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EXECUTION The Discipline of Getting Things Done Larry Bossidy and Ram Charan Crown Business, 2002, 268 pp. |
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BosExec 03-1-4 |
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Every business has three processes: strategies, personnel, and operations. Desired results occur when the right people and strategy are linked to an operating process that results in the implementation of specific programs and actions with accountability. Leading these processes is the job of the leader. He must force the organization to face reality via robust dialogue among the doers. Bossidy is chairman and former
CEO of Honeywell International. Ram
Charan is an advisor to CEOs. The
book has a nice balance of principles, examples, and commentary. Section 1: Execution: the gap between promise and
delivery Section 2: The Building Blocks Section 3: The Three Core Processes Execution has not been
adequately explained, but it is the biggest issue facing business and the
behaviors comprising it must be mastered.
Leaders often emphasize high-level strategy and minimize
implementation. Execution is a
discipline, a system. It is critical
for success. It has to be built into
a company’s strategy, goals and culture.
And the leader must be deeply engaged in it. (6-7) “The main
requirement is that you as a leader have to be deeply and passionately
engaged in your organization and honest about its realities with others and
yourself.” (8) Part I. Why Execution is Needed
One of the biggest problems facing many good companies is regularly failing to produce promised results. (14) There is a gap between what the leaders want to achieve and the ability of their organizations to achieve it. “But unless you translate big thoughts into concrete steps for action, they’re pointless.” (19) “No worthwhile strategy can be
planned without taking into account the organization’s ability to execute
it.” “In its most fundamental sense,
execution is a systematic way of exposing reality and acting on it. Most companies don’t face reality very
well. The core of Jack Welch’s style
of management was “that he forced realism into all of GE’s management
processes.” (21 -22) Regarding the annual review of
plans: “Typically too the reviews are
not particularly interactive. People
sit passively watching PowerPoint presentations. They don’t ask questions.
They don’t debate, and as a result they don’t get much useful
outcome. People leave with no
commitments to the action plans they’ve helped create. This is a formula for failure. You need robust dialogue to surface the
realities of the business.” (22-3) “The leader must be in charge of
getting things done by running the three core processes—picking other
leaders, setting the strategic direction, and conducting operations. These actions are the substance of
execution, and leaders cannot delegate them regardless of the size of the
organization.” (24) “Only the leader can set the
tone of the dialogue in the organization.
Dialogue is the core of culture and the basic unit of work. How people talk to each other absolutely
determines how well the organization will function.” “Is it candid and reality-based, raising
the right questions, debating them, and finding realistic solutions?” (24) “When things are running well, I
spend 20 percent of my time on the people process. When I’m rebuilding an organization, it’s 40 percent.” “I mean really getting to know people.” “I’ll go to a meeting of the whole staff
and listen to what they have to say.”
(26) “The leader who executes often
does not even have to tell people what to do; she asks questions so they can
figure out what they need to do.” (28) “Execution has to be in the
culture.” (30) Re one failure: The goals were unrealistic from the
beginning. “If the leaders had had an
open dialogue with the manufacturing people, they might have learned about
the manufacturing obstacle, but that wasn’t in their makeup. They just handed the numbers down.” “…they’re worse than useless if they’re
totally unrealistic, or if the people who have to meet them aren’t given the
chance to debate them beforehand and take ownership of them.” First involve all the people
responsible for the outcome, including the key production people, in shaping
the plan. Second, Ask the people how,
specifically, they are going to achieve the results on a timely basis and
within cost. If they don’t have the
answers, get them before launching the plan.
Third, Set milestones for evaluating progress. Fourth, Set up contingency plans to deal
with the unexpected. (38-9) Re McGinn’s failure at Lucent:
“A leader with a more comprehensive understanding of the organization would
not have set such unrealistic goals.”
“Lucent didn’t have the capability to get its products to market fast
enough.” (There was also) “failure to
understand changes in the external environment.” In addition, they set out in too many directions at once.
(43-4) Re Brown’s success at EDS:
“Brown jumped out into the playing field.
First, he got to know the company intimately, traveling around the
globe for three months, meeting people at all levels formally and informally
to talk and listen. In weekly e-mails
that he sent to the whole organization, he not only told employees what he
was thinking but also asked them to respond and make suggestions.” (47) Part II. The Building Blocks of ExecutionBuilding Block One: The Leader’s Seven Essential Behaviors· “Know
your people and your business. · Insist
on realism. · Set
clear goals and priorities. · Follow
through. · Reward
the doers. · Expand people’s
capabilities. · Know
yourself.” (57) “In companies that don’t execute, the leaders are usually out of touch with the day-to-day realities.” “They don’t know their organizations comprehensively, and their people don’t really know them.” (58) “The personal connection is
especially critical when a leader starts something new.” “Good, important ideas get launched with
much fanfare, but six months or a year later they’re dead…. Why?
Down in the organization, the managers feel that the last thing they
need is one more time-consuming project of uncertain merit and outcome, so
they blow it off. ‘This too will
pass,’ they say, ….” (65) “Realism is the heart of
execution.” “You start by being
realistic yourself. Then you make
sure realism is the goal of all dialogues in the organization.” (67)’ “When I go out to visit
facilities, I ask people, ‘What are we doing right in this business, and what
are we doing wrong in this business?’
Then I’ll ask, ‘What do you like about Honeywell, and what don’t you like?’” (68)’ “Focus on a very few clear
priorities that everyone can grasp.”
(69)’ “Follow through. Clear, simple goals don’t mean much if
nobody takes them seriously.” In too
many meetings everyone agrees on the idea but people leave without specific actions
and time frames. Nothing
happens. (71) “The most effective way to coach
is to observe a person in action and then provide specific useful
feedback.” “The skill of the coach is
the art of questioning. Asking incisive
questions forces people to thin, to discover, to search.” (74)
“Your aim is to ask the questions that bring out the realities and
give people the help they need to correct problems.” (76) “It takes emotional fortitude to
be open to whatever information you need, whether it’s what you like to hear
or not. …to accept points of view
that are the opposite of yours…, and accept challenges in group
settings.” (78) Building Block Two: Creating the Framework for Cultural Change“The ‘soft’ stuff—people’s
beliefs and behaviors—is at least as important as hard stuff, such as
organizational structure, if not more so.”
(85) “Cultural change gets real when
your aim is execution.” “You need to
change people’s behavior so that they produce results. First you tell people clearly what results
you’re looking for. Then you discuss
how to get those results, as a key element of the coaching process. Then you reward people for producing the
results.” (86) “Behaviors are beliefs turned
into action. Behaviors deliver the
results.” The concern here is “norms
of behavior: the accepted, expected ways groups of people behave in the
corporate setting…, how people work together.” (91) “The foundation of changing
behavior is linking rewards to performance and making the linkages
transparent.” (92) “You should reward not just strong
achievements on numbers but also the desirable behaviors that people actually
adopt.” (94) Help people master the new
behaviors. Coach. Teach people to break a major concept down
into smaller critical tasks that can be executed in the shorter term. (96) Often people seem to agree in
meetings but nothing happens because nobody states their misgivings. They simply let the project die
quietly. (97) “You cannot have an execution
culture without robust dialogue—one that brings reality to the surface
through openness, candor, and informality.”
“Robust dialogue starts when people go in with open minds. They want to hear new information and
choose the best alternatives….”
People speak candidly.
“Informality is critical to candor.”
“The aim is to invite multiple viewpoints, see the pros and cons of
each one, and try honestly and candidly to construct new viewpoints.” And finally the robust dialogue ends with
closure. People agree about what each
person has to do and when. They
commit to it in open forum and they are accountable for outcomes. (103, 104) “The reason most companies don’t
face reality very well is that their dialogues are ineffective.” (103) Building Block Three: The Job No Leader Should Delegate—Having the Right People in the Right Place Given the many uncertainties of
businesses, “the one thing they can control—the quality of their
people…” (109) “The quality of their people is the best
competitive differentiator.” “Dell
ultimately out-competed Compaq, a far bigger company, because Michael Dell
took great pains to have the right people in the right jobs….” “If you look at any business that’s
consistently successful, you’ll find that its leaders focus intensely and relentlessly
on people selection.” (110) “Leaders need to commit as much
as 40 percent of their time and emotional energy, in one form or another, to
selecting, appraising, and developing people.” (118) In investigating a potential
hire, the most important question is: How good is this person at getting
things done? (119) Part III The Three Core Processes of ExecutionThe People Process; Making the Link with Strategy and Operations“A robust people process does
three things. It evaluates
individuals accurately and in depth.
It provides a framework for identifying and developing the (future)
leadership talent…. And it fills the
leadership pipeline that’s the basis of a strong succession plan.” (141) “Meeting medium- and long-term
milestones greatly depends on having a pipeline of promising and promotable
leaders.” “Nothing is more important
to an organization’s competitive advantage.”
(150) HR has to be linked to strategy
and operations. (166) A robust people process requires
integrity, honesty, a common approach, common language, and frequency. Above all, candid dialogue is
critical. (172) The Strategy Process: Making the Link with People and Operations(The) substance and detail (of a
robust strategy) must come from the minds of the people who are closest to
the action and who understand their markets, their resources, and their
strengths and weaknesses.” “In
creating it, you as a leader have to ask whether and how your organization
can do the things that are needed to achieve its goals.” “Once you have developed the plan, you
need to ask: How good are the assumptions upon which the plan hinges?” “Do you have the organizational capability
to execute the plan?” “If a strategy
does not address the hows, it is a candidate for failure.” (178-9)
A business strategy clearly lays
out where it is now, where it will be going, and how it will get there. It looks at costs, analyzes risks, and
includes flexibility in the case of failure or new opportunities. It gives you plenty of room to
maneuver. “You get specific when
you’re deciding the action part of the plan, where you link it with people
and operations.” (184-5) “To be effective, a strategy has
to be constructed and owned by those who will execute it, namely the line
people.” (185) “People tend to look at their
businesses from the inside out—that is, they get so focused on making and
selling their products that they lose awareness of the needs and buying
behaviors of their customers. The
issue is simply understanding the specific people who make the purchasing
decisions and their buying behavior.”
(190-1) “An astonishing number of
strategies fail because leaders don’t make a realistic assessment of whether
the organization can execute the plan.”
(195) “Every business has half a dozen
or so critical issues—the ones that can badly hurt it or prevent it from
capitalizing on new opportunities or reaching its objectives. Addressing these usually requires research
and thought.” “Many strategies fall
apart because the right critical issues aren’t raised.” (201,203) The Operations Process: Making the Link with Strategy and PeopleMany companies translate their
strategic plans into operations via budgeting process. But budgeting doesn’t deal with how—or
even whether—you can get the results.
It is disconnected from reality.
The operating plan provides the
path for reaching the targets. “It
ties a thread through people, strategy, and operations, and it translates
into assigning goals and objectives for the next year.” “All of the people accountable for
executing the plan need to help construct it.” (226-8) Sound assumptions are the key to
realistic goals. You cannot set
realistic goals until you’ve debated the assumptions behind them. Get them all out in the open with everyone
present and a leader who asks penetrating questions. Then test them by going to customers or
some other source to be sure they’re valid.
(236-7) The first assumption: “Who is the customer? How does he buy it and why? What’s the need? How long will the need last?
What is the competition doing?
Is your value proposition good enough?” (239) These are operating plans, not hopes and dreams. This is about reality. (259) Key lessons: · Get to
know your organization. Get down
where the action is, talk with people at all levels. Ask questions and listen. · Get the doers
in on the planning. Face reality by
inviting candid discussion in an informal setting. Challenge all facets of the goals and plans. Examine assumptions. Test them with the customers. · Agree on action plans with checkpoints. Follow through with regular evaluation. Examine reasons for failure. Make adjustments. · Reward results and desired behaviors. |
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