Category Archives: Decision making

#199 A consultant’s value add

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Hiring a consultant is sometimes necessary, at other times unavoidable. Hiring is a qualitative effort, thus, you’ll try to hire a consultant you can trust. Sometimes you have no choice but to work with a stakeholder’s pet consultant. Regardless of how you get into the relationship, you need to lay down the criteria for success up front. Here are some suggestions:

  • You have a business critical problem, and the consultant helps you define or refine, and sharpen the problem definition. Now you can do something about the problem.
  • You are short of expertise and need talent temporarily. This is more staff augmentation, not a real consulting project. “Consulting” sounds better, so go with that.
  • The consultant tells you something you don’t know. These include best practices to gain a competitive advantages, lessons learned and pitfalls to avoid, and time/money saving tips (these are the “dots”). This also includes the connections you missed (between dots).
  • The consultant helps you get organized. Becoming streamlined is underrated, being disorganized hides many inefficiencies.
  • You want to try out an idea, but don’t want to devote full time resources to it.

While consultants need to be independent, they need to ensure someone will receive their advice. If no one takes ownership, the consultant’s work will be wasted. The proposals made should be in line with the client’s operations and thus should be made with change management in mind. Any proposals that intend to make the consultant look good or delivered with “you need to do this” will be immediately dismissed. Thus consultants are well advised to make sure there is an internal customer or sponsor for their ideas before they propose one.

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#192 Value of analytics and reporting

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With all this talk about “big data” and the power of data-driven decisions, it is relevant to assess the steps to insight using numbers. Analytics and reporting can provide you at least three immediate benefits:

  • Broken process: If you are new to using data, the first set of reports will make no sense. Before you dismiss them as “useless,” know that you are looking at the symptoms of a broken process. If the steps to perform work are random, unstructured, and unpredictable, your analytics and reports will simply reflect that. Use the analytics and reports to make your business processes structured and predictable.
  • Bad behavior: If you have a process defined (fully or partially) you may find that co-workers are willfully ignoring policies and procedures. While analytics and reports will flag the bad behavior, transparency will drive compliance. Meaning, just having policies and processes is not enough, co-workers must follow them for meaningful analytics and reports.
  • Bad data: This is a subset of bad behavior, but it indicates other problems as well, such as defects in systems. If the data is bad, the analytics and reports will be meaningless. If you think it is because of bad data, better roll up your sleeves and get to work cleaning the bad data.

Once the above three benefits are realized, even partially, true insight will be available. It could be that 50% of your data is unusable, but you can get insight from the remaining 50%. Don’t ignore the problems that can be identified and solved by assuming or pretending that you need perfect processes, behavior, and data.

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