Sunday, July 27, 2008

Are you Essential?

This is a question worth asking yourself periodically.

From time to time we're all guilty of getting into a rut at work - slogging through paperwork, handling routine requests. In most companies, what we do is necessary, but are we essential?

Essential implies belonging to the very nature of a thing and therefore being incapable of removal without destroying the thing itself or its character

What are you bringing to your job that no one else could? Attitude? Efficiency? Ideas? Execution? How vital are you to your company?

Would your fellow employees vote you to the company All Star team?

Better to ask (and answer) this question for yourself, than have someone ask it for you.

The Benefits of a Smaller Company

Thanks to Seth Godin for posting a link to this video, which illustrates the problems of "group think" in larger companies. Not unlike Dilbert cartoons, this video parody struck a little too close to home.

It's what happens when the journey becomes the destination - when work activity trumps results.

Enjoy.

Friday, July 4, 2008

Waste

I've been spending more and more of my time recently looking at reducing process waste.

Once you begin looking for waste, you begin to see it everywhere.

It's like buying a new car. You only notice how many other people are driving YOUR model after you've taken delivery!

In my search for waste (process improvement) I'm involved in departmental projects throughout the company. And I've discovered that my I.T. department is not immune.

If I could magically undo some of our previous practices, I'd start by reducing the I.T. peripheral "clutter".

No more dual monitors.
No more personal printers.
No more PC speakers.
Fewer docking stations.
No more projectors.

We've all heard the arguments FOR all this stuff. I need dual monitors for productivity enhancement. Really? How many more sales will you be delivering if I get you that second monitor? Will you be completing projects faster? How much faster? Will you communicate better? How will we measure this?

Once the first dual monitor shows up, its not productivity that spawns the next one and the next one. It's generally a status issue.

The same holds for personal printers. While everyone knows that printers are idle 99% of the time, it seems like everyone has to have one sitting on their desk. God forbid we should have to walk 30 feet to a high speed network printer!

Consider the walk a printing deterrent. Consider it part of the company health plan.

Sometimes the argument is that we need a personal printer for "sensitive" documents.

Print sensitive documents? As soon as a document is printed, you've virtually given up all security control, unless you immediately shred it or lock it away somewhere. Printing is about the LEAST secure activity you can do. Better to leave the document hidden or password protected on the network than to print it! And think of the waste!

1. Unique printer cartridges require you to keep a wide variety in stock or risk continually ordering unique replacements.
2. It means having to "learn" the quirks of several dozen printer types.
3. It means supplying paper. Filing paper. Shredding paper. Discarding paper. Waste. Waste. Waste.
4. Filing storage (cabinets, floor space, key control, archiving process, off site storage, archival rotation and destruction).

And don't get me started on PC speakers.

There are few things more annoying than listening to a cubemate's latest YouTube selection. These days we can all purchase headphones for less money and greater privacy!

Docking stations do serve a useful purpose - if the laptop travels frequently. But in many cases, docking stations are installed in case a person has to travel. A quick walk around our facility at the end of a workday will demonstrate the point. Laptops sitting in docking stations. Or docking stations allocated to people who seldom travel. And in our company if you have a personal PC at home, you don't need to take your laptop from work to get secure access to your business files.

I'm not immune to wasteful practices. We recently had a projector bulb fail. If you've ever had to replace one, you know they can be expensive - around $350. And they never seem to last as long as the manufacturer says they should. One of my guys asked me to consider a large flat screen TV/monitor. I prefer the resolution better. They install neatly on a wall and they have a longer life than projectors seem to. Larger up front investment (maybe) but better value over the life of the device.

I used to work for a manager who could tell how efficiently a company was run by the cleanliness and organisation of the warehouse. A neat and quiet warehouse indicated to him, that operations were well organized and efficient.

I take the same measure by walking around the office area and counting PC and network peripherals.

(Full disclosure: I may be a freak of nature. My desk is completely empty except for one small pile of papers (mostly handwritten notes to myself) and my laptop.

No docking station. No additional monitor. No personal printer. No in/out box).

It wasn't always that way for me. In previous positions I was comforted by the piles of paper, the unread industry magazines, the overflowing in box. It wasn't necessary. it was just a habit.

It's amazing how execution can improve when you strip away the "peripheral creature comforts".

And you'll enjoy the cost savings too.