Author Archives: ven00kat

#269 Admiration

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Life is difficult and surprises crop up at inconvenient moments. The more we try to bring order to our lives, the more obstacles are thrown in our path. We wish we could be like our co-workers who are organized and “in control” of their lives.

The notion of being organized and in control is an illusion. Life at work is more like a sine wave, with ups and downs.

Save half your admiration for those who overcome adversity, conflict, challenges. These are those who hit the bottom and bounce right back up. The remaining admiration should be for those can be level headed when they are on the way up and hit the top of the wave.

Simply observe where you are in the wave (on the way up or the way down) and tailor your responses to the needs of the moment. Do not anticipate the peak or the bottom, just enjoy them both equally.

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#268 Making exceptions

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Business processes are defined to streamline work efforts, lower costs, and improve customer delight. Some processes are standard and are expected to exist by customers. For example, if you mail a package, you expect to be able to track it. Some processes provide a competitive advantage via superior execution. For example, tight project management will differentiate professional services firms.

From time to time, customers and employees will ask for exceptions. Their reasons could be:

  • “I am valuable therefore I deserve an exception.”
  • “I am competent, please make an exception.”
  • “Your process does not cover this boundary condition, please make an exception while you figure out policy and procedure changes.”

As always, some requests are reasonable, others are clearly a lack of discipline. A couple of common examples:

  • Sales people don’t want to update CRM. They claim it takes time away from selling. The consequence is loss of intelligence on the buying/selling cycle for that prospect.
  • Software developers don’t want to document their design or code. They assert it interferes with their deadlines. The consequence is higher costs when debugging or enhancing code.
  • Business users don’t want to follow the governance model and want to rush their proposals into implementation. They worry that pointless objections will delay business benefits. The consequence is loss of trust and a power struggle.

Workarounds and exceptions make processes complex. Sensible managers pick their battles when granting or denying exceptions. It is never easy to decide whether an exception should be made, therefore mindfulness and wisdom, rather than logic is the best tie breaker.

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