it is to initiate it. Following are three areas in
which we need to constantly remind ourselves to avoid missteps.
Fix the Problem, Not the
Blame
Few people deliberately make mistakes. They want to be proud of their
work and their organization. Blame is demoralizing and counter productive.
Blame wastes time and money and delays customer satisfaction. We want and need
an environment where people feel free to identify problems without experiencing
repercussions. It can cause employees to hide problems and stifle innovation. Fixing
the problem is constructive use of your energy; fixing blame is destructive to
the organization. Focus on fixing the problem; it gets solved and the employees
are happier.
Fix the Cause, Not the
Symptom
If you spend time compensating for the symptoms of a problem, it
doesn’t go away. The problem continues to exhaust time and effort. Fixing
symptoms is just rework, over and over again. Instead, spend your time digging
for the real cause of the problem and eliminating it so you can go on to more
productive activities. When you break your arm, you don’t just take pain
killers to mask your discomfort, you treat you arm in order to heal and reduce
the pain. The same holds true for work, you should not just mask the pain and
continue doing the same thing without removing the cause.
Fix the Process, Not the Product/Service
All work consists of a series of processes that
produces our products or services. Bad processes, not by people doing something
wrong, cause most problems. Two world leaders in the field of performance
improvement shared thoughts on the percent of fault for problems. Joseph Juran
stated that in his experience, he found 80% of the time it was a process problem
and only 20% of the time was it people at fault. W. Edwards Deming said he
thought 90-95% of the time it was a weak or faulty process that led to the
problem. Again, don’t blame people, they are doing the best job they can with
the processes they are given. Typically, management’s job is to create and
improve the work processes and the people’s job to follow the processes. The
ideal is to create processes that are incapable of producing bad products.
By focusing on the right things, fixing the right
stuff, we can conserve our time and energy and get the best results. This
results in happier and more fulfilled customers, employees, and managers.
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