Shine: How do You Manage the 'Unmeasurable'?
 

Issue 11 - October 2005

>> How do You Manage the ‘Unmeasurable’?

Have you ever noticed that some of the great stuff you want to show up in your business is not easily measured?  It’s easy to measure quantities, of money, production, sales calls, numbers of time the phone rings before it’s answered…  Because it’s easier, businesses tend to default to measuring and managing only straightforwardly quantifiable things.                       

Quantifiable stuff has to be measured in business, it’s true.  You’d be failing in your accountability to your bosses, your bankers and your shareholders if you didn’t do it.  And by and large most business leaders make a pretty good job of measuring the results these people wish to see.  

But these alone don’t tell you that everything you want to happen is happening.  What about teamwork, values, customer service, people’s attitudes?  Of course, if a thing is worth doing, the value will fall to the bottom line - eventually.  However, bottom-line results take longer to show up – they are ‘lagging indicators’ of business success.  By the time you’ve missed your revenue target, it’s by definition too late to do something about it, this time around.  And it’s sometimes possible in the short term to produce apparently good bottom-line results by using inappropriate business practices, which will in the longer term actually damage your business.

So how do You Measure the ‘Other Stuff’?

How do you measure that you are making progress in all those good things you instinctively know are at the root of a successful, satisfying, sustainable business?  It may seem that these things cannot be measured, but if you ‘know it when you see it’, then you are using a set of criteria.  You might dismiss it as ‘gut feel’, but that would be a mistake.  You will find there is a remarkable correlation between people’s ‘gut feel’ about what constitutes great teamwork, or good customer service, for example.  People are by and large operating from a set of reproducible criteria.

With a bit of rigorous thinking, you can come up with a set of clear objective statements for the target behaviour.  Then it’s a short step to being able to note instances of the behaviour being employed, to setting targets for increasing the incidence of the behaviour, and to creating plans for improving performance.

What Might it Look Like in Practice?

Let’s look at the area of Performance.  Some Performance targets - what concrete, tangible, measurable targets you want to achieve - are pretty easy to come up with.  How often, though do you also set clearly measurable expectations for how people produce results?  How would it be for example if you were to assess your organisation against the following standards:

  • Underperformance is not tolerated
  • People never make excuses for underperformance
  • We don’t waste time doing irrelevant things
  • The results of the business are in line with its strategy
  • Only activity which supports the strategy is recognised and rewarded

Using clear statements like these of the ideal state you would like to see, you can make an honest assessment of where you are and where you would like to get to in your business, without it being too intimidating or abstract for people to grasp.  The gap between where you are now and where you aspire to be gives you the basic material to draw up a credible action plan. 

Some Pitfalls!

There are two major pitfalls to avoid.  Be careful to use the statements, not to criticise and complain about the current state of the business, but to inspire people, and as the raw material for building an effective way forward.  And be willing to use professional help where needed, especially when dealing with the need to shift fundamental mindsets and deep-rooted excuses for underperformance.

Staying on Track

Whether you are dealing with a whole organisation, a team, or an individual, with a bit of help you can always define very accurately what you are looking for.  Sometimes it helps to have someone ‘interview’ you to be able to put words to your ’gut feel’.  The effort is well worth it, though.  What you end up with is a clear articulation of your values, standards and expectations that can be measured and therefore managed proactively. This provides you, your colleagues and staff with a clear guide to the steps they need to take to achieve success in your organisation.  And you don’t need to wait for the end of the year, or the quarter, to know you are on track for tangible, quantifiable success!

>> Some Things to Try

Assess Your Organisation…

Take a look at the bullet points listed in the article above under ‘Performance’.  These are some critical underlying drivers of sustainable business success. 

Here are similar lists for the areas of Strategy:

  • Everyone knows where the company is going
  • Everyone shares the strategy concisely and compellingly
  • Everyone believes it is achievable
  • People are personally excited about it
  • It is translated into practical steps which are owned by specific individuals

…and Culture:

  • We proactively develop our culture when our strategy changes
  • People always demonstrate our stated company values
  • Everybody loves coming to work
  • The company's culture is managed as explicitly as the financials
  • People never whine and finger-point
  • People’s primary focus is delivering great service


Now Ask Yourself…

  • To what extent can you say these things of your organisation?
  • Do they work for you?  Would you add anything?  Change anything?
  • How many of your personal performance objectives are targeted towards improving these or similar areas?
  • How much time do you spend in a week, alongside driving for top- and bottom-line results, on developing your organisation?
  • Is there an imbalance?   
  • And what would you like to do about it?


 

>> Develop Your Own Targets

What Works for You?

Use your knowledge and experience of what has worked for you in the past to answer the following questions: 

  • What is important to you, in individuals, teams, organisations?
  • What do you always look for in recruiting someone? 
  • What do you always do when building your team? 
  • What values do you want to see expressed around you? 
  • What attitudes? 
  • What behaviour?

Now consider how far the items on your list contribute to the top and bottom line results of your (part of the) organisation? If you believe they do, then it’s vital that the things you’re talking about get measured.  How else can they be managed and monitored?  Finding a way of measuring these things is an integral part of creating business results, not just a ‘nice to do’!


David Maister, a specialist in the management of professional service firms, surveyed 29 companies in 15 countries to determine whether positive employee attitudes really correlate to corporate success.  Maister supports his findings with compelling data to demonstrate how and why firms that emphasise the highest standards of employee professionalism are invariably more financially successful than those that don't.

 

>> Thank You for Reading...

The next issue of this Newsletter will be the 12th and will mark its first anniversary.  We love writing it and developing our ideas, but we'd really like to know if it's useful to youHow do you find it?  We know you open it - do you read it?  And if you do, how useful is it?  Is there anything you'd like us to include that would be helpful to you?  We'll publish any great ideas or feedback of general interest in our anniversary issue.

Please take a moment to drop us a line or call us and let us know.  We'd love to hear from you.

All the very best,

Kate, Gil and Steve

PS: There's a full archive of all the previous issues on our website, where you can also find a contact telephone number and our email addresses


Please forward this email to any of your friends and colleagues who are also facing similar issues at work.  (And if you’ve received this email from a friend, you can subscribe by sending an email to info@shineconsulting.co.uk with SUBSCRIBE as the subject.)

The Shine Partnership LLP - email: info@shineconsulting.co.uk, Tel: (020) 8788 7545

Previous  Next