Archive for June, 2008

Time Management - Stop The Madness of Mindless Meetings

Meetings…meetings…meetings…I often wonder if anyone out there dislikes meetings as much as I do. Do you have to participate in mindless meeting after mindless meeting in which some of the participants actually seem to believe that they are accomplishing something productive by endlessly talking?

It’s as if no one in an organization is capable of making any decision these days without having a series of meetings to discuss it. Even worse, this “meeting culture” that has invaded the hearts and minds of our businesses has created an army of employees who think that talking about work is the same as doing work.

So what can be done to try and stamp-out these seemingly endless meetings? Let’s tackle the why first. I believe that there are three main reasons for the existence of this seemingly endless parade of lengthy and mindless meetings.

1) Meetings reduce individual responsibility and accountability. Instead of one person making a decision, that person can have a meeting and diffuse both the responsibility and the accountability for a decision.

2) Meetings make some people feel important. It gives them a sense of great importance to conduct or participate in meetings. The longer the meeting drags on, the more important these people feel.

3)It has become too easy to do other things while sitting in a meeting. People take their laptops to meetings and sit and do their own thing. So while one person is busy rattling off whatever it is that they want to rattle off about, other people are sitting there doing something else. This is a key reason why meetings drag on and on. There is no sense of urgency by the participants for meetings to end.

So now let’s discuss what can be done to reduce both the number of and the length of the mindless meetings you must endure. The best way to reduce meetings to the low position on the totem pole that most of them deserve is to create an environment that encourages employees to enthusiastically accept accountability and responsibility.

In other words, give your employees the responsibility, the authority, the freedom, and the duty to do what needs to be done to make your organization a great success. Develop this kind of entrepreneurial mindset within your organization, and watch the mindless meetings begin to fade away.

That’s the best way to make it happen, but there are several rules that you can implement immediately that will help you begin to stamp-out all those mindless time-wasting meetings. These rules may seem extreme to you, but they will work.

First, remove all the chairs from your meeting room. Remove the comfort factor from lounging around in meetings. Create a reason for your employees to only call meetings when absolutely necessary. Create a sense of urgency to make those meetings as short as possible.

Second, prohibit participants from bringing their laptops to meetings. Help everyone focus their complete attention on the issue at hand by removing their biggest distraction. If a computer is needed to properly address the meeting’s purpose, then give one participant the responsibility for bringing and using it during the meeting.

Finally, use the ancient technique utilized by many of my university professors back during my MBA days. Place a limit on the amount of time a meeting participant can talk. That will force them to efficiently organize their thoughts and focus on what is really important instead of endlessly babbling.

Will these three techniques be popular? With those in your organization who have developed an intense dislike of meetings, these steps will be viewed as a move in the right direction. With those in your organization who have come to embrace the “meeting culture” as a good thing, these steps will be viewed in a much less favorable light.

Regardless, you will be clearly demonstrating exactly how you feel about all those meetings that are wasting everyone’s time and sapping so much of their productive energy. And that’s a good thing for everyone in your organization to know. A very good thing.

Gerald Cook holds a Bachelor’s and a Master’s Degree in Business Administration, and he has extensive real-world business consulting experience. Gerald is the author of the “One book every small business owner or manager should read!” Visit http://www.discovergreatsuccess.com for more details.

Copyright 2006 - Gerald Cook. All Rights Reserved. Reprint Rights: You may reprint this article as long as you keep all the links active, do not edit or modify the article in any way, properly attribute the article to the author, and follow all the EzineArticles terms of service for Publishers.

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Basic Management Skills

Recent studies have shown that industrial supervisors are working at less than 60 % of their potential. Basic management skills training is guaranteed to change all this and at such little cost

Manager in context

Most of my adult life has been spent working as a supervisor or manager on industrial projects throughout the world. As the years passed I have become more and more convinced that the supervisor is the most critical of all roles in industry. The supervisor controls the key organizational ground that separates management from the workforce, which is fundamental to introducing and sustaining effective change.

Unfortunately, many managers are given their demanding roles without adequate preparation. People are commonly promoted into management and supervisory positions without being given the basic skills to be a manager. As a result millions of dollars are lost each year and so many personal ambitions are never realized.

Born to lead

Many people believe that good managers, like some good sportsmen, are born, not made. Fortunately research does not support this view. In fact, history shows us the damage caused by these so called natural leaders.

We must be careful not to confuse charisma with leadership skills. Of course some of us are endowed with more potential in some areas than others.

Most top athletes have some natural endowment but it is the constant coaching and practice that brings success. The same is true for a good manager.

Management skills can be learnt and practiced to perfection just like using your local tennis or golf pro. It will take time, effort, and determination but no one said it would be easy.
Benefits of becoming a better manager.

I mentioned earlier that change is good for you. What about the personal benefits to you in becoming a skilled manager? Let’s look at these in more detail:

You become more successful

In spite of what we say, we all love success both for ourselves and our loved ones. It is just natural and it makes us feel good and I cannot think of a better benefit than this.

You are in control

I prefer to be controlling my own destiny and not always following others. A good manager is always in control even in crisis situations. You get less unpleasant surprises and problems.

You have more time available

Now you can have the luxury of time to think. How to make further improvements? You get more quality time with your family with less emergency call outs.

You become more popular

Please forget about all this tough talk of a good manager has to be unpopular. That went out before sliced bread. I am not suggesting that you make popularity an objective but it will happen naturally by using the Manager’s Toolbox. Believe me that working in a pleasant work environment takes some beating.

You will be healthier

Industrial stress and its related diseases has become a major and worldwide problem. Good management training can be a significant factor in reducing these problems.

Benefits for your family

Wow, this is dangerous territory. Of course our family life is not structured as a company but there are many similarities. You need to plan and organize your family affairs and projects. On times you have to be a leader and be able to communicate at both adult and child levels. Most of us are positive about change when it comes to our families - we all want our children to do better than ourselves. All these things are covered in the Manager’s Toolbox.

Chris Thomas is the author of the Managers Toolbox training material located at http://www.managers-toolbox.com and runs the very successful Basic Management Course for new leaders and supervisors.

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Creativity and Innovation Management - Feasibility

Creativity can be defined as problem identification and idea generation whilst innovation can be defined as idea selection, development and commercialisation.

There are other useful definitions in this field, for example, creativity can be defined as consisting of a number of ideas, a number of diverse ideas and a number of novel ideas.

There are distinct processes that enhance problem identification and idea generation and, similarly, distinct processes that enhance idea selection, development and commercialisation. Whilst there is no sure fire route to commercial success, these processes improve the probability that good ideas will be generated and selected and that investment in developing and commercialising those ideas will not be wasted.

Feasibility

Task feasibility is also a part of the motivation equation.

If a task if feasible, then motivation increases. And if a task is out of reach, then motivation decreases. This is encompassed in the philosophy of incremental production and structure - large, complex and impossible tasks are split into smaller more manageable ones.

But the above goes against the philosophy of competency expansion - if a task is too easy, then challenge is reduced and motivational effort is reduced. So making a task slightly out of reach optimises motivation.

There have been situations where impossible tasks have created exceptional motivation (the Apollo 11 fiasco), but there, arguably, only the technical challenge seemed out of reach. The possibility of the task was demonstrated in that the problem was solved. The block was the illusion of difficulty and not the unfeasibility of the task itself.

These and other topics are covered in depth in the MBA dissertation on Managing Creativity & Innovation, which can be purchased (along with a Creativity and Innovation DIY Audit, Good Idea Generator Software and Power Point Presentation) from http://www.managing-creativity.com/

You can also receive a regular, free newsletter by entering your email address at this site.

Kal Bishop, MBA

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You are free to reproduce this article as long as no changes are made and the author’s name and site URL are retained.

Kal Bishop is a management consultant based in London, UK. He has consulted in the visual media and software industries and for clients such as Toshiba and Transport for London. He has led Improv, creativity and innovation workshops, exhibited artwork in San Francisco, Los Angeles and London and written a number of screenplays. He is a passionate traveller. He can be reached on http://www.managing-creativity.com/

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