4/17/11

How Do You Describe Yourself?


Who are you? This seems like a simple question, but the answer can be very different depending who you ask!

Depending on who you ask to describe you, you will more than likely get a picture that is directly related to your relationship and interactions with them. For example, if your parents were to describe you, would their description sound the same as the one provided by your significant other? How about a description from your children? Your best friend? From a colleague at work? 

Would the description from your first boss sound the same as one from your last boss? It is likely that you would get many different descriptions (some slightly, some significantly) depending who you ask. It is the same for your clients, audiences and constituencies. 

You are, and often want to be, perceived differently for each of the many roles you play (as consultant, teacher, writer, speaker, coach, author, financial advisor, etc.) or for the different industry segments you serve, or (for some) even for the clients in the different countries you might do business in. So what's the point of all this?

Having one standard bio, resume, C.V., or other descriptive information about you is probably not adequate. For the greatest leverage, tailor your communications (and perhaps even the picture that might accompany them) specifically for the audience you are serving. It is not as difficult as it might seem - you can shortcut your efforts by creating specially prepared pre-made "versions" through "cut and pasting" and customizing the material found within. 

You might even try taking a fresh approach each time a request is made by first listing the key points you want to get across to the intended audience, and then determining what information to "re-use" and what parts you might want to create specifically for that particular request.

Have a tremendous week!

Regards,
George Mancuso

4/10/11

Action Steps To Grow Management and Retain Employees


This is part 2 of 2 of the article sent to you on April 3, 2011

Actions to take
    Doing the bare minimum of training and development—just enough to keep your organization within the law, and to keep from being sued—can easily lead to behaviors that damage companies’ reputations. Once damaged, a reputation takes significant time and money to restore. Some companies never really recover. Before find yourself in a position of losing top talent or dealing with a weakened organizational reputation, you can invest in processes to improve the management capability in your organization.

    Human resource leaders are in an ideal position to influence all the elements needed to change the role of managers and to help their organizations build management capability. Many elements are needed, of course, but the first is the sponsorship of the most senior leaders to ensure buy-in and demonstrable support for the process. The rest of the elements involve your organization’s beliefs, values and culture. All of these are catalyst for change and are necessary to reinforce norms and expectations.

    Building management capability goes beyond training. It includes transforming the organization’s culture so that it values the role that management plays in attracting and retaining top talent and setting forth clear expectations for the manager’s role. As this indicates, all organizations have an underlying set of beliefs about the importance of the manager – owner - executive. Organizations that have strong management capabilities believe that managers are critical for their ability to attract, retain and motivate employees. Strong beliefs influence the values of an organization, and consequently the culture.

    Each of the motivation of change in any given model represents an area that organizations must consider if they want to build strong management capability. Just focusing on one catalyst will not bring about lasting change in management capability; the current culture will overwhelm small changes. By focusing on numerous change impulses, organizations can modify the culture and create long-term change. Briefly, the catalyst represent the following considerations:

·        Leadership: An organization’s leadership must both believe in the value of the role that managers play and must lead by example.
·        Communication: The leadership team must consistently communicate the importance of the role of the manager to the organization and its ability to achieve high performance, attract talent and retain it.
·        Competencies: Management competencies must be assessed and developed. Entry into a management role must be predicated on an appropriate, although not necessarily perfect, set of skills.
·        Measurement and rewards: Any effective strategy must be integrated into the scorecard. It must be measured and rewarded.
·        Structure and symbols: The role of a manager must be structured so that the manager can spend sufficient time with direct reports. The term "manager" must mean something in terms of role expectations.
    By focusing on these points of change, the organization will develop new norms and expectations for behavior. The organizational beliefs regarding the management role will actually conform to what the levers of change are encouraging: a belief that managers’ roles do make a difference.

Leadership first: showing the way
    Triggers for change begin with leadership; Leadership sets the tone and shows the way; How your leaders think will cast the mold for the rest of the organization.

    It must be clear to others that your organization’s leaders believe that management capability is an asset worth time and resources. Where leaders demonstrate this through their own behaviors, the organizations will have corresponding success. Having leaders publicly recognize individuals for outstanding team management (as opposed to personally exceeding business goals) will set the tone for the importance the organization places on the role of the manager in delivering results.

    When leaders spend time with their direct reports, setting clear goals and expectations, providing feedback and actively working to build bench strength in the organization, they are setting expectations for how others will act. Consider Jack Welch during his GE days; He spent a great deal of his personal time both developing his own successor (I’ve preached for years that you should always be training your replacement) and developing leadership capability throughout the organization by participating the GE’s management development programs. As a consequence, GE is constantly cited as having one of the best leadership development programs in the world. This happened because the senior leadership believed in the value of its leaders and made investments to insure they could deliver their maximum capability.

    Also, leaders are the ones who primarily create an organization’s fundamental beliefs, values and culture. Where leaders go astray, organizations often follow. Creating a powerful culture takes time. But leaders can play a powerful role in establishing the outward signs of culture and behaviors that they both embody and endorse.

Communication: Keeping everyone on the same page
    Organizations tend to undervalue communication. But communication plays a powerful role as the vehicle through which leaders demonstrate and publicly recognize the desired behaviors in the organization. How leaders talk about managers sets a clear message for what is expected in the organization. Strong communication systems can help organizations build strong cultures and enhance performance.

Competencies: The essential building blocks
    Identifying the critical competencies that make managers successful in your organization is the first step in creating the new manager role. New managers who are hired and current employees who are promoted into management roles must be selected because they have the capability to deliver on key functions of this role. These competencies include such skills as setting goals that fit the business strategy, providing coaching and feedback to others and helping employees understand how they fit into the big picture.

    Often promotions are given because someone is a good individual contributor. Good technical skills are a far cry from good management skills. We need alternative career structures if the only way to move up in the organization is to become a manager. Not all great individual contributors make great managers. The telecommunications industry in years past learned this lesson the hard way.  By having management competencies defined within an organization we can also coach and develop individuals on how to improve in these specific areas.

Measuring, rewarding and reinforcing
    It’s a cliché, but it’s true: That which gets measured and rewarded gets done. If you don’t include management competencies and results for such areas as reduction in turnover or developing staff to improve organizational bench strength in performance appraisal systems, managers will not focus on these issues. Organizations that reward their managers for being good managers will stand the greatest chance of building strong management capability over time. Rewards do not need to take the form of money. In fact, simple public recognition of strong management skills sends a message to the rest of the organization: Managers are important to us.

Organization structure: the key symbol
    When organizations design jobs so that managers must spend 90 percent of their time doing non-management work, we send a very clear message about how we view the management aspects of a manager’s role: They are not important. We need to redesign organizational structures to support managers so they can truly manage the talent within the organization.

    By involving your leaders, crafting key messages, developing managers and examining the current messages managers receive about their role in managing others, HR leaders can change how managers are viewed, and how they view themselves.

    The process of building better managers is not fast or cheap. But the rewards can be substantial and well worth the effort.
Regards,
George F. Mancuso

4/3/11

You Must Grow Management Effectiveness To Stabilize Retention

You Must Grow Management Effectiveness To Stabilize Retention

(Part 1 of 2.  The Emails continue heavily on this subject, so I’m sending this out in two parts with the action plan to follow on 4/10/2011)

http://www.workforce.com/images/drp/drp_i.gifn the past, organizations have clung to the belief that as long as they had competitive products and services, they could enhance their performance by hiring strong leadership and top talent. While this focus has worked in some cases, in today’s highly competitive labor market it is going to get much worse.  Organizations competing for top talent may be missing the essential managerial skills and processes needed to succeed over the long term. 

    Today’s Generation X employees have much higher expectations of what managers should do to support them compared with the prior generation. Furthermore, the new entrants into the workforce, known variously as Generation Y, Millennial or Generation Next, have still greater needs for immediate feedback and development. These young workers are accustomed to praise, reinforcement and time to develop their interests and skills. How can organizations capture and retain this new talent, as well as slightly older up-and-coming leaders? 

    Research suggests that most organizations neglect the role of managers, undervalue it and therefore suffer from a lack of strong management capability. A few years ago I read a survey that indicated that employees who plan to stay with their current companies are twice as likely as employees who say they might or might not stay to report that their managers recognize their talents and encourage them to use those talents to the fullest extent. 

    I would say that the trend that is emerging is not pretty. Today’s managers are also individual contributors and they spend more of their time doing their "real" jobs than they actually spend managing their employees. This behavior poses a problem because today’s employees want more from their managers and workplaces, not less. And they are willing to walk out of your workplace if they don’t get it. 

    While employees are hungry for praise and eager to get help expanding their capabilities, there is, unfortunately, a corresponding capability gap among managers to give them what they need. This deficit exists for many reasons, including: 

Years of downsizing means companies expect more from fewer employees. There simply is not enough time for managers to devote to mentoring and employee development.
·        Insufficient skills. Managers don’t know how to provide feedback and develop people.
·        A dearth of rewards. Managers are rewarded based upon individual contributions and achievements, not their management skills.
·        The mistaken belief that "one size fits all." The same rewards approach won’t motivate everyone.
·        Organizations do not place a high enough value on the role of the manager.

Employees don’t leave companies; they leave their managers (I’ve said this time and time again)

    Employees want managers who will provide goals and direction, feedback and coaching and who recognize and reward them for good performance. Yet research indicates that managers are not delivering on these expectations. One possible reason is that managers’ roles are not designed to focus on managing people. Most managers spend 90 percent of their time on technical and administrative tasks and only 10 percent of their time on activities related to managing and developing the people who report to them. 

    There is a wealth of research indicating that management behavior is a key factor in retention. This is nothing new. Recent research has consistently shown that dissatisfaction with one’s manager is a top reason for leaving the organization.

   More recently, three different research studies examined the factors that predicted whether employees would stay with or leave their current organizations. Some of the most commonly found items predicting intention to leave were:
·        Insufficient feedback and coaching.
·        Insufficient learning and development opportunities.
·        Insufficient reward and recognition for their work.
·        Insufficient sense that their organization values them.

    Management is responsible for delivering on each of these job factors. No one else can affect how an employee feels as dramatically and tangibly as an employee’s immediate manager. The most effective managers are those who know their employees’ strengths and development needs so well that they know which assignments to give based on balancing both organizational needs and those of the employees. 

    Coaching and feedback make up one area that is receiving the most attention in organizations today. Employee survey results in company after company are showing that employees want and expect feedback. Research conducted with Gen-X folks tell us that this age group not only expects feedback from their managers, but demands it. The Millennial Generation is even more voracious in its need for coaching and input. 

    Finally, people want to know that they are appreciated when they do a good job or put in extra effort. Good managers praise employees in ways that raise self-esteem and commitment to the organization. Poor managers just expect it all, and, as a consequence, praise nothing. What they really get is turnover, and lots of it. And then they get less productivity out of the people who do stay.

What actions should you take?  Watch your Sunday, April 10, 2011 Email for some of the possible answers.
Regards,
George Mancuso
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3/27/11

A Deal Isn't A Deal Until It Is Signed

QUESTION:  Of late it seems that when I am pursuing a solid engagement or sale and at the very last minute it doesn’t come to fruition.  And worse in my case, there didn’t seem to be any warning that something was going terribly wrong, so I wouldn’t be able to react in a proactive manner.  Is this the new trend or is it just me?

ANSWER:  I really don’t know just how common this scenario is played out in the business world, but there is little doubt that it does happen.  I don’t think it matters if it is a prospective sale, a new engagement contract or a project within an organization.  You are dealing with the human element of buyer’s remorse, laziness over logic, redirection (valid or not) and too much time destroying a deal.

I have a personal realization that a deal is not a deal until the contract is inked or the check is in the bank.  In times past, a hand shake and/or a verbal commitment would have been enough to “take it to the bank.”

I believe that all of us at one time or another in our careers has started down a path only to be derailed by a new corporate direction, new management, downsizing, ineptitude or a myriad of other reasons.  Don’t take it personal although I understand that it does become personally painful.

Work your deals with diligence beyond any of your competitors.  Leave no question unanswered, give more than is expected and do more than talk the talk….walk the walk.  Will this insure 100% success rate?  Of course not, but it will continue to grow you into a consummate professional and improve your self confidence.  Self confidence allows you to speak with authority and transfer the values and excitement of your product, service or project and inject right now urgency into the mix.  

Regards,
George F. Mancuso, President
Client Growth Consultants

3/20/11

Where Has All of The Ethics, Principles and Integrity Gone?


Where Has All of The Ethics, Principles and Integrity Gone? 

“In the last 10 weeks I’ve probably received over 100 Emails about our readers complaining about the lack of integrity ethics or business principles of friends, family, co-workers, customers and bosses.  It is from those Emails I give you excerpts which hopefully will give us all, pause to think of our future actions.”

Midwest Business Consultant
“….I completed a consulting contract for an organization that has a young leader.  It is has been well over 60 days and I still haven’t received my final payment, even though I’ve been told through Emails it has been approved for payment.  Where has the ethics, principles & integrity gone when one doesn’t honor their agreement?”

Executive Vice President
“….Our executive leader continues to be a one person show.  We are asked our opinions, we provide valid documentation to solutions and we get lip service to our face.  But when push comes to shove, she just does what she damn well pleases.  Where has the ethics, principles & integrity gone?”

Director of Engineering
“….When did they start teaching managers and owners to become the only source for decision making?  This younger generation puts a hurt on themselves by thinking that they must have their fingers in every process of business.  What happened to confidence, trust and integrity?”

Outside Professional Salesman
“….Recently I presented 8 business contacts with an outstanding deal to improve their business image.  All 8 said that they would give me the order before the month came to an end, because I had special monetary promotion working.  Only one signed.  The other 7 disappeared off the face of the earth until the month ended.  No response to Emails, no return of phone calls and when I did catch up with them the excuses were so lame it was pathetic.  If they didn’t want to do the deal, why did they shake my hand, give me a commitment and then kick me to the curb?  Where in the hell is the business principles integrity and respect for mankind gone?”

Job Seeker
“….I am blown away by the lack of humanity from hiring managers in general.  I am a highly educated, extremely successful business executive that got caught in a HUGE downsizing.  I’ve left interviews with hiring managers/human resource managers telling me that I did great and I can expect a call back or offer in the immediate future.  Guess what happens…..silence is what happens.  They don’t call back, they don’t respond to multiple phone calls or Emails and in my opinion they are replete with a disingenuous business personality that is driven by continual prevarications. (Yes that means lies)  I wonder how their spouses, kids and grandkids would feel being treated like that.  I doubt it would be an air of good feelings.  The integrity in this world seems to have vanished.  Who amongst us has any left?”

Almost Ready To Give Up on Man/Woman
“….My husband and I have reached a point of disgust with all of the duplicitous business people in this world.  Disgusted with the crafty and insidious way we get lip service to quiet us;  half truths if any truths at all; and dealing with people whose only goal in life is what is in it for them.  Well in our household we made a few new rules.  (1)  In major purchases or services we will no longer trade with anyone who hasn’t done business with us. (2)  We will never do business with those of you who lie to us; (3) and finally, we DO get the message – we ARE going to take care of us first and make it a win for us and you are on your own to make it a win for you.”

Hopefully this helps clear the air for several of our readers.  Sadly I have experienced most of what they are complaining about.  Their points are valid, the situations are real and the results are mixed at best.

Regards,

George F. Mancuso, President
Client Growth Consultants