I’d like to keep working this week on the topic this month –
handling and creating systems for change in your company.
In the last two weeks, we’ve discussed the simple fact of
creating management systems to save you time, and then, testing and quantifying
those systems.
Now, let’s move on to the next step – orchestrating changes,
systems, and processes.
What does that actually mean? Simple, it means getting them sorted out and
thoroughly documented. Now, you might
think since you created a system or a process, it’s “ready to go” but chances
are, as you studied the metrics of those changes, you might have realized you
needed weekly tracking instead of daily tracking. Or perhaps data needed to be reconciled after
each shift, or based on the client’s needs.
All those pieces are part of the “complete” system you’re
now organizing and orchestrating.
Get it?
Here’s the thing – now that you’ve tested something, you
have to make that process easy to do. In
other words, you’re taking this idea and making it a manageable
process.
Read that again…
You’re taking this idea and making it a
manageable process.
THAT is really the trick here – because basically nothing
I’ve shared with you wasn’t in your head already, or something you already
tried to do in your business. What we’re
really doing is organizing it into something coherent that can be easily
“offloaded” to someone else with a minimum of training or can be automated
through some type of software.
Ultimately, when you have this process fully documented, you
can replicate it over and over again.
In other words, it is now a turnkey system. It may also be the process you can use for
building other similar systems in the (near) future.
This part, though, is where it has to be very granular –
truly “step-by-step” so you limit the “skills” needed for a team member to do
the tasks. Consider ALL the things that
go into the process, and think about the lowliest team member as you
orchestrate this process.
Ray Kroc did this in McDonalds and that’s worked out pretty
well for seven decades. Far too many
companies look for highly skilled people because they refuse to simply expend
the energy to document how a simple system could imbue average employees with
the data they need to achieve higher-than-average success.
In other words, when you internalize the ideas we’re
discussing this month, you build a company that can create good people and
great results from average people.
You grow great people, in other words.
That’s a lot better than trying to find them and hoping
they’ll be loyal to your business!
Go ahead, give the idea of orchestration a try this week
using the ideas you’ve been playing with and see how it can make a difference!
All the best-
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