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Organization ImprovementProducing Hassle-Hunters - Every Employee A Quality Specialist by Robert BacalSummary: Managers may hate to admit it but the front line staff often knows more about improving how organizations work than they do. That's because they deal with barriers to quality and customer service everyday in real and hands-on ways. Effective managers take advantage of employee knowledge and expertise by harnessing that knowledge to remove hassles, or to improve efficiency. Learn how. On occasion, someone will ask me for my opinion on what makes for successful managers and leaders. I usually respond by asking if they want the long answer (a month of lecture), or the short one. For some reason the asker always chooses the short one, so I try to compress some very complex things into one sentence. Then, I usually make up something on the spot. It occurs to me that I should have a better answer, or at least one that is short, but really useful to the person who wants to know. I have settled on the notion that what sets apart poor managers, average managers and excellent managers is their effect on workplace hassles. Poor managers create workplace hassles for everyone. Average managers neither create or reduce workplace hassles, while excellent managers reduce hassles for themselves and their employees. Simply put, poor managers are always creating ways to shoot everyone's feet off, average ones just use the usual ways of shooting feet off, and excellent managers want to stop the amputations. What Are Hassles?
A workplace hassle can be almost anything, but all hassles have things in common. First, hassles involve avoidable processes, procedures and actions that do not add value to an organization. Second, hassles aggravate everyone (except the person who insists the hassle continue). Hassles interfere with employees' abilities to do their jobs, they create problems for managers, and often they result in angry or frustrated clients. Let me list a few things that can be classified as hassles, suggested to me by people from various organizations.
Every organization has hassles--procedures, rules, regulations and workflows that are often left over from pre-technology days, or are in place only because it hasn't occurred to someone that they need to be removed. The very very odd thing is that hassles, and their sources are common knowledge. The expertise to identify, and solve hassle problems exists in almost any organization, if only there is incentive, a process to dehassle, and confidence that dehassling can be done successfully. The collective knowledge of executives, managers and employees is there. Producing Hassle-HuntersWithin
any work unit, the degree to which people will ferret out hassles
will depend on the behaviours of the direct supervisor or manager.
Managers can encourage hassle-hunters by putting in place the
incentives, and process necessary to funnel employee frustration
with hassles into constructive actions. The less effective
managers, by neglect, allows that frustration to fester While we will explore the production of hassle-hunters in more detail in future PSM's, below are a few ways managers can encourage them to take on the challenge.
ConclusionThere is no question that hassles create huge amounts of frustration for everyone, and eat up valuable time and money. The only way that hassles can be eliminated is if managers support and encourage their employees to become hassle-hunters. Bacal
& Associates will custom-design a long-term strategy and process
to dehassle your workplace. Since each organization is different,
we can't provide details without sitting down to discuss your
particular situation.
Copyright
Robert Bacal, 2000 - 2008 Reprint or distribution without permission prohibited.
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