Saturday, April 19, 2008

The "Magic" of Getting Things Done



I am continually amazed at how often people fail to demonstrate the ability to "get stuff done".

Some call it a failure of leadership. Some say it's due to a lack of organization. Or maybe it's simply poor implementation skills. Or a lack of a coherent strategic vision.

Truth is, it could be any (or all) of these things.

I am not an expert, but I have learned a few things over the years.

The first, is. If you have ten #1 priorities, you don't have any priorities at all. You simply have a list. And the problem with an unprioritized big list, is that it allows those responsible for the list to "touch" each task, without ever moving any single one forward significantly. The "overhead" it takes to juggle ten initiatives soaks up valuable time you could be spending on completing a task.

So, prioritize. If necessary, trim the list to a few key items. The rest can wait. Truth is, you're not making much progress on them anyway, so where's the harm?

The second rule is to assign ownership to each task. If a "team" is responsible for the completion of a task, no ONE person owns the outcome. And so each team member gains comfort in the thought that a lack of progress is probably someone else's fault.

Thirdly, ask yourself, "Have I engaged the right resources?" For example, if you're undertaking a revamp of your Job Costing processes, do you include shop floor supervisors who collect and assign labor costs? Is purchasing involved? Receiving? Accounting? Do you need someone from payroll to verify that labor hours assigned to jobs balance to payroll hours? Identifying all the process "touch points" and securing the involvement of expertise from all areas, is a basic requirement to move forward in any substantive way.

Fourth, "paint the picture". Help your team understand why this initiative is a priority. Paint the picture of what the future process might look like - what the business benefits of improvement are. Establish buy-in from the team. Remember that these people already have full time jobs. Just because they're on your team doesn't mean you have their support or buy-in. At the end of the day, each participant should be able to understand "what's in it for me?"

Fifth, parse the project. Large change initiatives are scary and daunting. If you can break up your project into manageable and easily understood milestones, you improve team understanding of each task and can easily measure progress. I always think of the old joke: How do you eat an elephant? (Answer: One bite at a time.)

Sixth. Spend your time executing the tasks, not managing the project. Use tools that allow for simple collaboration and project updating (SharePoint, Basecamp, Google Docs) - whatever works for you. This will allow you less time in meeting updates and more time to address issues and make decisions.

Careful observers of these rules will have, by now, understood the "magic" of getting things done. Design your project by providing answers to the questions: Who, What, When, Where, Why and How?