Category Archives: Uncategorized

#48 Whitespace

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It is comforting to come to a predictable work place. Comforting, but boring if done for long periods.

A work place that is 100% predictable is probably not innovating or pushing the envelope. Either their customers are not demanding enough or perhaps there is no competition or other burning platform to rally around to drive change.

If you want to work in a fun and exciting workplace, actively look for “whitespace.” These are the difficult problems that everyone wants solved, but no one wants to step up to solve it. Identify the whitespace, reward those who jump on the opportunity to take over the whitespace. Be sure to set the right priority so that people are not spread thin. Find the right sequence and do the top 2 or 3 items well, instead of doing a number of things badly. The illusion of progress when you do many things, may well turn out to be just that… an illusion.

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#40 The life cycle of a training program: reinforcement

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If training is a “check in the box” for you, then you can ignore this blog. I am guessing with the current economic situation, ROI will be required (even demanded) for all training investments.

In the preparation and execution phases, you set the stage by defining success criteria and by making changes in knowledge and skill levels. Hopefully you sent the message, “We will be watching you because we want you to be successful. If you need help, we are here to provide it. If you need to be ‘nudged’ to improve, we will do that as well.”

Regressions to old behaviors or inconsistent application of desired behaviors are symptoms that need to be watched. How people interact and communicate in the workplace provides hard-to-avoid signals and pressures to conform. What the executives are saying is the policy, not what is written in documents and slides. Keeping the “saying” and “doing” aligned and consistent will automatically drive the right behavior. People tend to cope with inconsistency by doing their best, this often makes things worse, because now everyone is pushing in a different direction and creating conflict.

Organize follow up huddles to debrief and course correct. Ask for suggestions at the policy and business process levels. Make changes to systems if that is a roadblock. Asking someone how they are doing every couple of months will let them know someone is watching. More important, someone cares!

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