The Leadership ChoiceEvery home and every organization has structure. Structure is the invisible field that influences behavior. Systems expert Peter Senge of M.I.T. defines structure as “choices made over time.” Choices made over time becomes the “way we do things”. The way we do things comes from the way we think--our beliefs, assumptions, and perceptions. Every relationship and every organization that you are a part of has a structure. You influence that structure by the choices you make. Structure is what compels people to act in certain ways.For example, I went to a book store (Schuler’s Books and Music) and asked about a certain book. The sales associate looked it up, led me to it, took it off the shelf, and handed it to me. All of this was done with cheerfulness and a desire to help me. I know that if I go into that store and ask for a book, I will get the same response. That’s structure. All the associates treat customers that way. Why is that? It is because leadership has communicated and modeled that b
e if the business is on track to achieve each objective. These are also called KPIs (Key Performance Indicators) or metrics. As with objectives, focus is key. Each objective should have at most three measures attached. These measures should be the best indicators of achievement for that strategic goal. Careful consideration should go into measure selection to ensure that the desired behaviors will be encouraged by each measure and that they will indeed indicate whether strategic needs are being met.
Stoplight Indicators – Are You On Track?
After selecting the most important measures, it’s critical to set performance goals or targets so that the measure owner and management will understand expectations. Based upon these goals, certain thresholds may be set, which will trigger a visual performance indicator
Little White Lies - Are they Worth the Risk?There are many circumstances in which it would be easy to enlist the aid of 'white lies' in the era we live in today. 'The check is in the mail' when in actuality it won't be mailed until tomorrow. 'She/he is in a meeting - out to lunch - gone for the day' instead of stating that she/he is unavailable and take a message. 'No we didn't get your fax' when it has actually come through hours before but gone unnoticed and unattended by the staff. A majority of humanity reacts favorably to honesty and integrity.Often when the word 'integrity' is spoken it brings to mind a picture of trustworthiness and truthfulness.Definitions for the word 'integrity' are: 1. Wholeness, Completeness 2. unimpaired condition, soundness 3. honesty, sincerity. A more current definition indicates that integrity is 'comprised of the personal inner sense of wholeness - an honesty and consistency of uprightness of character'. Thus a relationship with an individual or business that promotes integrity would sug
Balanced Scorecard
In the late 1980s, vast numbers of companies were rapidly adopting Total Quality Management (TQM) principles, yet many of these organizations found themselves struggling to tie TQM to their bottom-line results, because TQM efforts tended to focus on isolated improvement projects that too often were not directly linked to strategic goals.
Kaplan & Norton Studied Leading Organizations
Recognizing this problem, Doctors Robert S. Kaplan and David Norton studied many organizations that were overcoming this problem and successfully creating this strategic linkage to improvement. From these studies, The Balanced Scorecard (BSC) concept was born and described in a 1992 Harvard Business Review article and in subsequent books by Doctors Kaplan and Norton.
What is a Balanced Scorecard?
The Balanced Scorecard approach suggests that companies examine performance across a wide range of “balanced” indicators, rather than the more typical approach wherein executive management teams focus almost exclusively on high-level financial outcomes. This helps a company focus on broader aspects of its strategy and mission by exposing the causal relationships amongst all of an organization’s key “stakeholders,” which includes not only its financial stakeholders, but also its customers, employees, and other constituents.
Perspectives on Performance
A company’s critical stakeholders and most important strategic focus areas are represented on Balanced Scorecards within what are called perspectives. These groupings should show the cause and effect relationships between the company’s selected focus areas. Using the perspectives described by Kaplan and Norton, this would mean a Balanced Scorecard would be organized with the “Financial” perspective at the top, followed by the “Customer perspective,” then “Internal Processes,” and finally “Learning and Growth.”
Tailoring Perspectives to Other Organization Types
The Kaplan and Norton perspectives work well in for-profit companies since the fiscal outcomes are shown as most important. Other types of organizations, including not-for-profit associations, governmental organizations, and healthcare systems often select additional or alternative perspectives to more appropriately represent their mission. For example, “Clinical Outcomes” is a common top-level perspective among hospitals, whereas “Constituent Satisfaction” is a helpful perspective for many gove.
Objectives – What You Want to Achieve
Grouped under each perspective should be an organization's “critical few” objectives – ideally no more than 10 of the organization’s most important organizational goals. These should be written in short, verb-noun format (e.g., “Increase sales of core products”) and should reflect the current year’s strategic plan. Objectives should articulate the business needs of the organization, so it is critical to determine these before proceeding to the measures. Too many organizations jump straight to the measures without first framing the objectives, which can lead to measures that do not adequately address strategic opportunities.
Measures – Your Basis for Achievement
The next step is to identify measures that will best determine if the business is on track to achieve each objective. These are also called KPIs (Key Performance Indicators) or metrics. As with objectives, focus is key. Each objective should have at most three measures attached. These measures should be the best indicators of achievement for that strategic goal. Careful consideration should go into measure selection to ensure that the desired behaviors will be encouraged by each measure and that they will indeed indicate whether strategic needs are being met.
Stoplight Indicators – Are You On Track?
After selecting the most important measures, it’s critical to set performance goals or targets so that the measure owner and management will understand expectations. Based upon these goals, certain thresholds may be set, which will trigger a visual performance indicator
An Introduction To LeadsLeads are tips or directives offered to gain an insight into a subject. There are varies kinds of leads that an inquiring individual can have access to. Leads can be related to a diverse range of topics like mortgage leads, financial leads, life insurance leads and a host of other subjects. Good salespeople have to create a supply of targeted referrals through leads, and maintaining a positive, straightforward attitude does this. Remember leads create referrals and referrals lead to potential business. This lead generation system is imperative to establishing a successful business. Taking advantage of leads that land referrals is not only helping your business, but it's your potential client's lead and referral networks as well.A continual supply of guidance or leads into the search channel of any enterprise is the key to resounding success in one's business. Creating an excellent list of targets is crucial and can go a long way in giving a boost to a business as far as its growth potential
orecard?
The Balanced Scorecard approach suggests that companies examine performance across a wide range of “balanced” indicators, rather than the more typical approach wherein executive management teams focus almost exclusively on high-level financial outcomes. This helps a company focus on broader aspects of its strategy and mission by exposing the causal relationships amongst all of an organization’s key “stakeholders,” which includes not only its financial stakeholders, but also its customers, employees, and other constituents.
Perspectives on Performance
A company’s critical stakeholders and most important strategic focus areas are represented on Balanced Scorecards within what are called perspectives. These groupings should show the cause and effect relationships between the company’s selected focus areas. Using the perspectives described by Kaplan and Norton, this would mean a Balanced Scorecard would be organized with the “Financial” perspective at the top, followed by the “Customer perspective,” then “Internal Processes,” and finally “Learning and Growth.”
Tailoring Perspectives to Other Organization Types
The Kaplan and Norton perspectives work well in for-profit companies since the fiscal outcomes are shown as most important. Other types of organizations, including not-for-profit associations, governmental organizations, and healthcare systems often select additional or alternative perspectives to more appropriately represent their mission. For example, “Clinical Outcomes” is a common top-level perspective among hospitals, whereas “Constituent Satisfaction” is a helpful perspective for many gove.
Objectives – What You Want to Achieve
Grouped under each perspective should be an organization's “critical few” objectives – ideally no more than 10 of the organization’s most important organizational goals. These should be written in short, verb-noun format (e.g., “Increase sales of core products”) and should reflect the current year’s strategic plan. Objectives should articulate the business needs of the organization, so it is critical to determine these before proceeding to the measures. Too many organizations jump straight to the measures without first framing the objectives, which can lead to measures that do not adequately address strategic opportunities.
Measures – Your Basis for Achievement
The next step is to identify measures that will best determine if the business is on track to achieve each objective. These are also called KPIs (Key Performance Indicators) or metrics. As with objectives, focus is key. Each objective should have at most three measures attached. These measures should be the best indicators of achievement for that strategic goal. Careful consideration should go into measure selection to ensure that the desired behaviors will be encouraged by each measure and that they will indeed indicate whether strategic needs are being met.
Stoplight Indicators – Are You On Track?
After selecting the most important measures, it’s critical to set performance goals or targets so that the measure owner and management will understand expectations. Based upon these goals, certain thresholds may be set, which will trigger a visual performance indicator
Commercial Collections Billing Practices AdviceSwiftness is the key to collecting past due commercial accounts because commercial accounts depreciate more faster than consumer accounts.In creating and implementing a billing system, a credit grantor should recognize that time is the safest refuge of any debtor. The more time they are given, the less likely they are to pay. Hence, sales documents should be explicit about payment terms, return privileges, interest charges on overdue accounts, guarantee and service costs.Various Commercial Collection Programs UsedA series of letters used together with an account aging sheet or data printout will help to track slow-paying accounts.All systems should have an organized and mechanical follow-up of accounts at regular intervals, for instance, 30, 60 and 90 days past due.It is essential to establish regular billing and commercial collections procedures. Follow up on every account to the point where contact—or lack of contact—with the customer indicates some alternative
lected focus areas. Using the perspectives described by Kaplan and Norton, this would mean a Balanced Scorecard would be organized with the “Financial” perspective at the top, followed by the “Customer perspective,” then “Internal Processes,” and finally “Learning and Growth.”
Tailoring Perspectives to Other Organization Types
The Kaplan and Norton perspectives work well in for-profit companies since the fiscal outcomes are shown as most important. Other types of organizations, including not-for-profit associations, governmental organizations, and healthcare systems often select additional or alternative perspectives to more appropriately represent their mission. For example, “Clinical Outcomes” is a common top-level perspective among hospitals, whereas “Constituent Satisfaction” is a helpful perspective for many gove.
Objectives – What You Want to Achieve
Grouped under each perspective should be an organization's “critical few” objectives – ideally no more than 10 of the organization’s most important organizational goals. These should be written in short, verb-noun format (e.g., “Increase sales of core products”) and should reflect the current year’s strategic plan. Objectives should articulate the business needs of the organization, so it is critical to determine these before proceeding to the measures. Too many organizations jump straight to the measures without first framing the objectives, which can lead to measures that do not adequately address strategic opportunities.
Measures – Your Basis for Achievement
The next step is to identify measures that will best determine if the business is on track to achieve each objective. These are also called KPIs (Key Performance Indicators) or metrics. As with objectives, focus is key. Each objective should have at most three measures attached. These measures should be the best indicators of achievement for that strategic goal. Careful consideration should go into measure selection to ensure that the desired behaviors will be encouraged by each measure and that they will indeed indicate whether strategic needs are being met.
Stoplight Indicators – Are You On Track?
After selecting the most important measures, it’s critical to set performance goals or targets so that the measure owner and management will understand expectations. Based upon these goals, certain thresholds may be set, which will trigger a visual performance indicator
Train Me a Habit - How Organizations Are Using Training to Gain a Competitive EdgeIt was a sound I hadn't heard before, a 'ping' followed by a long silence. This sequence was repeated until the executive answered his phone. This distinctive ring tone was like the sound a NASA deep space probe might make as it searches the outer reaches of our solar system. While this executive was one of more than a dozen seated in a non-descript conference room, this distraction was enough to break our concentration and further prohibit a few key messages from developing out of his organization's presentation for a multi-million dollar opportunity. I started thinking about NASA's Galileo probe crashing into Jupiter's moon, Europa, while the executive answered his phone. Now there was one long ping followed by continuing silence. As he hung up his phone, I wondered why voice mail was even invented. How does a speaker compete with cell phones going off in the same room as the presentation? What about other executives walking in on a training class to yank a key employee out of the room?
ul perspective for many gove.
Objectives – What You Want to Achieve
Grouped under each perspective should be an organization's “critical few” objectives – ideally no more than 10 of the organization’s most important organizational goals. These should be written in short, verb-noun format (e.g., “Increase sales of core products”) and should reflect the current year’s strategic plan. Objectives should articulate the business needs of the organization, so it is critical to determine these before proceeding to the measures. Too many organizations jump straight to the measures without first framing the objectives, which can lead to measures that do not adequately address strategic opportunities.
Measures – Your Basis for Achievement
The next step is to identify measures that will best determine if the business is on track to achieve each objective. These are also called KPIs (Key Performance Indicators) or metrics. As with objectives, focus is key. Each objective should have at most three measures attached. These measures should be the best indicators of achievement for that strategic goal. Careful consideration should go into measure selection to ensure that the desired behaviors will be encouraged by each measure and that they will indeed indicate whether strategic needs are being met.
Stoplight Indicators – Are You On Track?
After selecting the most important measures, it’s critical to set performance goals or targets so that the measure owner and management will understand expectations. Based upon these goals, certain thresholds may be set, which will trigger a visual performance indicator
Can A Minus Become A Plus?Even on a great day at work there are so many things that can go badly. Any little glitch can become a negative, stress-inducing experience: the staff member who arrives late leaving the company short-handed, you placed an order for needed inventory in plenty of time but your vendor shipped to it to the wrong address which caused you to be out of stock, the customer who was told her order would be ready on Thursday but now needs it Wednesday, the invoice for “The Acme Company” that should have been filed under “A” for “Acme” instead of “T” for “The”, and on and on. Each of these small glitches caused problems, wasted time, added stress, and caused unhappy customers and staff. Even worse, while everyone runs around fixing problems, other crucial work does not get done. If you were keeping score, each glitch would earn a “minus” grade.Wouldn’t it be better when, at the end of the day, you gave your company a grade and the daily report card was solidly on the “plus” side of the equation? I
e if the business is on track to achieve each objective. These are also called KPIs (Key Performance Indicators) or metrics. As with objectives, focus is key. Each objective should have at most three measures attached. These measures should be the best indicators of achievement for that strategic goal. Careful consideration should go into measure selection to ensure that the desired behaviors will be encouraged by each measure and that they will indeed indicate whether strategic needs are being met.
Stoplight Indicators – Are You On Track?
After selecting the most important measures, it’s critical to set performance goals or targets so that the measure owner and management will understand expectations. Based upon these goals, certain thresholds may be set, which will trigger a visual performance indicator to appear (most often a red, yellow, or green arrow). These allow the measure owner and others viewing the scorecard to quickly spot problem areas that require additional focus or resources.
Initiatives – Projects that Address Performance Gaps
Finally, an organization should identify initiatives that will address critical areas of underperformance. Initiatives are time-specific improvement projects (with identified start- and end-dates) that are aligned to strategic, yet underperforming measures or objectives. A quick look at the red and yellow stoplight indicators on a scorecard often provides a good first step for assigning new initiatives or for evaluating priorities for stretched improvement resources. Close attention should be paid to initiatives, since these should help close the gaps on your Balanced Scorecard (and turn yellow stoplight indicators into greens). If this is not happening, initiatives should be reevaluated to ensure they are addressing the root cause of the performance gap.
Key to Success: Creating a Balanced Scorecard Framework
A Balanced Scorecard should be thought of as more than a single scorecard; to get real business benefits, it must be deployed as a framework of linked, aligned scorecards that are tailored to each area of the company. A cascaded scorecard framework allows the organization to communicate its strategy from the top down, aligning employees throughout the business to specific, measurable actions that each contribute to the strategy.
Cascading Scorecards
To cascade scorecards down and across various business units, functional areas, and management groups, you must translate the objectives (the verb-noun goal statements) and the measures (indicators of achievement), making them relevant to that area’s business processes and outputs, while maintaining alignment to the strategic objective one level up. This type of linkage and alignment is what makes the Balanced Scorecard so powerful. When done correctly, organizations create a predictive, actionable performance framework that truly drives success. Expect that this will take some time and significant effort. Many large organizations cascade scorecards just one or two management levels at a time.
Getting a Scorecard Framework Started
To jump start the development of a Balanced Scorecard management system, it is often beneficial to select a qualified consulting vendor. This can be especially helpful for companies just learning about the concepts, so a solid foundation and understanding of cascading techniques and best practices may be developed. Executive and management coaching can also greatly help an organization’s leadership understand how to manage via the Balanced Scorecard.
Managing the Framework Long Term with Balanced Scorecard Software
To be successful, a Balanced Scorecard framework must be gradually integrated into existing business processes, such as strategic planning cycles, budgeting processes, and monthly business reviews. Organizations that are most successful at this full integration find that automating a Balanced Scorecard framework using software is essential to achieving long-term buy-in and focus.
Balanced Scorecard software helps ensure that content stays up-to-date and is
As with the martial arts Black Belt, a Six Sigma Black Belt is an individual who has achieved and proven their Six Sigma abilities. The rank of Black Belt is an acknowledgment of actual process improvement by verifiable means. You can not “buy” a black belt. You must earn it through training and demonstrated application.
The feeling of being misunderstood, ignored, or rejected creates an uncomfortable environment that manifests it self in a high degree of employee dissatisfaction. Feeling understood makes you feel as if you exercise a degree of control over the process and impacts its outcome. Vocal training and the confidence it creates increases call and contact center agents’ feeling that they have authority over the communication exchange.
IT Sales requires not to give away the farm. Do your research before-hand, make sure the client is someone you can work with and move them into profitable IT sales.