Monday, December 18, 2006

New Podcast Episode on Investing in Your Career

What you do with your paid time determines your current income, but what you do with your unpaid, non-reimbursed time determines your future. You can (no, you must) use those unpaid hours to improve your "career assets," by investing the time in building client relationships, breaking into new markets, and developing new skills to increase your future success.

My latest podcast episode, entitled "It's About Time" (based on my article True Professionalism), explores a powerful regimen to harness your most valuable professional asset: non-reimbursed time.

  • 01:38 -- Calculating and assessing your non-billable hours
  • 05:10 -- How to rethink the way you categorise time for a better ROI
  • 08:20 -- 8 criteria to evaluate and prioritise your non-billable activities
  • 13:03 -- A personal example of non-billable time management

You can download It's About Time sign up to receive new Business Masterclass seminars automatically with iTunes or other podcast players (click here for step-by-step instructions on how to subscribe). My seminars are always available for download at no cost.

IMPORTANT: Podcast series subscribers should note that I'll be taking a break from posting new episodes in this careers series until after the holidays. The next new episode will be posted on Monday, January 8th, 2007.

Monday, December 11, 2006

New Podcast Episode on Managing Your Career Assets

Have you taken stock of your career "balance sheet" lately? Even if your career looks healthy and your income statement is great, you still need to worry about your assets -- your skills and your relationships.

My latest podcast episode, entitled How's Your Asset, explores how you can continuously improve your career by developing new career assets instead of just milking your existing job skills.

  • 01:31 -- Evaluating your career balance sheet
  • 01:54 -- Knowledge and skill as a professional asset
  • 03:51 -- Your other asset group: client relations and reputation
  • 04:47 -- The measure of client relationships: quality vs quantity
  • 05:15 -- The dangers of the career path of least resistance
  • 06:34 -- Asset-building vs Asset-milking
  • 08:48 -- Moving Towards a Solution: The Personal Strategic Plan
  • 09:08 -- Make your skill set specific
  • 12:51 -- Why counseling skills trump technical skills
  • 15:04 -- Accelerate your asset-building
  • 16:49 -- The four kinds of debriefing that promote learning
  • 20:31 -- Five questions to plan your career

You can download How's Your Asset or sign up to receive new Business Masterclass seminars automatically with iTunes or other podcast players. (Click here for step-by-step instructions on how to subscribe.) My seminars are always available for download at no cost.

Monday, December 4, 2006

New Podcast Episode on Career Planning

"Nothing in the world can take the place of persistence. Talent will not; nothing is more common than unsuccessful men with talent. Genius will not; unrewarded genius is almost a proverb. Education will not; the world is full of educated derelicts. Persistence and determination alone are omnipotent."

-- US President Calvin Coolidge

What does it take to insure a lifetime of fulfilling and exciting career choices? With all due respect to Calvin Coolidge, more important than even persistence and determination is the passion that inspires persistence and determination.

My latest podcast episode, entitled No Regrets, explores how to coordinate your own Personal Strategic Plan for a passionate career that drives true success.

Timeline
00:30 -- Formative and important career advice.
02:05 -- The power of passion, drive, and determination.
04:05 -- Five questions for the continuous revision of your own Personal Strategic Plan.
06:00 -- Look to the recent past to find what would truly satisfy you.
06:49 -- What determines the quality of our work lives.
08:38 -- Play to your evil secrets. Don't suppress them.
09:38 -- The critical career choice you are facing right now
11:08 -- Just how important is other people's advice?
12:14 -- Don't sell: Buy!

You can download No Regrets or sign up to receive new Business Masterclass seminars automatically with iTunes or other podcast players. (Click here for step-by-step instructions on how to subscribe.) My seminars are always available for download at no cost.

Monday, November 20, 2006

New podcast episode on work fufillment

When one examines who succeeds in their careers, it quickly emerges that it has nothing to do with IQ, where you went to school, or what training you received. Instead, it's all about "frame of mind." Those who succeed are those who can recapture the magic and excitement they felt when they were first setting out to build a career, and were willing to work to "make it happen."

My latest podcast episode, entitled "Are You Having Fun Yet?" explores all the excuses professionals make for why they accept being unhappy in their careers, and what can be done about making your career more fulfilling (and successful.)

My Business Masterclass seminars are always downloadable at no cost. You can download "Are You Having Fun Yet?" or sign up to receive new seminars automatically by subscribing to my Business Masterclass podcast series with iTunes or other podcast players. (Click here for step-by-step instructions on how to subscribe.)

Monday, November 13, 2006

Technician vs. Professional: which are you?

What is professionalism? How do you achieve it yourself, and how do you manage in order to elicit it in others?

What, for example, does it mean to be a great secretary, compared only to being a good one? The answers will influence how we traditionally think of professionalism. It's not just applicable to those with advanced degrees.

Are you a real professional or just a highly-paid technician?

This second episode in my Career Development podcast series, entitled "Real Professionalism" is all about the difference between being just a technician and being a true professional, including:

  • the key attitudes and character traits that make a true professional;
  • the difference between real professionalism and self-interested professionals;
  • what managers can do to cultivate professionalism.

My Business Masterclass seminars are always downloadable at no cost. You can download "Real Professionalism" or sign up to receive new seminars automatically by subscribing to my Business Masterclass podcast series with iTunes or other podcast players. (Click here for step-by-step instructions on how to subscribe.)

Wednesday, November 8, 2006

New Podcast Series on Career Development

Starting today, I am launching a new podcast series focusing on how to build your career as part of my Business Masterclass podcasts.

The career development series will cover topics relevant to success on every rung of the career ladder, including:

  • Drive and determination
  • Real professionalism
  • How to create a work life filled with what you enjoy doing
  • Making job choices
  • Investing in self development
  • Building friendship skills
  • Learning to earn trust and build relationships
  • Beginning to learn how to manage others
  • And many other subjects

As with my previous series on Marketing, Managing and Strategy, this series provides the opportunity to present to you some of my earlier work integrated with new thinking into a new narrative flow.

The first seminar in the series is entitled "It's Not How Good You Are, but How Much You Want It." It tells the story how my writing and consulting career "happened" and what I learned from those experiences -- along with specific takeaway lessons to develop your own career.

My Business Masterclass audio seminars are always downloadable at no cost. You can download "It's Not How Good You Are, but How Much You Want It" or sign up to receive new seminars automatically by subscribing to my Business Masterclass podcast series with iTunes or other podcast players. (Click here for step-by-step instructions on how to subscribe.)

Wednesday, November 1, 2006

Accountability: Effective Managers Go First

After attending one of my seminars, Jay Bertram, president of the Toronto office of TBWA, the global advertising agency, returned to his office and immediately asked all his people to evaluate their overall job satisfaction, their feelings about the office and (most critically) their overall rating of him as a manager.

Then he dropped the biggest bombshell: as I had recommended, he announced to all his staff that if he did not improve in their ratings across all three measures -- by 20 percent within one year -- he would resign! He later wrote to me:

I was thoroughly moved by your passionate plea for senior management accountability. I want to thank you for encouraging me to be a better manager. It is because of you that I am making a real difference for my employees. I have never been happier and more productive. I have just completed the follow-up survey, and my scores have improved.

The results have been terrific. The office continues to grow rapidly and our employee satisfaction results are all above the corporate averages. We have become a better management team at having direct conversations with our employees, and we face issues rather than avoid them. I believe everyone in the office has become more accountable. They look to what they have done or contributed before complaining about others.

And what had I said that made Jay act on all this? He told me:

You challenged me to be personally accountable for my role as a manager. It struck home when you said that many managers are seen by their people as lying -- to others and to themselves -- when they publicly proclaim their commitment to standards of excellence or missions for their organisation and do not follow through. You gave me the reassurance that living up to my standards, and being prepared to be personally accountable for them, was the right thing to do.

Every manager has room for significant improvement. We must challenge ourselves to stretch past our comfort zone by stating a goal that will generate a real change in our own behaviour, for all to see and experience. Managing is truly a race with no finish line. We must keep moving, learning, listening, acting, and growing if we are to fulfil our role.

Jay described my recommendation as "the right thing to do," and maybe it was, but in my seminar I hadn't been trying to make a moral point but a practical, pragmatic one. When trying to get an organisation to move, there is nothing more powerful than a manager who is prepared to lead -- by going first!

We cannot expect an organisation to raise its game, change its direction or pursue new ambitious goals and strategies by saying "Charge! I want all of you, the troops, to climb out of your foxholes and go put yourselves in harm's way." Realistically, that's unlikely to work. Instead of saying "Charge!", we need to say "Follow me," energising others through our own behaviour.

In any organisation, regardless of its purpose, scale or location, there is great power that comes from creating a culture of accountability. When people in an organisation can depend upon the fact that everyone else will keep their word and perform the duties and tasks they have accepted, more will get done with less explicit oversight. People will feel a heightened sense of responsibility and will act on it.

And if we want others to perform their roles to higher levels, we must ensure that they know and believe that we are truly being held responsible for performing our role -- the managerial role -- effectively.


A Specific Recommendation

There are four steps toward making yourself accountable, and in turn, improving your organisation:

Step One: Examine the specific statements below, one by one, while putting yourself in the shoes of your employees. Ask yourself whether or not doing well on each of these is an important part of your role -- is it something you are supposed to be good at?

You, My Manager ...

  • Act and live by the principles you advocate
  • Act as a role model that people want to copy
  • Are a person of integrity
  • Enforce the company values
  • Are "part of the team" as opposed to being the boss, separate and detached.
  • Cause me to stretch for performance goals
  • Are concerned about long-term issues, not just short-term profits
  • Provide constructive feedback that helps me improve my performance
  • Are a source of creative ideas about our business
  • Help me to grow and develop
  • Make me feel that I am a member of a well-functioning team
  • Emphasise cooperation as opposed to competitiveness between work groups
  • Are prompt in dealing with underperformance and underperformers
  • Keep me informed about the things I need to know to perform my role properly
  • Encourage me to initiate tasks or projects I think are important
  • Are good at keeping down the level of politics and politicking
  • Are more often encouraging than critical
  • Are fair in dealings with employees
  • Are consultative in your decision making
  • Act more like a coach than a boss
  • Are publicly generous with credit
  • Are effective in listening

Eliminate immediately any questions that you think are idealistic, unimportant or not part of your role. Add back in any critical things you think I have missed in order to be good at performing your role.

Take this first step seriously and slowly. The purpose is to think through what you really need to be good at if you are to be an effective manager. You have to ask yourself what your personal performance standards really are.

Notice that we are trying to uncover performance standards for ourselves as managers that will predict the future performance of the organisations for which we are responsible. Most organisations will already have in place metrics that record how well managers are doing as judged by a retrospective look at our group's results in the latest reporting period. Our purpose here is different. We are asking ourselves: "What would I, as a manager, have to do well to cause my group to perform better in the future? What do I have to do well at to really make a difference?"

Step Two: Circulate the final questionnaire you develop, asking everyone you deal with in your organisation to evaluate you on the specific dimensions you have decided you should be good at. Have the surveys returned to and tabulated by a third party (inside or outside your organisation) to give everyone the comfort and confidence that the individual responses will be treated confidentially.

Step Three: PUBLISH the average ratings you receive to everyone in your organisation. Everyone -- administrative staff included!

Step Four: Call a meeting of those you manage and give the following speech:

"Here's what you think about me. Don't expect me to be perfect the first time we try this. Perfection is not a standard you can hold me to, and it's not a standard anyone can hold any one of you to.

"What is more, don't expect me to be perfect a year from now when we repeat this, just as I will not expect you to be perfect. I don't think that's a realistic standard for any of us.

"But here's my promise to you, right here, right now. If I have not improved in my performance against the agreed-upon standards that are embedded in my role, then I will step down from my role as the manager of the group.

"You do have a right to expect that I will get better at the things that are my responsibility. And that's exactly what I'm going to ask of you!"

Now THAT'S going first! Can you imagine the impact?


The Benefits of This Approach

Why do I advocate what seems to be such an extreme approach? Let's analyse some of the many things that this process accomplishes:

  • It clarifies your role as a manager, in advance, in everyone's eyes.
  • It establishes the principles of accountability and continuous improvement.
  • It creates a balancing scorecard
  • It provides feedback for improvement
  • It reduces the emotional distance between manager and organisation


CLARIFYING YOUR ROLE AS A MANAGER

I have written extensively about where I think a manager can have the greatest impact (for example, see How Managers Add Value.) Nevertheless, it may be debated at great length whether the sample questions I gave above are the right ones for you. In fact, depending upon the size and type of organisation you are responsible for, I may have missed the mark completely. That doesn't matter too much.

What does matter -- in fact, it is crucial to your effectiveness -- is that you clarify, articulate and agree, both with those above you and those you are supposed to manage, what you are supposed to be good at. There can be a great deal of ambiguity about how you, the manager, are supposed to make a difference. Managers are subjected to a lot of pressure to focus on a wide disparity of things: finance and administration, representing their organisation externally, personal production of various kinds, and energising their group.

If there is no shared understanding of how you, the manager, are supposed to have an impact, how can you be sure that you are thinking about the job in the right way? The very act of clarifying your role and obtaining consensus and buy-in about what you are supposed to be doing, what will actually make a difference, can be a giant first step.

THE PRINCIPLES OF ACCOUNTABILITY AND CONTINUOUS IMPROVEMENT

The approach of accountability presented here is not meant to be brutal or threatening. Central to the approach advocated here is the philosophy that accountability means the obligation to improve, not to be perfect.

As I pointed out in my article Strategy and the Fat Smoker, if you tell me my goal must be to lose 50 pounds (or twenty-some kilos) in a year, the prospect will be terrifying and I probably will not move at all. However, if you ask me to focus on losing one pound a week, the likelihood that I will join in and (in 50 weeks) accomplish the goal is infinitely higher.

So it is with organisations of all kinds and sizes. Wonderful things can be accomplished if you convince me (and us) that this is doable. But don't scare us with the immensity of the challenge. Also, don't scare me about how demanding you are as a manager. By showing that you expect improvement but in doable, reasonable amounts, I am much more likely to become an eager participant than if I feel you have impossible standards.

CREATING A BALANCING SCORECARD

One of the most important things the system I describe can accomplish is to establish a counterbalancing scorecard for evaluating your own performance as a manager.

One of the reasons that the managerial role so often goes neglected (and remains misunderstood) is that most organisations already have scorecards, very powerful ones, for the other roles managers are asked to play. Without the "upward evaluation" system I propose, it is therefore normal that you and I will emphasise the other, more visible, scorecards that judge how well we are doing in our other roles: financial measurements, measures of volume such as number of customers or subscribers, user satisfaction scores, and so on.

Some organisations and managers might claim that because they have 360-degree feedback programs, they already have the system I am describing. Many 360-degree programs collect feedback from those being managed and find ways to pass it on to the manager on deep background, without public accountability. But because the 360-degree feedback is never publicly disclosed, it fails to convince those being managed that the information is being acted upon. (Frequently, it is not). That is not the system I am advocating.

The goal of my feedback system is not to measure. The goal is not (just) to obtain feedback. The goal is to create a form of accountability that will both create sufficient pressure to improve and demonstrate our willingness to be personally accountable. The power of what I am advocating is visibility and accountability.

OBTAINING FEEDBACK ON OUR PERFORMANCE AS MANAGERS

Obviously, a consequence of the system of accountability that I advocate is that we open ourselves up to receive direct feedback on how we are doing as managers, and get the opportunity to consider ways we can improve.

At all levels of our careers, our continued effectiveness and improvement depends not only on what we think of ourselves, but on what other people -- those we are trying to influence -- actually do think of us.

Unfortunately, people very rarely tell you the truth about yourself, which makes it even more important that you develop ways to get feedback on how you really come across to the rest of the world. And the feedback must be timely. We must ask for feedback, and act on it, while there is still the opportunity to change.

When you're the boss, all of this is even more critical. As has commonly been observed, when you become the manager, people stop telling you things -- especially about your own performance. If you really want to find out how you are coming across, then you need to find out not what people have to say when they are in a logical, analytical mode, but what they FEEL about you. This is scary stuff, but absolutely essential to know if you are to have an impact!

There are, of course, more ways, in addition to questionnaires and surveys, to divine feedback from your staff. On my blog, Kent Blumberg (www.kentblumberg.com) describes his method:

I hold monthly coaching sessions with my direct reports. About once a quarter, I ask them to give me feedback on my leadership. Usually I ask "What can I do to more effectively support you?" and "If you were me, what would you do differently right now?"

The answers are often hard to hear, but usually just what I need to hear. And I most often act on what I hear (not always -- I'm not perfect!). It's not easy to do, but this sort of feedback has been the best development advice I have received. The people I lead are the best judges of my leadership skills -- not me, and certainly not my manager.

Also on the blog, Jennifer Davis (www.CreativeOutletLabs.com) said:

I find it is easier to get people to open up with candid feedback if you start by commenting on something you could have done better and then ask them to respond. You come out of a meeting and remark to a trusted colleague, "I think I could have done a better job keeping the group on task today. You seem to do this well. What's your secret? What am I doing wrong?" This puts people at ease and communicates that you really do want to learn and improve from their advice.

I'd add one more little "trick" that has helped me. If I ask people what they think of me, they are usually polite (well, usually.) But if I ask them if they'd be willing to tell me what other people say about me, I give them the opportunity to say things without putting them in the awkward position of criticising me to my face. Quite often, they say "Well, now you've asked, Richard, there are some people -- not me, of course, Richard -- who think you could improve in these areas." We can then discuss it without raising the emotional temperature on either side.

The key point to note here is that while these informal, more personal methods of obtaining feedback will usually yield deeper and more thorough insights than the questionnaire we discussed earlier, they represent a complement, not a substitute. Occasional in-person conversations may yield better feedback, but they do not represent the visible, powerful, "impactful" system of accountability that we are trying to describe here.

REDUCING THE EMOTIONAL DISTANCE

Perhaps the most powerful benefits of the accountability approach I advocate is that it makes the manager part of the group, subject to the same standards and processes as everyone else.

One of the most effective ways we have to get people to respond to us is to make them believe that we are truly talking about us. If we can be convincing to people that we are "all in this together, mutually committed and mutually responsible," it is much more likely that we will have influence.

However, it is remarkable how rare this feeling is, and how difficult it is to sustain. I have seen even the best managers become increasingly isolated, at least in the eyes of the rest of their organisation, as time goes by. Managers become resented by those doing the work, perceived as costly administrative overhead or increasingly remote from where the action is.

It is hard to energise a group of people if they view us, as managers, as "other." Alas, this can happen all too often. Members of management are seen as "the bosses", distinct from "we the workforce." Few of us are likely to be energised by (or can energise) those we see as being on "the other side."

To overcome this distance and remain part of the group doesn't mean that, as managers, we must do exactly the same things that we want our people to do.

Of course, some symbolic gestures are powerful, as when the owner of the hotel bends down to pick up a piece of trash on the hotel carpet, thereby illustrating that he owns the problem as much as anyone else, and wants everyone in the organisation to own problems rather than delegating or abdicating responsibility for tasks and standards. But while symbolism is powerful, this approach can be, and is, taken too far. A manager can get too involved in the daily activities of the group.

In some professional businesses, for example, group managers often feel that to manage effectively they must do as much or even more of the group's work than anyone else. They try to lead by selling more work personally and serving more clients themselves as individuals. The problem with this approach is that while it can (and often does) inspire others through the force of personal example, it eliminates the time and attention available to ensure that the managerial role is played properly.

It's as if a military leader were trying to win the battle by personally killing more of the enemy in hand-to-hand combat than any other warrior. It's inspiring, it's impressive; it may even be noble. But there's real room for doubt as to whether it's the best way to help the organisation win. If you were a soldier, wouldn't you want your general to excel at generalship, and not (just) be the best rifle shot?

To be effective, an approach is needed that simultaneously inspires, creates the sense that the manager is deeply embedded within the group, and allows and encourages the manager to perform the tasks that actually do lead to group success. In each of our organisations, we need to think through more thoroughly exactly how a manager is supposed to add value, and then ensure that the manager fulfils that responsibility. That's the personal accountability system we have been discussing.


The Role of Integrity

I suggested above that, in clarifying your role, you should design your own set of questions, preferably in consultation with those you report to and those you manage.

However, it must be noted that there does exist some research on which managerial behaviours are most likely to lead to future organisational performance. I will not try to summarise all of it here, but it may be helpful to report the findings of my statistical study of 139 businesses (Practice What You Preach.)

in that study, I was able to identify the organisations that produced the highest financial performance, and then investigate how the attitudes of people within those offices differed from the other businesses in my database.

Consistently, the difference between the most successful operations and everyone else was attributed (by the people in the organisations) to the qualities of the person managing the office. Such managers, they said, were the type of people who "washed their own cup." They weren't separate and distinct from their people. They never became detached, but made their management very personal.

The words used by the employees to describe the managers were:

  • Honourable
  • Genuine
  • Noble
  • Someone of high integrity
  • Sincere
  • Articulate about what he or she stands for
  • Enthusiastic

The best managers were not only these things. These characteristics were necessary but not completely sufficient. Managers of successful businesses were also demanding and set ambitious goals. However, being demanding and setting ambitious goals were quite common characteristics -- such behaviour was not distinctive among the most successful organisations.

It was honesty and integrity, as judged by the members of the organisation, that did have predictive value in identifying financially successful organisations. Managers of successful businesses, it turned out, did not necessary advocate different things than other managers; they just lived what they advocated. They practiced what they preached.

At first, the words honesty and integrity were a surprise to me, not least because they sound so "moralistic." Why did these qualities lead to the superior financial performance I identified in my study?

What seemed to be happening was this: When the employees saw their manager in these ways, they were more likely to believe and accept the standards and values he or she advocated. The employees would then do one of two things: join in enthusiastically, or leave because they did not want to participate in something that seemed so "inspirational" and "moralistic."

Those who remained had been self-selected as eager and willing participants in the ideology of the organisation, and were more likely to function together as a team to pursue the organisation's objectives.

Jim Kouzes and Barry Posner arrive at similar conclusions in their masterwork The Leadership Challenge, (3rd edition, Jossey-Bass, 2002). So did Jim Collins in Good to Great (Harper Business, 2001).

There are many qualities that cause people to follow and participate with enthusiasm, but the honesty and integrity of the manager are clearly the pre-eminent number characteristics. What I am advocating is an accountability system to ensure that you and I do not only assume that we are seen this way, but are actually held to that high standard.

This conclusion leads us to the ultimate paradox in all of this. I have tried here to make the case that the manager acting as the shining role model for accountability is a pragmatic point that leads, with high probability, to superior effort and excellence in others. Such managers can (and do) create superior financial returns -- consistently. As such, this finding is practical, not a moral point.

But maybe the real lesson is that, ultimately, it is a moral point. Maybe what "accountability" really means is a willingness to be assessed and held to the standards one advocates -- a point of principle, not a tactic.

If people believe that the manager is behaving in certain ways only as symbolic gestures, then the act will lose its power. It gains in influence to the degree that others believe that the manager believes it. When excellence becomes a moral point, it will tend to be implemented better than when it's purely a pragmatic one.

In the final analysis, what would energise any organisation, of any kind, anywhere, is not the mechanics of any questionnaire, but the sincerity and integrity of the manager. Any manager can say "These are the standards I believe in." What transforms an organisation is when the group also hears the manager say "And I expect to be held accountable to the principles I advocate! Does anyone else want to join me in operating that way?" And they say "Yes, me too! That's what I want to be part of!"

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

Last Podcast Episode on Strategy

This week I have posted the final episode in my 14-part strategy series of podcasts. The final episode is called "The Courage to Manage."

The central argument of the final episode is that the key to strategy is having good managers who can create a sense of "insistent patience" -- Rome doesn't get built in a day, but we ARE building Rome.

My Business Masterclass audio seminars are always downloadable at no cost. You can download "The Courage to Manage" or sign up to receive new seminars automatically every week by subscribing to my Business Masterclass Series with iTunes or other podcast players. Or you can subscribe right here by going to subscriptions.

After this week, I will be taking a few weeks' break in issuing podcasts, in preparation for the launch of a new 15-part series on CAREERS, which will begin in mid-November.

Monday, October 9, 2006

READY SET GO. Fast-Track Strategy

This week's podcast episode, entitled "READY SET GO: Fast-Track Strategy", presents a simple but effective process to move any professional business ahead strategically.

In this podcast I explore:

  • The 4 key objectives of any winning business strategy
  • The critical role of "the coach" in putting your strategy into action
  • What makes this process unique -- and effective

Click on the podcast player below to listen to the full discussion:

You can receive new seminars automatically with iTunes or other podcast players. (Click here for step-by-step instructions on how to subscribe.) My Business Masterclass audio seminars are always downloadable at no cost.

Monday, October 2, 2006

Managing the Multidimensional Organisation

Both management and front-line employees today are overburdened by time-consuming and often conflicting roles due to the complex structures of departments, industry teams, major account teams and geographic locations.

That's why in modern businesses, the organisation IS the strategy: if the organisation functions smoothly, the firm will excel. If it creates barriers, the firm will stumble continually.

This week's free audio seminar, Competing through Organisational Functioning, discusses the diagnostic tools for a smoother functioning organisation:

5 Imperatives to structure your organisation for success

  1. Examine structure, process and people
  2. Recognise shifting priorities in structural design
  3. Establish mandates for each group
  4. Clarify agreements within the groups
  5. Choose the right group leaders

I also discuss how to create your own customised solution for managing a complex firm that goes beyond the motions of establishing "theoretically correct" structures and obtaining "false consent" from key players to effect real change.

A slightly modified version of this podcast (with the same title) will be posted as a new article on my website later this week. [Update: the article version of Managing the Multidimensional Organisation is now available on the site as both a screen version and a downloadable PDF.]

You can receive new seminars automatically with iTunes or other podcast players. (Click here for step-by-step instructions on how to subscribe.) My Business Masterclass audio seminars are always downloadable at no cost.

Sunday, October 1, 2006

The One-Firm Firm Revisited

In 1996, I wrote an article for the Sloan Management Review called "The One-Firm Firm." It identified a strategy common to leading firms across a broad array of professions -- creating institutional loyalty and team focus.

The firms named in that article were McKinsey, Goldman Sachs, Arthur Andersen, Hewitt Associates, and Latham & Watkins, where Jack Walker became managing partner three years before.

If one is prepared to accept the argument that Accenture (formerly Andersen Consulting) is the legacy firm of Arthur Andersen, and not the defunct audit-based business, then that 1996 list of one-firm firms stacks up remarkably well as a predictor of subsequent success. These are still pre-eminent and immensely successful firms.

The marketplace for professional services has changed in ways that were unimaginable in 1996. Clients and client relationships have become dynamic at best and fickle at worst. Shortages and mobility of talent have affected every profession. As a result, the five named firms -- and their main competitors -- have adapted by making dramatic and often risky changes.

For example, of those five firms, Goldman, Accenture, and Hewitt have become publicly held companies -- most have acquired other firms with varying degrees of success, and all have grown, become global, and (except perhaps in the case of McKinsey) have profoundly diversified their service offerings. Yet each has maintained or improved its competitive position as one of the most admired and profitable firms in its industry or profession.

In this article, I will address the issue of whether the one-firm firm principles identified in 1996 are still relevant to the continued, sustained success of these five firms. I will focus on what has been maintained, adapted, and abandoned in their management since 1996.

As we shall see, one-firm firm principles do indeed continue to drive success for these firms, even as their specific practices have been adapted and modified for changing market conditions.


What Is It?

The one-firm firm approach is not simply a loose term to describe a "culture." It refers to a set of concrete management practices consciously chosen to maximise the trust and loyalty that members of the firm feel both to the institution and to each other.

In 1996, the elements of the one-firm firm approach were given as:

  • Highly selective recruitment;
  • A "grow your own" people strategy as opposed to heavy use of laterals, growing only as fast as people could be developed and assimilated;
  • Intensive use of training as a socialisation process;
  • Rejection of a "star system" and related individualistic behaviour;
  • Avoidance of mergers, in order to sustain the collaborative culture;
  • Selective choice of services and markets, so as to win through significant investments in focused areas rather than many small initiatives;
  • Active outplacement and alumni management, so that those who leave remain loyal to the firm;
  • Compensation based mostly on group performance, not individual performance;
  • High investments in research and development; and
  • Extensive intra-firm communication, with broad use of consensus-building approaches.

The one-firm firm approach is similar in many ways to the U.S. Marine Corps (in which Jack Walker served). Both are designed to achieve the highest levels of internal collaboration and mutual commitment in pursuing ambitious goals.

Loyalty in one-firm firms, and in the Marines, is based primarily on a strong culture and clear principles rather than on the personal relations or stature of individual members.

The key relationship is that of the individual member to the organisation, in the form of a set of reciprocal, value-based expectations. This, in turn, informs and supports relationships among members -- who often do not know each other personally.

Everyone knows the values they must live by and the code of behaviour they must follow. Everyone is commonly and intensively trained in these values and protocols. Everyone also knows that if an individual is in trouble, the group will expend every effort to help him or her.

Marines have a special bond and a shared pride, built on shared values and a shared striving for excellence with integrity. Critical to the success of the organisation is respect for both the past and the future. Every marine grasps the concept of stewardship -- the organisation, its reputation, and its very effectiveness have been inherited from previous generations and are held in trust for future generations.


The Warlord Model

A contrasting, and more common, approach to running a professional service firm is the "star-based" or "warlord" approach, which succeeds by emphasising internal competition, individual entrepreneurialism, distinct profit centres, decentralised decision-making, and the strength that comes from stimulating many diverse initiatives driven by relatively autonomous operators.

In extreme warlord firms, the productive senior members operate as chieftains presiding over their own territories, coordinating occasionally but fundamentally without a commitment to the institution or each other.

Many prosperous firms are close to the warlord end of the spectrum. Such firms succeed by forgoing the energy that comes from institutional commitment and extremes of collaboration but achieve a powerful substitute through extreme levels of entrepreneurial energy exhibited by individual warlords.

Warlord firms succeed when management keeps the "big hitters" happy and productive. The past and the future are not high agenda items. Consequently, the performance of extreme warlord firms often swings through peaks and valleys over time. The environment at these firms tends to be politically charged, and a great deal of management energy is expended in modulating that charge.

Personal taste can play an important role in determining which path a firm takes. Some of the most effective professionals cannot abide by the one-firm firm model and thrive in the warlord model (and vice versa).

I hasten to note that the great majority of firms are neither pure one-firm firms nor pure warlord firms. What the one-firm firm and warlord models have in common is high levels of energy. Firms in the middle may pay a price if they fail to fully engage either method of eliciting energy (high levels of internal collaboration or high levels of entrepreneurial individualism).

Capturing the benefits of high institutional energy is not easy. The one-firm system (like that of the Marine Corps) depends upon a mutually reinforcing set of concrete policies and practices, and many firms may not be able to "get from here to there" in a short period of time. Indeed, part of my argument is that "true" one-firm firms were, are, and will likely remain statistical anomalies in each of their industries, albeit successful ones.


Ten Years On

Looking at the range of their services and locations, the five one-firm firms are now almost unrecognisable compared to what they were in 1996. Goldman now emphasises proprietary trading -- a change from its predominantly advisory roots; Hewitt and Accenture have moved into business process outsourcing; and both McKinsey and Latham have expanded their service offerings and global coverage. As mentioned, Accenture, Hewitt, and Goldman have become public companies.

According to most press reports, McKinsey experimented with some significant changes as the impact of technology on consulting was felt. An early countercultural attempt to acquire and integrate an IT firm was generally considered to be a failure.

In the late 1990s, the technology bubble led the firm to expand at a faster pace, rapidly increasing the rate of hiring new juniors. It opened offices in many more locations around the world and reportedly cut back on training. As did other professional firms in that era, McKinsey stretched its compensation system to pay more to stars in order to keep them.

Then, when the bubble burst, the relative economics dropped and the firm had to let a lot of people go. A "capital call" on the partners was issued. According to most reports, the new managing partner who took over in 2003 has reoriented the firm on a more values-driven, one-firm firm approach.

Goldman Sachs has also been through significant policy and cultural changes, particularly during the late 1990s, leading up to the decision to go public. As with much of Wall Street, the traditional reliance on long-term relationships to build the firm has been significantly influenced by a move toward a "transactional" approach, pursuing fast-moving market opportunities.

Most observers would concede that Goldman is still, by far, the most collaborative, team-based banking firm. But this may now be a relative rather than an absolute description.

Latham has also stretched the boundaries of the one-firm firm approach. As I discuss below, it has relied, like most of the one-firm firms, on an increasing use of laterals. It has also introduced a greater individual component into its reward scheme. And it has acquired some sizable groups over the course of its expansion. (For example, it added a firm of more than 90 lawyers in France in 2001.)

Hewitt has also experienced dramatic changes. A few years ago it acquired a large firm which it had some difficulty integrating. It has gone public and has shifted from mainly an advisory firm to primarily a human resources business processing outsourcer.

Hewitt often acquires the client's HR department in order to do this, which is contrary to the one-firm firm approach of stringent, selective recruiting from the bottom.

Accenture has also migrated to the profoundly different business of outsourcing, along with the concomitant less stringent hiring practices.

In spite of all these changes, something essential remains in most (if not all) of these firms. They are still, observably, institutions designed much more committed than most of their competitors to emphasising teamwork and collaboration rather than individual entrepreneurialism.

This is most clearly revealed in their special human resource practices, designed to enforce high standards of both teamwork and dynamism.

The April 29, 2006 issue of The Economist magazine contains an article profiling Goldman Sachs, with rich details about its intensive and selective hiring process, tough promotion process, and enforcement of high standards even among the firm's most senior people. The article says, "Often enough, someone important is asked to leave. This is one of Paulson's most critical roles." (Then CEO Hank Paulson is now US Treasury Secretary.)

Paulson is quoted as saying: "Goldman is a hard place to be hired, a hard place to be promoted and a hard place to stay." One of The Economist's writers observes that, "if you want an explanation of how Goldman endures, that, perhaps, is the best explanation of all."

What these firms teach us is that the essence of the one-firm firm strategy (and what gives it its economic power) is not a superior ability to select markets and services, but a greater ability to achieve high standards through the consistent application and enforcement of espoused operating rules, philosophies, values and ideologies.


The Role of Leadership

A key component in a successful one-firm firm is the governance structure. Members of the firm must feel that they have approved the leaders and that the leaders are accountable to them. This is normally accomplished by having the members (or most of them) elect the head of the firm, who would then serve for a term, typically renewable by election.

In most cases, the leader is supported by a small, elected term-limited management committee made up representatively of practicing professionals. This accountability is usually balanced by a structure that insulates the leadership from the wrath of colleagues, following tough decisions that may involve short-term unpleasantness for long-term gain.

In one-firm firms, driven as they are by a commonly held ideology, once all viewpoints are aired and management makes its decision, the partners generally line up behind the decision. Partners or senior officers are willing to delegate managerial powers upward because they trust that those appointed to leadership will operate in accordance with the principles and values of the firm's ideology. The existence of shared values underpins sustained management effectiveness.

To maintain this environment takes active management effort and (usually) careful thought in the appointment of group leaders. Running on autopilot is not an option.

Replying to a previous article (Managing the Multi-dimensional Organisation) Peter Friedes, the former CEO of Hewitt Associates, was quoted as saying: "I had 15 or so managers reporting to me. So I needed them to not be pulling the firm in different directions. One practice I had was to remind all those who reported to me that part of their role was to have my CEO perspective in managing their group. They were not to just be an advocate for their group or their people. They had to have a 'whole entity' view."

The payoff from this consensus, values-based management practice can be huge. It permits the firm to excel at getting things done as a firm. In warlord firms, partners typically continue to undermine decisions they dislike, since they feel that they have not delegated the power to management to make those decisions.

This doesn't mean that one-firm firm partners are shy about expressing themselves or opposing management as issues arise. They do, and indeed more safely and effectively than in warlord firms, where political risk and retribution are real issues.


Size and Growth

The good news, I believe, is that many (if not most) powerful professionals yearn to be part of a cohesive team (often in spite of their chest-thumping behaviour). This yearning is something that can be leveraged.

However, it is very difficult to sustain the one-firm firm, consensus-based governance system as the firm grows beyond the point where all members know each other.

As clients and competitors change and as firms grow and expand, management must work harder to hold the firm together by, among other things, engendering a sense of reciprocal obligation both between the firm and individual members and among the members.

While ten years ago a firm could engage in broad consultation and give people a real sense of participation, today's mega-one-firm firms cannot feasibly do this without great effort and creativity.

Inevitably, the top person becomes more CEO-like. This has happened at each of the named firms. This inevitable transition from consensus-building to "consult then decide" can be successfully accomplished only where a strong philosophical base of shared values has been laid down over many years.

In a sense, the trust given to the firm-wide (often global) CEO is a residual habit left over from times when the individual could be known to all and could interact with all. Perhaps paradoxically, choosing a CEO (or managing partner) based on character, values, and principles becomes even more important if the CEO is to enjoy the same latitude to manage as in the past. And, of course, he or she must continue to deliver. Shared values go only so far.


The Role of Selective Recruiting

A core characteristic of the one-firm firm, in 1996 as well as 2006, is the careful hiring, training, and indoctrination of new talent. The one-firm firms described in my 1996 article relied almost exclusively on hiring "from the bottom." They resisted lateral hiring as unnecessary and risky to the firm's "fabric." But, as mentioned, things have changed dramatically.

One key feature still common to most one-firm firms is that the core (if no longer exclusive) strategy is to "grow its own" young talent. Professionals hired directly from school invariably have the strongest emotional ties to each other and to the firm, and they are the ones who find it hardest to abandon ship. Focusing on young hires has the added virtue of creating a nimble, energetic army of people who are generally more willing to embrace the core teamwork culture and core values than are older lateral hires.

Many warlord firms have reduced or eliminated entry-level recruiting, purportedly because of the (short-term) cost of hiring and training such people. They prefer to hire laterally from other firms, to avoid the costs of investing in junior people.

I believe these firms are sending two uncongenial messages: the people we hire are fungible, and there is nothing special about us. As a result, they are not developing sufficient loyalty and glue to survive the coming down periods, much less to take them to the upper reaches of their respective industry or profession.


Alumni Management

One of the keys to the one-firm firm model has been the vigorous enforcement of high standards for progression within the firm. This means that a relatively small percentage of those hired are actually promoted through the ranks. For that reason, one-firm firms may not have different nominal turnover rates than other firms. However, one of the hallmarks of the model is that people who leave one-firm firms do so with great pride and loyalty, often becoming a source of business referrals for the firm.

Turnover among junior (and even senior) people has become a fact of life in all professions. In the 1990s, Latham learned that it made all the difference in the world whether people left feeling, on the one hand, neglected or badly treated or, on the other hand, as proud advocates of the firm.

Up to that point in time, Latham had ferociously concentrated on hiring, training, indoctrinating, and holding on to talent. In that environment, when a lawyer left the firm to do something else, it was regarded as a failure rather than an opportunity. The pejorative term "attrition" was applied to these sad events. As a result, the firm often treated the departing lawyer neglectfully or even badly, as if he or she was a defector. This is an example of a one-firm firm principle run wild.

In retrospect, the firm lost millions of dollars in potential business because it mismanaged relationships with those who left. As Latham matured as an organisation, it changed its practices to honour people who leave the firm and to cultivate their friendship.

In the mid-1990s, Latham made a calculation about how much of then current business came directly or indirectly from alums. The figure was approaching 50 percent. And it was great business -- name-brand clients, often premium rates, quicker bill collection, pleasant dealings, and so on. Moreover, the clients benefited because the alums had a special feel for the firm, including knowledge of strengths and weaknesses. In some cases, alternative risk/reward billing arrangements could be worked out because of the built-in trust factor.

At all of the one-firm firms, the loyalty of alumni is a key competitive weapon. A one-firm firm leader told us, "One of the managing partners of a competing firm once told me, 'The thing that strikes fear in our hearts is when one of your alums ends up at one of our clients -- the loyalty is beyond our understanding and usually means it's just a matter of time before you guys have your nose under the tent.'"


The Role of Lateral Hiring

Prior to the 1990s, firms entered new markets cautiously by redeploying existing talent. But affairs and clients began to move quickly and markets have shifted much more rapidly in the years since then. Accordingly, most of the one-firm firms have expanded their use of lateral (experienced senior) hires. To wait for inside talent to develop was to risk missing the boat.

In addition, firms in every profession started to open offices in new geographic markets. Early attempts to staff new offices solely with partners from existing offices were unsuccessful. As a result, expanding firms began to cherry-pick talented experienced people from outside the firm.

Most firms moved cautiously, bringing in only individuals and small groups and avoiding large-scale mergers. The key has been to make sure that when new laterals join the firm, they know what they are buying into. The lateral must understand that he or she is joining a firm with an established ideology. "If you don't like this ideology," the clear message is sent, "don't think of joining us."

Surprisingly to many outsiders, one-firm firms have found that many laterals come to the firm to benefit from good management; that is, to be managed. They know about the firm's reputation for effective management and team-based approaches, and they often come from poorly-run firms. Often -- not always -- they are the most fervent supporters of teamwork, management, and cohesive action in their new organisation.

Lateral hiring, now a competitive necessity, remains a double-edged sword for a one-firm firm. On the one hand, careful lateral hiring provides rich work opportunities for the "home-growns." Also, laterals can help the firm challenge its settled view of itself. Done well, laterals can bring a new air of dynamism and creativity to a firm.

On the other hand, lateral hiring is management-intensive. The bottom line is that a disciplined lateral program, anathema not very long ago, can strengthen a one-firm firm. A poorly managed program will tend to pull the firm apart.


The Role of Compensation Schemes

The one-firm firms have largely avoided the stampede toward individual-based (or profit-centre-based) reward schemes. However, since 1996 most one-firm firms have gradually expanded the individual component of their reward scheme (in fact if not in rhetoric) and have increased the total compensation ratio between the highest-paid members and the lowest-paid members.

At Latham, until 1993 the long-term compensation element (known as units) was essentially lockstep, with seniority as the main driver. Under cover of the early 1990s recession, this system was changed. Management's considered view was that the firm could not operate successfully in the emerging marketplace without providing more incentive for short- and long-term individual performance, particularly on the business development front.

Walker reports that this was the hardest decision he had to make during his tenure because of the obvious risk to the firm's "fabric." But because the change was sold and accepted as fundamentally respectful of the firm's ideology and shared values -- not as a scuttling of them -- it turned out to be a successful move. Since that change, the percentage of Latham partners hustling and producing business of substance has dramatically grown.

Most one-firm firms run judgment-based compensation schemes (with a studied avoidance of formulas). As always, the key to successful functioning of the system is agreement on values and ideology. This is because a successful compensation system requires trust: the members must believe that the compensation decisions are made by colleagues who have the firm's best interest as their only agenda.


Review: The Importance of Trust and Loyalty

There are many reasons why institutional trust and loyalty are important in a professional business, but three are worth stressing immediately.

First, clients of a one-firm firms have, as a practical matter, access to all the resources of the firm. Individual members, rewarded through the overall success of the enterprise, are more comfortable bringing in other parts of the firm to both win and serve clients with complex multidisciplinary or multi-jurisdictional matters.

Clients are generally better served than they would be by a firm of solos or silos. Clients respond positively when individual members support (and, especially, do not undermine) their colleagues. One-firm firms are good at relationships, internally and externally.

In firms that emphasise the use of credit and compensation systems to motivate (and placate) individual members, client service across disciplines and geography will often suffer. Sophisticated clients may cherry-pick great individual professionals or small practice teams from such firms but will rarely depend on them for complex work across boundaries. Warlord firms tend to excel at transactions, not relationships across boundaries.

Second, as we have seen, the stewardship approach that one-firm firms take toward their recruits (selectivity, training, high standards), when done well, can lead to great alumni loyalty. One-firm firms do not necessarily have lower levels of turnover, but former employees often leave as loyal advocates of the firm, based on the way they were treated when they were there. Employees of warlord firms do not always feel this way. This can have a significant impact on future revenues.

Third, trust and loyalty give a professional service firm a better chance of surviving market downturns. The test of a firm is not how it does in good times, but rather how it responds to roadblocks, stumbles, and problems, minor and major.

On such (inevitable) occasions, members of a loyalty-based firm will pull together, and they will take pride and pleasure in doing so.

In professional businesses with a free-agent climate, seemingly successful firms can disintegrate (and have disintegrated) almost overnight. At the first sign of weakness, the strongest members often feel that the sensible personal strategy is to build and cling to a client base and a personal reputation.

At the very time when leadership is most needed, it is difficult to get the best people to work for the good of the firm. As firms grow weaker, the key members clutch ever more tightly to their client work and the firm flounders. Those who can, run for the door. It is not easy to reverse this spiral.

In my view, many professional service firms are currently engaging in activities that undermine loyalty and create fault lines, including:

  • Growing for growth's sake, by incoherently adding laterals and merging;
  • Expanding into unconnected practice areas and markets;
  • Hiring primarily semi-experienced lateral associates rather than hiring and training entry-level applicants;
  • Eliminating social and partner/officer meetings as a cost-cutting measure;
  • "Pulling up the ladder" to partner or owner status and establishing complex membership hierarchies, including non-equity levels, not to serve clients but rather to relieve inside pain; and
  • Obsessing about the short-term bottom line: treating financial success as the goal rather than as a by-product of a well-run firm.

Joseph Heyison of Citigroup, in a private communication, offers an interesting explanation of why such actions are common. Consider, he suggests, looking at the issue from the perspective of a powerful rainmaker in a professional service firm.

The bottom-line question is whether a rainmaker is better off supporting a warlord model and developing a strong portable practice that can be moved to another firm if the current firm suddenly gets into trouble. Heyison's special insight is that firms compete not only for clients and junior staff, but also for rainmakers, and much of what we can see in the evolution of firms can best be understood in terms of that competition.

He notes that, while many firms have gone under in downturns, few rainmakers have. This reasoning may indeed explain why some warlord firms (if staffed with truly skilled warlords) do well, at least in the short run.


The Stress of Boom Times on One-Firm Firms

Brian Sommers, a former Accenture partner, points out on his blog, in a posting called "The Lessons of Andersen," that too much individual incentive can lead firms into trouble in boom times as well as bad times. He observes:

"Great firms don't let their partners sell inappropriate work. They have a quality control process that prevents this. They utilise partners from different geographies, industries, etc., to do these quality control checks so that no one, in a position of career determination, can influence whether the work is sold and how it is structured.

"Great firms have a formalised approval process. Great firms protect their reputation as they realise that their brand is their number one asset. Great firms also pay all people in a relatively uniform way.

"Lone wolf selling and delivery, to get the biggest pile of money at the end of the year, drives way too many bad deals."

Jonathan Knee, in a review of his experiences working in investment banking (The Accidental Investment Banker, Oxford, 2006), also points out that temptations can exist when a boom market allows firms to achieve rapid volume increases by relaxing their hiring or other quality standards. Management must be disciplined -- must know how to say no -- in prosperous times as well as in down times.

My observation from watching one-firm firms over ten years confirms that the one-firm firm principles are as fragile in prosperous times at they are in troubled times. In highly prosperous periods, productive partners grow impatient with management's reluctance, for example, to hire willy-nilly in order to staff all of their new production, or to promote their favourite -- and very busy -- partner candidates.

Also, in busy times there is a temptation to let investments such as training take a back seat to getting the work out the door. Only adherence to the firm's principles and values prevents opportunistic behaviour that may have short-term benefits but long-term adverse consequences.

Rainmakers -- always stressed but even more so in boom times -- often have little patience with the one-firm firm business disciplines. They are characteristically insecure about whether it will rain tomorrow for them. This insecurity is why they are compelled to hustle for new business.

They are also likely to compare their compensation with those of the leading rainmakers in the warlord firms. When they feel that they are not at the very top of their peer group, they often find it hard to trust in the future. This is especially so with members who did not "grow up" with the firm. Loyalty and the long view require time to accrue.

It is during these times that managers of one-firm firms earn their money. It is tempting to relax the disciplines in boom times, but boom times always recede and the bad calls always bite.


Summary

As I have tried to report, the five named one-firm firms are both similar to and different from what they were in 1996. Changes have happened in these firms, but they have been managed within a (mostly) coherent ideological framework.

Some specific one-firm firm practices have changed with positive effect, and some experimental moves away from the one-firm firm system have proven to be mistakes.

While they may not seem as pure in their commitment to the ideals described in 1996, these firms are still distinguished by their deep commitment to a teamwork approach.

So it might be fair to say that I left out one important item when I listed the one-firm firm attributes in my 1996 article: flexibility, and the willingness to experiment and change within the firm's value system.

One-firm firms are known for their attention to what warlord firms would pejoratively characterise as "soft values."

If my experience since 1996 tells me anything, it is that this attention, balanced of course with high standards, can really pay off in terms of producing the kind of internal loyalties -- and energy -- necessary for long-term success.

Tuesday, September 26, 2006

More Things in More Places

While most professional businesses, from banks to ad agencies to accounting firms, want to grow multidisciplinary relationships with key accounts, their attempts to create one-stop shopping strategies usually stumble, and even those firms implementing modern client relationship management (CRM) programs are still struggling to make them work.

This week's free audio seminar, More Things in More Places, addresses what it takes to implement any multidisciplinary and/or geographic expansion strategy successfully.

The key ingredient:

Expansion is not what you do in order to achieve excellence -- it's what you are allowed to do after you have achieved it.

To explore why this common and much-desired strategy is so hard to pull off, I examine expansion strategies from the buyers' perspective, including:

  • Cross-selling vs. co-ordinated teams: the client-centric distinction
  • What a client wants from a project co-ordinator
  • How to tell when geographic expansion makes sense -- and when it doesn't

My Business Masterclass audio seminars are always downloadable at no cost. You can download More Things in More Places or sign up to receive new seminars automatically by subscribing to my Business Masterclass podcast series with iTunes or other podcast players. (Click here for step-by-step instructions on how to subscribe.)

This seminar was based on my article, True Professionalism, as well as the following resources available for free on this website:

Again I want to know: if one-stop shopping and premature geographic expansion have just dismal track records (and they do, in industry after industry, profession after profession), why are so many firms, small and large, still eagerly pursuing this? I'm ready to admit they may be right and I'm wrong, but what am I missing?

Monday, September 18, 2006

"Why Merge?" -- new strategy seminar download

This week's podcast seminar, "Why Merge?", discusses the pros and cons (mostly cons) of trying to achieve strategic benefit through mergers.

This seminar includes:

  • Menu, Bulk, Dots, Alchemy & Crisis: the five types of professional company mergers
  • Client-centric merger strategies
  • Four-point checklist for a successful merger

My Business Masterclass audio seminars are always downloadable at no cost. You can download Why Merge? or or sign up to receive new seminars automatically every week by subscribing to my Business Masterclass series with iTunes or other podcast players. (Click here for step-by-step instructions on how to subscribe.)

Given all the merger activity that DOES take place, my sceptical views about the benefits of mergers in professional businesses seem to be out of step with what's going on out there. What am I missing?

Tuesday, September 12, 2006

"Adapting to the Future" -- new free strategy seminar

This week's podcast seminar, "Adapting to the Future: Whatever it is" (downloadable at no cost), poses the question:

How do you ensure that your organisation is good at identifying and examining emerging needs -- and devising successful responses?

Through planning (and re-examination of current business management practices) organisations can become better at listening to the environment and picking up change signals early. They can also become better at ensuring that they have numerous experiments (or pilots) going on to test new ideas and new approaches. Companies should be constantly testing what the market will and will not respond to. They must avoid complacency and be adaptive by constantly asking "Is there a better way to do what we do?"

You can download Adapting to the Future or sign up to receive new seminars automatically every week by subscribing to my Business Masterclass series with iTunes or other podcast players. (Click here for step-by-step instructions on how to subscribe.)

What do you think the keys are to becoming more adaptable (or more adaptive) to changing environments? What are the key practices that help organisations respond fast (and well) to their environment?

Monday, September 4, 2006

"Justifying the Company" -- new free downloadable seminar

This week's podcast seminar, "Justifying the Company" (downloadable at no cost), poses the question:

In an organisation where every decentralised operating unit is responsible for its own strategic plan, what is the role of the company itself?

The seminar explores how to ensure that the company or firm acts as more than just a holding company, a common trading name, or an excuse to share overheads.

The seminar includes:

  • The six key elements organisations can share across operational boundaries to create greater value for the whole
  • Two versions of managerial added-value that increase performance
  • Branding: the true value of a brand as performance standards

You can listen to the episode with the above player, download Justifying the Company, or sign up to receive new seminars automatically every week by subscribing to my Business Masterclass series with iTunes or other podcast players.

The podcast is also related to ideas we've discussed in these blog posts:

What do you think I have left out? What do you think are the ways in which firms can and do add value? How do they REALLY go beyond being just holding companies with financial management procedures?

Friday, September 1, 2006

Managing the Multi-dimensional Organisation

Professional businesses today are structurally complex organisations with many senior people overburdened by time-consuming and often conflicting roles.

Professional businesses often have some combination of

  • Business unit
  • Geographic markets or offices
  • Division or department
  • Product line/service offering
  • Industry group
  • Key account team
  • Committees (recruitment, training)
  • Task force or project team (service innovation, new offerings)

Each of these organisational groupings can, and does, intersect with duplicated missions, overlapping membership, and common resource pools to draw upon.

I frequently hear comments like this from members of management:

"It's not at all clear what each of these groupings should be responsible for and how their activities should be coordinated and evaluated. If you are a key player in this organisation, you can spend an inordinate amount of time in meetings. There has got to be a better way to organise for effective operations!"

There is a better way, but the way professional businesses organise and manage has not kept up with their increasing complexity. Eventually -- I think sooner rather than later -- this will significantly impede their continuing success.

Not only do modern companies have more "types" of organisational groupings than in the past, but these groups now have broader responsibilities than the simple "generate and serve clients" goals of the past. To survive and flourish, individual groups within today's organisations must be accountable for client loyalty, knowledge transfer, development of their people (junior and senior), and many other "balanced scorecard" items.

To make it all worse, many of these groups are composed of people who, because of geographic dispersion, do not see each other regularly face-to-face. They have to operate as members of a "virtual" organisation. Many would not even recognise some of the people in their own operating groups, with whom they have to interact regularly.

As Marcel Goldstein, of the global public relations firm Ogilvy, wrote to us:

"The modern-day professional business lacks much formal structure, at least when compared with manufacturers, government agencies, and other organisations. This is a great asset, as it allows the flexibility, creativity, and autonomy necessary to adapt to client needs. It can have a darker side though: inefficiency, confusion, and process breakdowns.

"In many professions, clients are demanding cross-practice cooperation. But do we have the right structures and personal skill sets to successfully manage the integration of specialty expertise?

"The highly matrixed professional business turns downright chaotic during times of great change: acquisitions/mergers; technology disruptions; and transitions to integrated, cross-functional service delivery.

"Many professional businesses engage in acquisitions of great fanfare, only to have their value left unrealised by political undermining. In my experience, traditional manufacturers with structured, hierarchical management execute acquisitions with far less confusion and resulting paralysis.

"We need structures that don't squash flexibility and creativity but minimise inefficiency and confusion. We need help building the personal skill sets needed to manage ourselves and each other in these environments, especially during times of great change."

I certainly would not profess to have answers to all these complex issues. However, I believe that there are five perspectives that must guide any review of a firm's or company's structure.


Imperative 1: Examine Structure, Process, and People

The solution for an individual firm must always address three perspectives in any organisational review:

  1. structure (how we are formally organised);
  2. processes (how different types of decisions are to be made and how conflicts and trade-offs are to be resolved);
  3. and people (appointing the right individuals to play the complex roles that will make it all work).

No one dimension will solve the problem: all three must be examined. However, I suspect that the importance of these three elements in the solution may be first, people; then processes; then structure.


Imperative 2: Choose the Right Group Leaders

Many organisations believe, as I do, that selecting the right leaders (and having enough of them) is more important than structure or process.

Peter Kalis, managing partner of law firm Kirkpatrick & Lockhart, states the view forcefully:

"Structure and process -- while as essential to a law firm as a skeleton and a nervous system are to a human -- are prone to ossification and thus are fundamentally at war with the dynamism of the marketplace. People, on the other hand, are not. We try to elevate the empowerment of our people over the organisational niceties of structure and process except to the extent that those structural and process features work to empower our people."

Choosing the right people for leadership positions was always important, but is even more critical in complex organisations. Consider just some of the (newly important?) skills that today's group leader probably must have:

  • The ability (and interest) to motivate and influence people they never see in person
  • The ability to delegate and trust others to manage important relationships
  • The ability to play a "linking-pin" role, simultaneously thinking about the overall good of the firm while taking care of the needs of the units they are responsible for
  • The ability to manage people who have core disciplines other than the one in which the leader was specifically trained

It has always been true that effective management required a complex mix of social, interpersonal, psychological, political, and emotional skills on top of the high intelligence and technical skills necessary to rise to the top. I believe that as organisations become more complex, possession (and development) of these so-called soft skills must play an ever-more-important role in influencing who is selected to perform managerial or leadership roles.

Unfortunately, such considerations do not always play a dominant role in selecting group leaders. It is a common syndrome that all initiatives (client team, industry, geographic, functional, etc.) are seen as important, so the same senior people always end up on all the committees, often based on considerations other than managerial aptitude or even orientation.

As a result, it is somewhat hit-and-miss as to whether the right people get selected for these roles, their mandate is clear, their performance as leaders gets discussed and evaluated, and whether they receive any assistance or guidance in learning how to perform their roles.

Not only does this hurt the organisation by (possibly) leading to less effective team leadership, but it's not clear that it is wise to consume the limited time of valuable people by asking them to manage and/or get involved in everything. This is simple economics -- a valuable resource should always be focused on its highest and best use.


Imperative 3: Establish Mandates for Each Group

Even if you have an ideal structure, there will always be problems with coordinating cross-boundary resources and dealing with conflicting priorities. You cannot make all cross-boundary issues go away by simply redesigning the boundaries.

Beyond structure, companies must ensure that each group has a clear mission (or mandate) that is understood by those inside and outside the group.

In my experience, many firms launch new business units, various committees, or project teams with ambiguous charters and then leave it to powerful (or not-so-powerful) group leaders to determine through negotiations over time precisely how the groups will interact.

The case for doing this rests on the idea that internal competition is the inevitable result of shifting external market forces influencing each of the organisation's groups differently and that a flexible approach to the responsibilities and interactions of groups is an efficient way of responding to these external market forces.

However, I believe that failing to discuss and resolve the issues of group responsibilities (and how groups will interact and resolve conflicts and trade-offs) rarely results in optimal outcomes.

Under such an approach, power rather than principle determines group goals and how groups will interact, and this leads to lesser performance. Resolution of conflicting goals and clear, agreed-upon guidelines for decision making over trade-off situations must be determined in advance.

I also believe that organisations must stop treating all groups alike, which many unfortunately do, for administrative convenience. It is possible to use different types of groups for different things: lots of little teams for client-level relationships or one large central group for financial and administrative services.

A large, growing, and complex firm doesn't have to be (in fact, can't be) made up of units that have similar roles, look alike, have the same targets, and are managed in the same way.

In making all this work, it is almost better to stop thinking of permanent or semi-permanent "departments" and to begin to use the language of "teams." There is a great deal of evidence that organisations work better when people feel that they are volunteers self-selected to small mission-oriented teams.

This is not just a matter of making people "feel good." It has always been true that winning professional service firms succeed most by designing their organisations from the bottom up -- through the voluntary enthusiasm of individuals. You'll be better off with a messy set of teams filled with enthusiasts than you will with a logically correct set of groups filled with good citizens.

As Ben Johnson of law firm Alston & Bird remarked:

"One problem is that too many 'leaders' are afraid to create more energy than they can control. I tell people I'd rather have created more energy than I could control than not created any energy at all. Here's to structural complexity! Here's to dispersed leadership!"

On the other hand, it is also important that firms clarify the roles and responsibilities of group leaders and avoid the balkanisation of the organisation that can come from letting group leaders think that they are responsible only for their groups.

Peter Friedes, the former CEO of human-resources consulting firm Hewitt Associates, had this to say:

"I had 15 or so managers reporting to me. So I needed them to not be pulling the firm in different directions. One practice I had was to remind all those who reported to me that part of their role was to have my CEO perspective in managing their group. They were not to just be an advocate for their group or their people. They had to have a 'whole entity' view."


Imperative 4: Clarify Agreements Within the Groups

Whether you are managing a division, a key client team, or a limited-scope task force, every group needs to have a very clear understanding of what "team membership" implies. As a matter of practicality (although not, alas, reality in some firms) there also needs to be a limit on the number of teams one person can join (and the number of roles one person can play).

For teams to work, there need to be clear, explicit guidelines (even rules of engagement) that team members have agreed to observe. Clarifying team members' rights and obligations can go a long way toward becoming more efficient and effective. (Even as simple a rule as "You must do what you said you were going to do" would transform some organisations and save a lot of wasted meeting and planning time.)

The need for such agreements, while always wise, has become ever more critical in a virtual world. As Harry Truehart, chairman of law firm Nixon Peabody, observed, "Getting people and procedures that facilitate effective 'management at a distance' is the biggest challenge in making groups work."

I believe that if far-flung groups made up of many autonomous individuals are to make cohesive decisions over time, then it is necessary that the group members agree in advance the principles on which they will base their decisions -- the guidelines the group members agree to follow. Only with such an agreement in place can a decentralised organisation make consistent decisions.

Part of the solution, may involve thinking of (and formalising) different levels of team membership. For example, levels of "team membership" might include (i) full decision rights -- possible called Team Leadership, or (ii) right to be consulted -- called team membership or (iii) right to be kept informed -- called team affiliation. (These are examples only.)


Imperative 5: Recognise Shifting Priorities in Structural Design

Structural changes alone will not resolve conflicting priorities and competing demands for resources, but structure does nevertheless matter. The evolution of professional-service firms over time suggests that some structural approaches do work better than others. Most successful global firms, in a broad array of professions, have tilted the importance of their different organisational "axes."

For some time, there has been a general trend to make the target client industry the most important (and organisationally powerful) grouping. This has been driven by clients repeatedly telling their vendors and providers that they had better get to know and understand the client's business.

Next in authority and emphasis comes the specifically targeted client (or key account) team. Well-orchestrated client teams are the only answer to making seamless service across geography and product/service offerings a reality. Don Lents of law firm Bryan, Cave notes, "It is my sense that there is a growing focus on client teams and the need for such teams to be front and centre in the thinking of firms."

Third, and with increasingly less power and responsibility inside most organisations, are the traditional product or service-line groups built around a focused technical specialty or discipline. Companies need to have highly focused and skilled technical people, but few are still primarily organised that way.

Finally (and this is a huge revolution from the past), the trend has been to make geography the least important and powerful dimension of the complex matrix.

In the past, the office head (or country head in mega firms) was the source of all resources and the arbiter of last resort. Today, in many organisations, a geographic head may preside over a location whose people all belong to groups headed and "controlled" by a powerful leader located elsewhere.

This is not meant to denigrate the role of the geographic leader. As Bob Dell of law firm Latham & Watkins points out:

"Having the right leader in an office can be extremely effective in facilitating the success of all the other groups therein. There seems to be something about physical presence combined with a leader who is perceived as less biased toward any group that can be very powerful in resolving competing demands."


Moving Forward

I believe that there is a distinct process that firms need to go through to find their own customised solutions to managing a complex organisation.

The steps are these:

First, assess the perception of "pain and difficulties" felt by the current organisation, to determine people's appetite for considering changes. This will usually require a process of interviewing key players across the firm. No change can be made unless there is a keenly felt sense of either pressure or opportunity.

Next, it will be necessary to collect and assess the evidence as to how well the organisation and its components are currently performing and interacting. In a recent issue of The McKinsey Quarterly (2006, number 3), Cross, Martin, and Weiss described a detailed and powerful methodology for "mapping the value of ... collaboration."

Even if the approach is not this thorough, there will need to be an investigation of current organisational functioning, including not only an in-depth view of financials, analysed according to numerous perspectives, but also an analysis of external evidence (including, perhaps, input from selected clients) and internal structural frustrations and performance inhibitors.

It will be necessary to examine whether reward systems are in line with organisational objectives and whether profit-centre accounting systems are contributing to a balkanisation of the organisation.

At the other extreme, it would be worth examining whether the organisation is currently being held together and energised by sharing in what is sometimes referred to as an "overarching purpose" or shared values. This is an approach to organisation that is often fervently preached but rarely achieved.

Next, in any organisational review, would be the need to design and implement a process to generate commitment to re-examine organisational structures and processes and explore the major alternatives (including possibly re-constituting key groups). Any redesign, must, of course, ensure continuity of strategy formulation and implementation through the organisation.

Finally, it will be necessary to examine, consider, and implement methods for the development of special managerial skills and competencies as well as new metrics that may give better indications of the organisation's functioning and response to external forces or internal pressures.

It may also be necessary to design a process to get the organisation to recommit to a clarified sense of purpose, values, and "rules of membership": -- the principles and practices that people must follow to remain members in good standing of the organisation.

Of course, to make any of this work, there is a need for key players to be willing to let other people decide some things even when they're not there -- a situation which does not exist in many companies and firms!

I do not mean this to be a throwaway line. To effect real change, organisations must not try to establish "theoretically correct" structures and processes but must have honest discussions among powerful players about the types and nature of the firm's group processes that would, in fact, be honoured.

I have seen too many firms go through the motions of putting in place what appear to be sensible organisations, when everyone knows that certain key players will not adhere to the policies that have been adopted.

I'm not an idealist here -- I recognise the realities of the need to accommodate personalities and special situations. But I also do not believe that progress is made by pretending or obtaining "false consent." That is why organisational solutions must be custom-designed for each firm and need to be the result of a comprehensive review, not, as is so frequently the case, the net result of an accumulation of a series of incremental changes driven by short-run pressures.

Monday, August 28, 2006

"Play Nice: Creating the Collaborative Firm" -- new free seminar

"The One-Firm Firm", last week's free seminar in my Business Masterclass series, explored how businesses can achieve distinctive competitive advantage by achieving company-wide collaboration.

In this week's seminar "Play Nice: Creating the Collaborative Firm" (downloadable at no cost), I follow up with a more fine-grained examination of tactics for achieving collaboration.

The seminar explores the questions:

How do you make company-wide collaboration happen in all types of companies? What are the specific tactics that get people in multiple disciplines, industries and offices to work for the good of the firm?

This seminar is based on my article, "Managing the Professional Service Firm", and explores:

  • The Principles of collaboration
  • The 16 Top-tier tactics to promote collaboration (in order of effectiveness)
  • The incremental approach to increasing cooperation

You can listen to this week's seminar with the player shown just above, or download this episode directly to your computer. You can also receive new seminars automatically every week by subscribing to my Business Masterclass series with iTunes (or other podcast players). (Click here for step-by-step instructions on how to subscribe.)

The ideas in this seminar were further explored in these previous conversations on my blog:

Would you agree with the priorities I have given to the most effective tactics? Do you have an explanation as to why companies tend to use the least effective tactics first?

Monday, August 21, 2006

"The One-Firm Firm" -- new free seminar

This week's strategy podcast seminar, "One-Firm Firm" (downloadable at no cost), is based on an article I wrote Managing the Professional Service Firm.

Back then, I asked the question, "What do Goldman Sachs, McKinsey, (Accenture), Latham & Watkins and Hewitt Associates and other prominent professional businesses have in common?" (I referred to Accenture by the name of its predecessor firm.)

Besides being among the most profitable firms (if not the most profitable) in their respective professions?

And besides being considered by their peers among the best managed firms in their respective professions?

The answer I gave back then:

A commitment to a model of professional business management which stresses teamwork, collaboration and institutional loyalty, which I term the "one-firm firm" system.

This seminar is one of the very few I have written where I talk about specific firms by name. After all this time, I still feel that I chose the correct firms to discuss.

I am in the process of writing an update for this article, which will appear later this year. But since I think that the lessons still apply (and because these firms are still hugely successful) I decided to make a podcast seminar out of the original article, changing very little.

The seminar includes:

  • An analysis of what makes "one-firm firms" great
  • How the best firms generate loyalty and a sense of mission
  • The "open secrets" of great firms' strategy on hiring, mergers, compensation, and more
You can listen to this episode with the player above, you can download "The One-Firm Firm" here, or sign up to receive new seminars automatically every week by subscribing to my Business Masterclass series with iTunes or other podcast players. (Click here for step-by-step instructions on how to subscribe.)

The podcast draws from ideas I discuss in these 3 previous conversations on my blog:

  • What does it take to be truly great?
  • Can the good guys win?
  • Goldman's Secret

I also highly recommend "The Lessons of Andersen" by Brian Sommers -- presenting an ex-Andersen perspective on the Enron convictions.

What does your experience say?

Does the evidence really match my conclusion that the loyalty-based, real team-play organisations actually ARE triumphing over the decentralised, profit-centred, internally competitive and entrepreneurial organisations?

And if the "one-firm firms" truly are winning, why isn't their "one-for-all, all-for-one" approach more common?