| Suggest You |
Hubs | Hubbers | Topics | Request |
| #1 in Business | Subscribe Email Print |
|
You are here: Home > Business > Strategic Planning > Are Seven Percenters Killing Your Business? |
|
Suggest You - Are Seven Percenters Killing Your Business?
Incorporate Church ame response. The fourth and sixth and eighth had some time spent on them which amounted to about 4.2 hours. That is 4.2 hours out of 60 hour week spent at work. That’s a whopping 7 percent of senior management time spent on the top ten most important objectives of this organization, in one week. It was, he agreed, a fairly normal week.A non-profit association is an incorporated association run with the primary purpose other than to make profit. The not-for-profit associations fall into three categories. Educational institutions and charitable associations for public benefit, trusts for the mutual benefit of the members and religious establishments like churches, religious beneficial programs and religious education. Churches are theological institutions with Jesus Christ as the head. Churches exist for the worship of God. Other activities include proselytizing, i.e. spreading the word of God to others and other charitable works. Churches have many denom So 93 three percent of the COO’s time was spent on less important items. Some of the things he worked on were actually not even part of his job description. It makes a senior executive feel really important when put in that perspective. A seven percenter! A few more Is Word Links The Next Advertising Trend In my world of working with companies to achieve their strategic plans through execution, we’re always developing goals and objectives to work on achieving during a calendar year. So in the prospecting side of my business I met many executives and business owners who tell me how well they have things covered, but still wonder why business is not doing as well as it should.The advertising industry is one that has stood the test of time. In more recent years, website advertising is yet another form of advertising that has become quite popular and necessary in this world where the internet rules. Advertising is no longer monopolized by print magazines, the broadcast industry, billboards and the media. However, it is important to first know the different modes of advertising from which you may choose. Some variations of website advertising are the pixel ad or word links.In 2005, a student by the name of Alex Tew had the idea to sell some advertising spaces on his website to help fina Recently I was invited to spend sometime with a company and determine how what I do may be of use in improving the businesses. Now this is a substantial business with a few divisions. The first meeting I attended was a typical example. My first thought was that these individuals were arrogant, pompous and full of hot air. I really wondered how they made any money for the company! They had excuses for everything and reasons galore as to why nothing was really happening. They down graded sales numbers and operating info. Prices were too high, the competition were cutting prices, vendors were screwing them, the government wasn’t helping, the war in Iraq, and the price of gas really didn’t help. I wondered if they could have found any more? There was little to promote the conversation. No agenda, nothing positive, the customers weren’t mentioned once. No solutions or ideas. Nothing! After about 45 minutes of this they then turned to me and said “Hey, you’re the consultant what do you think?” I know they didn’t want to hear anything. So I said, “OK, let me understand what it is each of you do” “What do you do on a daily basis? Your job roles?” We listed the roles that each person was responsible for. I asked which role was determined to be the most critical to the process of developing their business? Then I asked them each to list two or there of the most important priorities that each role need to be achieving. We came up with about 25 items and then prioritized that down to a mere 10 for simplicity. They all agreed these were it. If these things were not being achieved business was in the toilet. Each of them had some involvement in one or more of the items. I then asked the Ops manager (COO), whose role was deemed to be the most important, how many hours he worked last week. 60hours. I asked how many of the hours last week were devoted to the number one priority item on the list. He looked at me, lowered his eyes and said “None, last week.” We then went onto the second item and received the same response. The fourth and sixth and eighth had some time spent on them which amounted to about 4.2 hours. That is 4.2 hours out of 60 hour week spent at work. That’s a whopping 7 percent of senior management time spent on the top ten most important objectives of this organization, in one week. It was, he agreed, a fairly normal week. So 93 three percent of the COO’s time was spent on less important items. Some of the things he worked on were actually not even part of his job description. It makes a senior executive feel really important when put in that perspective. A seven percenter! A few more q What Does Your Staff REALLY Want? (Part 2) mple.CREATE A CULTUREThe 2005 “Best Places to Work” program study showed that, contrary to popular opinion, employee satisfaction didn’t depend on salary. The most given answer as to what makes a company a great place to work is employee empowerment.And what constitutes employee empowerment? I believe it comes down to a few basic principles, the second of which is the corporate culture.In the book "Guts!: Companies That Blow the Doors Off Business As Usual," authors Kevin and Vickie Freiberg discuss businesses that replaced traditional corporate cultures with those where fun and creativity dominate. My first thought was that these individuals were arrogant, pompous and full of hot air. I really wondered how they made any money for the company! They had excuses for everything and reasons galore as to why nothing was really happening. They down graded sales numbers and operating info. Prices were too high, the competition were cutting prices, vendors were screwing them, the government wasn’t helping, the war in Iraq, and the price of gas really didn’t help. I wondered if they could have found any more? There was little to promote the conversation. No agenda, nothing positive, the customers weren’t mentioned once. No solutions or ideas. Nothing! After about 45 minutes of this they then turned to me and said “Hey, you’re the consultant what do you think?” I know they didn’t want to hear anything. So I said, “OK, let me understand what it is each of you do” “What do you do on a daily basis? Your job roles?” We listed the roles that each person was responsible for. I asked which role was determined to be the most critical to the process of developing their business? Then I asked them each to list two or there of the most important priorities that each role need to be achieving. We came up with about 25 items and then prioritized that down to a mere 10 for simplicity. They all agreed these were it. If these things were not being achieved business was in the toilet. Each of them had some involvement in one or more of the items. I then asked the Ops manager (COO), whose role was deemed to be the most important, how many hours he worked last week. 60hours. I asked how many of the hours last week were devoted to the number one priority item on the list. He looked at me, lowered his eyes and said “None, last week.” We then went onto the second item and received the same response. The fourth and sixth and eighth had some time spent on them which amounted to about 4.2 hours. That is 4.2 hours out of 60 hour week spent at work. That’s a whopping 7 percent of senior management time spent on the top ten most important objectives of this organization, in one week. It was, he agreed, a fairly normal week. So 93 three percent of the COO’s time was spent on less important items. Some of the things he worked on were actually not even part of his job description. It makes a senior executive feel really important when put in that perspective. A seven percenter! A few more Direct Marketing VS Direct Sales mers weren’t mentioned once. No solutions or ideas. Nothing!Direct Marketing is the direct mailing to potential customers to tell them about your products and services and deliver a simple message compelling them to come by something from you or sign-up for service. Direct sales are very similar in that you send people rather then mailed items directly to the potential customers to tell them about your products and services and explain how they can help your customer and why they should buy them from you.Which works better? Well, you might find it quite surprising that they work really good in combination. For instance, rather than having your sales force cold call all the After about 45 minutes of this they then turned to me and said “Hey, you’re the consultant what do you think?” I know they didn’t want to hear anything. So I said, “OK, let me understand what it is each of you do” “What do you do on a daily basis? Your job roles?” We listed the roles that each person was responsible for. I asked which role was determined to be the most critical to the process of developing their business? Then I asked them each to list two or there of the most important priorities that each role need to be achieving. We came up with about 25 items and then prioritized that down to a mere 10 for simplicity. They all agreed these were it. If these things were not being achieved business was in the toilet. Each of them had some involvement in one or more of the items. I then asked the Ops manager (COO), whose role was deemed to be the most important, how many hours he worked last week. 60hours. I asked how many of the hours last week were devoted to the number one priority item on the list. He looked at me, lowered his eyes and said “None, last week.” We then went onto the second item and received the same response. The fourth and sixth and eighth had some time spent on them which amounted to about 4.2 hours. That is 4.2 hours out of 60 hour week spent at work. That’s a whopping 7 percent of senior management time spent on the top ten most important objectives of this organization, in one week. It was, he agreed, a fairly normal week. So 93 three percent of the COO’s time was spent on less important items. Some of the things he worked on were actually not even part of his job description. It makes a senior executive feel really important when put in that perspective. A seven percenter! A few more On A Scale of 1-10, Just How Nice Are You ving. We came up with about 25 items and then prioritized that down to a mere 10 for simplicity. They all agreed these were it. If these things were not being achieved business was in the toilet. Each of them had some involvement in one or more of the items.The TIME Magazine, November 6, 2006 Business Supplement for home delivery featured an article by Senior Writer, Andrea Sachs. Ms. Sachs addressed the issue of just how nice women need to be in the workplace. She interviewed several authors (including this author) who wrote about that very subject.Some of the titles will catch your attention. Interestingly, each female author holds a different viewpoint on what will and won’t work in getting you where you need to go. There’s a tug of war between “Nice Girls Don’t Get the Corner Office” and “Nice Girls DO Get The Sale: Relationship Building That Gets Results”. I then asked the Ops manager (COO), whose role was deemed to be the most important, how many hours he worked last week. 60hours. I asked how many of the hours last week were devoted to the number one priority item on the list. He looked at me, lowered his eyes and said “None, last week.” We then went onto the second item and received the same response. The fourth and sixth and eighth had some time spent on them which amounted to about 4.2 hours. That is 4.2 hours out of 60 hour week spent at work. That’s a whopping 7 percent of senior management time spent on the top ten most important objectives of this organization, in one week. It was, he agreed, a fairly normal week. So 93 three percent of the COO’s time was spent on less important items. Some of the things he worked on were actually not even part of his job description. It makes a senior executive feel really important when put in that perspective. A seven percenter! A few more Increase Free PR Exposure by SEO Optimizing Your Press Release ame response. The fourth and sixth and eighth had some time spent on them which amounted to about 4.2 hours. That is 4.2 hours out of 60 hour week spent at work. That’s a whopping 7 percent of senior management time spent on the top ten most important objectives of this organization, in one week. It was, he agreed, a fairly normal week.When thinking about the press release or free pr most companies may think, the document is just an obscure piece of the communication strategy that does not get much attention. However, in the world of today the press release can be one of the major communication documents that reach hundreds or even thousands of people searching the web today. Not only does the online press release get you valuable free pr it helps to boost the publics’ perception of your product or service and optimizes your website for better search engine rankings.We will explore some very easy ways to optimize your press release or free pr for So 93 three percent of the COO’s time was spent on less important items. Some of the things he worked on were actually not even part of his job description. It makes a senior executive feel really important when put in that perspective. A seven percenter! A few more questions revealed similar patterns with the rest of the team. The high cost of Seven percenters So if you figure that around that boardroom there was about a $2 million annual salary expense. Which with a simple bit of arithmetic meant they were costing this company $1,145 per hour. This was an expensive meeting in which nothing was resolved! Calculation Here was a first indicator of the problems facing this company. People had become over paid and were prepared to look busy to avoid performing. Managers worked on things they liked and could be seen to be doing something rather than working on the strategic priorities. Just by highlighting this caused enough of a stir to realize that the process probably occurred all the way through the organization. Yes it all flows down hill. I had a new client. How’s your organization doing? How many Seven percenters are you supporting? Are you one of them? The trick to resolving this conundrum is fairly simple. Make sure the overall company knows the strategic goals and the actions required to achieve them. Cascade this across and down the company. Monitor this monthly, if it makes sense to do it weekly, do it. Take action to resolve variations. Many companies have Balanced Scorecards which help reduce this approach but often these become too large and complex to be of any value. A Balanced Scorecard is a great approach but it must be easy to use and understand. Then it will lead a business to success. It’s really just short interval control on an expanded strategic basis. Simple management 101 stuff. Just not common practice in the corporate world. Maybe only 7 percent of the organizations are doing this?
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
Related Articles:The Ultimate Power of Writing Effective Ezine Articles Public Services on the Move: Mobility and Flexible Working in UK Local Government Sales Brochures - 9 Steps to Success
|