Crises are everyday occurrences
in most complex organizations. They must be dealt with rapidly and effectively
as discussed previously in lecture 20. Meetings are necessary and they should
be staged to minimize wasting time of workers involved. Stage the meetings as
follows:
·
First meeting- gather only those likely to have
data needed to define the problem
·
Second meeting- gather only those necessary to
solve the problem
·
Follow-up meetings- gather only those needed to
status the problem and plan for solution. (Crises are abnormal events so
standard information systems aren’t likely to be adequate to status progress
and brief meetings such as daily stand-ups are needed.)
Think about
how the crisis solving team can be structured so that few meetings are needed.
For example, if a manager is available with the necessary problem solving
skills that manger can be part of the team and be responsible for reporting
status so that other team members need only concentrate on problem solving.
Work Meetings
Many work tasks require
collaboration of knowledge workers and collaboration requires communication.
Work communication can be informal face to face or electronic involving just
two or three workers or it can be formal meetings involving large numbers of
workers. Managers are involved as organizers, facilitators, workers or all
three roles. Useful guidelines for work meetings include:
·
Separate status reviews from working sessions
·
Keep working sessions small and informal
·
Keep status reviews from becoming working
sessions
·
Exploit modern technology including all forms of
electronic communications
·
Develop agreed upon guidelines for electronic
communications
·
Hold working sessions and status reviews at
fixed times and places so that people prepare and attend automatically
A fundamental
principle is to minimize information latency* by means appropriate to each
situation. If possible co-locate team members to reduce the need for frequent
meetings to exchange information. [*
Information latency is the time between when information is generated and the
time it is available to others depending on the information for the next steps
in their work.]
The availability of inexpensive
large screen display projectors, n to one video switches and inter/intra nets
makes it cost effective to set up special work rooms where teams of 10 to 25
knowledge workers can gather with their laptops and software tools to
simultaneously work and share work results. Many organizations now use such
facilities for teams to gather for intense work and information sharing periods
of three to four hours two or three times weekly. These sessions must be well
planned and workers must come prepared to work and share results in real time.
Planning, documenting work and time consuming tasks are performed in between
sessions in the work rooms. This approach is called by a number of names but
Integrated Concurrent Engineering (ICE) is a common name. This approach is
effective because it reduces information latency from minutes to seconds or
hours to minutes. It is proven to reduce cost and schedule of complex projects
by factors of three to ten.
If you are responsible or desire to be
responsible for teams of knowledge workers I recommend you become familiar with
ICE. Don’t let the term engineering dissuade you from investigating this
approach for any knowledge worker activity.
There is adequate information on the web so I will not include the
details here. Start with:
Observation, Theory, and Simulation of Integrated Concurrent Engineering
by Chachere, Kunz and Levitt, CIFE Working Paper #WP087, STANFORD
UNIVERSITY, August 2004, or
The Integrated Concurrent Enterprise by David B. Stagney, MIT
Thesis, 2003.
Knowledge workers spend much of
their time in work meetings and much of the time not in meetings in their
ubiquitous cubicles. If your organization is housed in cubicles consider
arranging the work space of small teams; those with two to eight members, in a
common cubicle. This can often be done by removing partitions or rearranging
the cubicles. The objective is to enable the small team’s members to see and
talk to each other from their normal workstations. This eliminates the need to
get up and walk to another cubicle to ask a question, sending an email or
calling a meeting to obtain data from teammates. Information latency is greatly
reduced for the small team thereby increasing its efficiency. Yes, it likely
increases unproductive social conversation but this loss is more than offset by
the increase in efficiency for most teams. For teams larger than about eight it
makes more sense to use the ICE technique mentioned in the preceding paragraph.
If you work in a large
enterprise with multiple locations it is likely that you and your organization
are involved in work spread across locations. In such cases it is impossible to
physically co-locate workers but virtual co-location is possible with modern
teleconferencing and collaboration software. In planning uses of this
technology seek to drive information latency as low as practical as well as to
coordinate and status work. In my experience these modern techniques are
effective if workers that must interact electronically are first brought
together in one location for a day or two to get to know each other. Face to
face interaction enables workers to learn each other’s work style and quirks.
This makes it easier to understand each other later when interacting via
electronic communications in spite of the filtering imposed by these methods.
Be aware that small
organizations may not know how to organize to work big projects and large
organizations may treat small projects the same as large projects and overkill
on status meetings when informal communication is adequate. This is because the
methods needed to effectively manage projects do not scale with the size of the
project. Methods don’t scale because much of the communication that takes place
in the work place is informal communication. Let me explain how this impacts
work with extreme examples.
Informal communication is
completely adequate if everyone involved in a project is located in the same
room. Information needed by one worker from another is available by direct
asking. Information needed by all can be posted on the walls so there is little
need for formally scheduled meetings. Contrast this tiny project with a giant
complex project involving several enterprises located in several different
parts of the country or world and each enterprise using its own data bases of
project information as well as shared data bases. Workers do not even know who
is responsible for generating the information they need, let alone being able
to ask for it, without there being formal organization, organization charts,
descriptions of responsibilities and similar documentation plus the many types of
meetings associated with large projects. Note however that within each separate
part of the project there is informal communications working locally as always.
If you are responsible for a
new project that is either much larger or much smaller than those you and your
organization are experienced with it is wise to call in someone with experience
with projects of the size of your new project to help you avoid serious
mistakes in organizing the project and structuring the meetings necessary to
ensure effective communications.
Mistakes in organizing the project or structuring meetings lead to major
time wasters that are also money wasters and threaten the success of the
project.
The discussion above is couched
in terms of projects because projects have limited lifetimes and organizations
that do project works face these problems repeatedly. All organizations are
faced with project work from time to time. However, the principles apply to
other work types and problems of scale arise in the initial stages of setting
up an organization or when the size of the organization increases or decreases
in size substantially.
I now digress from discussing
work meetings with a personal story about the effects of scale on
organizations. Feel free to skip this story as it is just an example of the
principles described above applied to manufacturing. I was responsible for two
manufacturing plants, plant A producing a product at a rate of about 100 per
day and plant B a similar product at a rate of about 1000 per day. Applying the
methods that are the subject of this course we had improved the effectiveness
of plant A to the point that we had the space and skills available to absorb
plant B’s work, which would make plant A even more cost effective. My boss,
supporting the move but having a lot more experience in manufacturing than I,
told me that my plant A team wouldn’t be able to handle the new work because of
the difference in rate. Having the arrogance of ignorance I told him my plant A
team was a crackerjack team that was familiar with the materials, processes and
machines involved with the higher rate product and I was confident they could
do the job. Well the boss was right. My team was indeed familiar with
everything involved but the difference in rate. They tried to use the work flow
management techniques that worked well at a rate of 100 per day on the 1000 per
day production line and these techniques were inadequate. I won’t admit to the
amount of money we lost before we got proper work flow management processes in
place for the higher rate production but I will say that I was reminded of it
several times by the top level financial people in the enterprise.
Problem Solving or
Brainstorming Meetings
Problem solving meetings are
part of crisis meetings and are in a class of meetings that involve
brainstorming. Problem solving meetings are particularly prone to wandering off
focus and wasting time. If the meeting room has a white or black board, or an
easel, then there is a simple technique for making a problem solving meeting effective.
You can use this technique as the meeting leader or as a volunteer secretary.
The approach is to write down on the board or easel just the key things needed
to keep the meeting on track and to follow a logical sequence of discussion.
This sequence is as follows:
1.
First get agreement from the group on the definition of
the problem to be solved. If it is your meeting you should have defined the
problem in your planning (see next section) and be ready to define the problem
with your introduction.
2.
Gather data. In a true problem meeting this means using
a tool like a fishbone diagram* to guide brainstorming on the possible causes
of the problem. [*Fishbone diagrams, also called Ishikawa diagrams or
cause-and-effect diagrams, are diagrams that help collect and organize the
causes of a certain event. Consult Wikipedia for a more complete definition.]
In a brainstorming meeting you are gathering ideas. Be open to all ideas and
write each down for all to see. Make sure everyone has the opportunity to offer
ideas. Gather all ideas without evaluation, i.e. make sure ideas are not
critiqued in real time.
3.
After all the ideas are written down thin and organize
the gathered data. This means consolidating data that is similar into one item,
throwing out data that doesn’t seem relevant after brief discussion and
identifying any obvious hierarchy or relationships between the remaining data
items.
4.
If a fishbone diagram has been generated then
prioritize the candidate causes collected so that actions can be assigned to
determine if each cause is a root cause of the problem. Some causes are likely
the result of other more fundamental causes. It is important to track causes
back to root causes. Otherwise solutions may only correct symptoms and not the
root causes. It may be that additional data is needed to identify root causes.
If so, assign actions to collect the needed data, schedule a follow-up meeting
to discuss the new data and close the meeting.
5.
Once root causes are identified brainstorm to collect
possible solutions to the root causes if possible solutions were not collected
as part of the brainstorming in step 2. Follow the same procedure as for
collecting and evaluating causes.
6.
Thin and organize the alternative solutions as
described in step 3.
7.
Discuss pros and cons of each alternative and make a
decision on the best if sufficient information is available. If additional
information is needed then assign actions to gather the information.
8.
Define the steps necessary to implement and monitor the
effectiveness of selected alternatives, assign actions, schedule any necessary
follow-up meetings and close the meeting.
Using a board or easel to write
down relevant information at each step keeps the group on track and having the
information available visually to all attendees aids their thinking. Being the
recorder of information helps you guide the meeting and keep it focused. Once
the members of your organization become familiar with the process outlined here
the meetings tend to stay focused because they recognize that the process works
and doesn’t waste their time. Whereas it is possible to use a computer and
projection screen in place of a white board or easel it isn’t as effective
unless the computer operator is particularly skillful in capturing and
organizing data. For most people it is easier and faster to use a board or
easel.
Make Sure Meetings Are
Disciplined- Guidelines for Effective Meetings
The reason for most meetings is
to communicate, i.e. gather or disseminate information as efficiently as
possible. If meetings go beyond gathering or disseminating information then
they become time wasters. Plan your
meetings, have an agenda and a time limit. Planning a meeting means thinking
through each candidate item on your draft agenda and answering the following
questions:
·
Does this item belong in this meeting?
·
What information must be communicated and/or
gathered for each item?
·
How do I introduce each item to focus the
discussion so that I get the answers I or the organization need?
·
How do I decide when this item is ready for
closure?
·
How much time is it likely to take to discuss
and close each item?
If you think through the
questions above you can limit the items on the agenda to those that can be
covered adequately in the allotted time and you are prepared to conduct an
effective meeting. If you are not prepared you risk wasting everyone’s time by
getting off track or onto unnecessary topics. Don’t be discouraged if this
looks like it takes a lot of planning time. With practice you become proficient
at this planning and find that it takes only a few minutes to plan an effective
meeting.
Start meetings on time and end
them on time. Make it clear that you expect to start meetings on time and do
not wait for late arrivals. They soon learn that they are expected to be on
time and most people do what is expected of them. If you wait for late arrivals
you not only waste the time of everyone present but you condition everyone that
it is not necessary to be on time for your meetings. As a result your meetings
are always late in starting due to waiting for late arrivals and waste the time
of those that arrive on time.
Establish intended outcomes for
the meeting at the beginning and get agreement on outcomes. Make sure you have
a process to capture actions. It is sufficient to identify the action and
responsible person in the meeting. Hold a follow-up one on one with the
actionee to discuss details, set up guidelines, due dates and what is expected
at midterm and final reviews. These details are critical to ensuring that an
actionee understands what is expected but they are not important to other
meeting attendees.
Keep on schedule, summarize key
points frequently and use group problem solving tools as appropriate. Use your
judgment on the necessity of keeping and distributing minutes since the
necessity depends on the type and frequency of meetings. Formal organization
meetings that are scheduled monthly typically require minutes and weekly staff
meetings typically do not as long as actions and other decisions are
documented.
Discussing details of problem
resolution and issuing detailed instructions to an actionee during meetings are
just two examples that result in ineffective meetings. It is the responsibility
of the meeting leader to keep the meeting focused on the agenda items. Other
items will come up and it is necessary to quickly judge whether the additional
item is relevant to the success of the meeting or should be dealt with at
another time. Items that are not relevant can be deferred to another meeting,
to a one on one, or assigned to someone to resolve outside of the meeting.
Although such items must be dealt with quickly make sure you take the time to
listen effectively to people bringing up items not on the agenda. They have
decided, rightly or wrongly, that the items are important for the group and if
you cut them off before they complete their explanation you frustrate them, and
thereby demotivate them.
Exercises
1. Develop
straw man agendas for the following meetings for your organization:
1.
Weekly Staff Meeting
2.
Monthly All Hands Meeting
3.
Crisis Meeting to Address an Apparent Case of Fraud in
your organization
4.
Status Meeting on a current project in your
organization.
2. Review
your answers to the exercises in the middle of this lecture and assess the
effectiveness of your organization’s meetings according to the guidelines
covered in lecture 21.
3. Identify
any changes you need to make to improve the effectiveness of meetings in your
organization.
4. Incorporate
plans for these changes in your action plan.
If you find that the pace of blog posts
isn’t compatible with the pace you would
like to maintain in studying this material you can buy the book “The Manager’s Guide for Effective
Leadership” at:
or hard copy or for nook at:
or hard copy or E-book at:
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