shallowbridge.com shallowbridge.com
   Site Home >> About Us >> Privacy >> Terms of Service >> Add Your Link >> Submit Article
Search:   
Add Url
 

Society & Communities

Estate & Realty

Self Enhancement

Home & Garden

Art & Creative

Medical Care

Shopping Online

Lifestyle & Fashion

Sports

Jobs & Careers

Events & News

Music & Entertainment

Policies & Law

Academics & Learning

Food & Recipe

Online & Board Games

Hygiene & Health

Companies & Business

Automobiles

Finance & Banking

Children & Teens

Travel & Vacation

Research & Science

Software & Networking


 

Site Home –› Self Enhancement –› Personal Productivity Enhancement
 

Measurement and Feedback are Vital to Improvement

 

"Ignorance is the starting point for the bliss that leads to oblivion."

Joan, a coffee shop manager watched a customer get up and make his way to the pay phone beside the counter. "Hi. I am calling about the ad you had in the paper for a regional manager a few months ago," Joan overheard her customer saying on the phone. "Oh, I see, the position's been filled. Are you happy with the new manager," the man asked. "You are. OK, thanks."

As the customer went past the counter, Joan said sympathetically, "I couldn't help but over hear your call. Sorry that job wasn't available." Somewhat puzzled, the customer replied in a different voice than he'd used on the phone, "What? Oh, that. Oh, I have the job now. I was just calling to see how I was doing."

High performers actively seek feedback. They know that's the only way to change their course and improve their performance. Good feedback and measurement identifies the "here" that goes with vision's "there". Getting from here to there depends on a solid understanding of where "here" is.

But in most organizations " ? if it's given at all " ? feedback is a distorted jumble of mixed messages and past results. It's almost impossible to draw connections between today's results and yesterday's behavior or today's behavior and tomorrow's results. It's as if we're archers being judged on our ability to hit the target with a few arrows each day. But the target is hidden in the mist. And the results of our daily shots are consolidated and given to us at the end of each month. Then we are rewarded or punished for the "accuracy" of our aim and exhorted to improve.

Feedback is central to learning. Faulty feedback is one of the biggest contributors to organization, team, and personal learning disabilities. If I don't know how I am doing, I can't improve.

The right measurements establish vital feedback loops that show whether the approaches being used are moving the organization toward its goals. They help separate the useful from the useless work.

Effective measures show whether all the training, team activities, experimentation, and process management are producing results. They help managers see through the dust storms raised by so many furious flurries of enthusiastic "busywork" that can create the illusion of progress.

The quality movement and approaches like The Balanced Scorecard have played key roles in the development and refinement of measurements to provide leading indicators of potential problems before they become apparent to everyone. These balance the lagging indicators or backward-focused measures (usually financial) that managers have relied so heavily upon. But the quality and quantity of non-financial performance measures being used is still very low.

We find that there are two main reasons for the low levels of non-financial measures. First, many managers haven't done their homework. They don't realize just how disciplined this field has become. They don't know that a vast array of very effective tools measuring customer/partner, process, organization improvement performance and the like are now readily available. Second, managers aren't comfortable with feedback. They haven't learned how to get it and how give it effectively. So measurements turn into "gotchas" to be avoided.

Author: Jim Clemmer
 
Author Bio:

Jim Clemmer

Jim Clemmer is a bestselling author and internationally acclaimed keynote speaker, workshop/retreat leader, and management team developer on leadership, change, customer focus, culture, teams, and personal growth. During the last 25 years he has delivered over two thousand customized keynote presentations, workshops, and retreats. Jim holds the prestigious Certified Speaking Professional (CSP) designation, the highest earned designation in Professional Speaking. Jim's five international bestselling books include The VIP Strategy: Leadership Skills for Exceptional Performance, Firing on All Cylinders: The Service/Quality System for High-Powered Corporate Performance, Pathways to Performance: A Guide to Transforming Yourself, Your Team and Your Organization, Growing the Distance: Timeless Principles for Personal, Career, and Family Success, and The Leader's Digest: Timeless Principles for Team and Organization Success. Jim co-founded Canada's largest consulting and training firm, The Achieve Group, which was sold to Zenger Miller and is now part of AchieveGlobal. He and is listed in half a dozen Canadian, American, and international Who's Who directories.

This article can be searched using: productivity improvement, productivity improvement consultants
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
World Kindness Day
 
We Are Already Enlightened: Part One
 
What is IMPORTANT to You?
 
Hut is Where the Heart is
 
Time Management Is Supposed To Reduce Stress!
 
Overcoming The Fear Of Money
 
How To Overcome Procrastination Today
 
7 Tips to Creating Success from the "Inside Out"
 
Get On with Your LIfe
 
Stress Management: Dealing with the Bozos Without Becoming Like Them, Part 2
 
 
 
Site Home >> Privacy >> Terms of Service  
Copyright © www.shallowbridge.com - All Rights Reserved