Volume 9 | Issue 3
It’s happened to all of us: we’ve read books, attended seminars or benchmarked other companies and gleaned ideas we decided to introduce to our organization. Then we brought them back to our team, announced our new direction and felt gratified as others nodded in agreement and affirmed our genius.
Then, something happened. Actually, nothing happened. After the first few steps toward change were taken, momentum fizzled and died. It wasn’t a sudden or violent death. In fact you hardly noticed it. But, that didn’t alter the fact that your once grand ideas are now buried six feet under. If you are wondering why this happened, it’s probably for one of the following reasons:
The influences weren’t on board. Before embarking on any major change initiative, it’s vital you gather your inner circle together, explain what you’re thinking and why, gain their input and buy-in and then announce the change to the rest of the organization. If you can’t influence the influencers, your initiative is dead.
Needed Vision
There wasn’t a clearly articulated vision. If your desired outcome is covered in fog, detractors will leverage that cloudiness to distort and water down your real goal. Make your objective crystal clear. Here’s how:
The most effective way to communicate a change initiative is to live it. Your deeds must be consistent with what you say you want, and where you want to go. In other words, if part of your strategy is to maintain higher performance standards in your business, and become less tolerant of poor performers, you must follow through by reprimanding or removing those who don’t hit expected standards.
The best time to change is before you have to, not when your back is against the wall. J.F.K. said the best time to fix the roof is when the sun is shining. Don’t wait until it leaks, or worse, caves in. With all the signs of change and challenge in the manufacturing world, if you fail to wake up, get urgent, thaw out the frozen status quo and innovate rather than stagnate, you have a death wish for your business. The signs of change are abundant and the pace is accelerating. You can change, or be changed, but either way something is going to change.
Dave Anderson is the author of: If You Don’t Make Waves You’ll Drown: 10 Hard-Charging Strategies for Leading in Politically Correct Times (Wiley, October 2005). He is a speaker and trainer with management expertise who earned his business reputation by leading top national car dealerships to sales of $300,000,000.
Tune in to hear from Chris Brown, Vice President of Sales at CADDi, a leading manufacturing solutions provider. We delve into Chris’ role of expanding the reach of CADDi Drawer which uses advanced AI to centralize and analyze essential production data to help manufacturers improve efficiency and quality.