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Add You - Mission: Critical
The Long and The Short Of It - Balancing Today's Business With Tomorrow's Prospects the right thing to do. It's also practical. The average Fortune-1000 boss spends 13 percent of his or her time refereeing his or her staff, according to a study by the Marshall School of Business at the University of Southern California. Do the math. That's seven squandered weeks every year, a crippling price for neglecting to put your manners where your mission is.One of the biggest challenges in running a business is continuously finding the balance between short-term profits and monthly cash flow needs, and the business long term future. This can be a delicate tightrope walk indeed. However, you can use this balancing act to your advantage.Managing for the short-term gain means making dollars-only-decisions, driving people hard and prioritizing cost over ultimate value. Cutting out or failing to add anything that does not yield an immediate benefit is the mark of a business being managed only to a short horizon. Much damage can occur under the cloak of seemingly sensible frugality. If you dont buy any seeds to plant, how can you expect anything to grow?An example of this is not investing in your people. You give your team incentives to deliver results based on the clear goals set forth. Results are measured daily, weekly and monthly, and you hold them to consistently delivering those results. While your passion for winning and your rewards to your employees for doing so are important, short-term results orientated thinking should be balanced with longer term investments in the training and development of your staff. Think of this as sharpening their axe. Would you rather pay your people to swing a dull axe all week long? Or would you rather pay for them to attend a week long training seminar to learn how to sharpen their axe, so they can come out swinging sharper next week and chop down twice as much? You would lose one week worth of work, but the benefits you would reap in the long run far outweigh this initial investment. Many small business owners have a hard time with this even though they may inherently believe in the benefits of training. It is hard to invest in the unknown and take that leap of faith, and that is essentially what operating from a long-term perspective requires. RETOOLING YOUR MISSION If your company's mission is in mothballs, I have two words: huge opportunity. Reigniting your mission can set off sparks that fire up the whole team. Stir things up at the next executive-team meeting. Ask if anyone can state the mission from memory, or at least its essence. If the executives can't, chances are no one can. And that means your mission registers a big fat zero on the inspiration scale. Looks like it's time for an update. First, convene a brainstorming session with top brass. The leaders (hopefully) have an innate sense of the company's purpose. Start by describing what your company offers. Ask, "Why is that important?" Challenge what the group comes up with, asking again and again, "How does that help our customer?" Go deeper still until you finally punch through the brick wall of logic and tap into people's hearts. After five or six iterations the whole thing could take two or three sessions odds are you'll nail the essence of why you're in business. Now, it's tweak time. Create opportunities for every employee to pitch in. Reach out to resident wordsmiths and deep thinkers by posting drafts of the mission wherever people will see it elevators, bathrooms, paycheck envelopes. Send it out in an email blast. Call a companywide meeting. Tell people how to submit their ideas. Getting everyone involved and assuring them that all suggestions will be valued builds trust and teamwork. Before you know it, a wellscrubbed mission statement will be hanging on your office wall, and in your teams' hearts and minds. TURNING VISION INTO REALITY Championing your mission statement was a good start. Now that everyone's on board the mission train, how do you keep everyone on track without derailing into complacency or chaos? And how can they pick up a head of steam while they're at it? Hitch up the engine to the ol' Double-V vision and values. Unlike your mission, which states your firm's purpose, a vision statement asserts where your company is headed. And a statement of operating values spells out the personal tra Bite Your Tongue; They Might Think You are Arrogant Picture a general addressing his nervous troops on the eve of a decisive battle. He implores them to fight fiercely for the honor of everything and everyone they hold dear. He stresses that the safety of their loved ones rests on how courageously they perform on the midnight battlefield. Then the general strides over to a second group of soldiers and orders them to conquer the enemy or die trying. The objective, he thunders, is to earn him that elusive fifth star and secure a heftier pension. It's a safe bet the first group of soldiers will hit the battlefield with a steely resolve to give their all. It's just as certain the second bunch would rather smash rocks in the hot sun than put their leader's objectives ahead of their own self-interest.Often people think others are arrogant when they will not hear their advice or point of view. Yet in a way that is an arrogant thought in itself. You see if you believe that your advice is so important that the other person MUST listen to you then are you being arrogant that your advice is above any other persons advice?Now then in the process of calling someone else arrogant who will not hear your advice are you not being arrogant yourself? Hello Mirror! And isn’t it a slap in the face to someone of knowledge when some of little knowledge tries to give advice to them.For instance a good friend of mine has been in the business as a Financial Planner 37 years and her clientele often call her to tell her something or give her advice on something she knows quite a bit about and has for 30 years. After all why are they hiring her as a consultant to manage their money if they do not trust her knowledge?And yet if she acts in a way and says; "Yes I know that of course" then the other person might say; “Well how conceited?” or “You are quite arrogant!” or worse not say anything but think it and thus she might lose a client you see? In reality those of ignorance will often see what they think of as conceit and arrogance when they are actually the one’s who need to work thru their own arrogance. You see what I mean? Consider all this in 2006. The do-or-die spirit of an army unit is the essence of what an enlightened executive must instill in the men and women under his command. That lofty goal is attainable, but only if the answers to three fundamental questions are clearly articulated, strategically disseminated, and consistently reinforced: 1. Why does the organization exist? 2. Where is it going? 3. How does it need to act to get there? The answers to these questions must be precisely expressed and held with conviction throughout the culture. "Conviction" is the operative word. If a company's mission, vision, and values aren't genuinely believed and championed by top management, they're just words on paper. Ah, but when conviction is convincing, the organization rises above the sum of its parts and produces inspired employees. Until it clicked into place at my company, I never would've believed how much passion and creative energy could be unleashed when mission, vision, and values are moving in sync. The change is palpable. It's also contagious. When you hit your mission, you're symbolically "pouring the foundation." Sure, The Mission Statement is Business 101 something most companies have in place. But is it working? In so many seat-of-the-pants outfits it's often just slapped together, a generic, white-bread substitute devoid of motivational nutrients. Or, tons of time has been invested only to produce something too complicated to be memorable. Even if a mission statement jumps those hurdles, it often hasn't been integrated effectively into the culture. Take a look at your mission statement. Is it on the front or back burner of people's minds? Does it drive your company's culture and inspire employees? Or, is it brought out like a what-were-they-thinking wedding gift that sees the light of day only when the in-laws visit? A mission statement is fundamentally immutable. Carve it in granite and display it behind unbreakable glass. Market forces, business strategies, and senior management may shift, but a good company's core purpose is timeless. Through boom and bust, 3M's mission will always be "To solve unsolved problems innovatively." Likewise, even when aggressive competition impacts Sony's marketing tactics, its mission remains "To experience the joy of advancing and applying technology for the benefit of the public." These missions don't reference profits or shareholder value. Their purpose is to inspire people to throw themselves into the work they love and make a difference in the world. The power of a well-stated mission lies in its unifying effect. Like a maestro, it directs everyone to play the same song at the right tempo and in the right key. Without a codified mission or when a mission statement gathers dust like a gold-plated plaque in some long-forgotten storeroom exuberance and gusto give way to inertia and apathy. MISSION IN MOTION "To help restore people to full life." That's the essence of Minneapolisbased Medtronic's six-part, 171-word mission. It's also the mantra Ann Krzmarzick heard in each of the eight interviews she endured to become a communications specialist at the worldrenowned medical technology company. It was a test of sorts. If Medtronic's mission didn't resonate, the human resources manager told her, she should look elsewhere for employment. Ann smiled and nodded. It was a catchy sound bite, but she figured it would have about as much impact as a bumper sticker on her day-to-day duties. She figured wrong. Ann quickly discovered that those seven words were the beating heart of Medtronic's corporate body. "I didn't realize," she said, "that the light of that mission would shine so brightly on the everyday work in communications, given that we're fairly removed from direct patient care." The mission was consistently almost reverently referenced in every meeting and memo. It informed every decision at every level. It even reached all the way to the annual holiday party, where six bona fide patients share their stories of heartache, hope, and renewal. There's never a dry eye in the house. Surveys reveal that nearly every one of Medtronic's twenty-six thousand employees knows the company's mission statement and how it applies to his or her job. The employees are inspired because they know their work makes a big difference in people's lives. Is it any wonder that Medtronic always appears on Fortune magazine's list of 100 Best Companies to Work For? I was the CEO of the $200 million Tires Plus before I sold it in 2000 to Bridgestone/Firestone. We expressed the guiding principle of our company's existence through our 13-word mission: "Deliver caring, world-class service to our guests, our community, and to each other." A noble sense of purpose was essential for attracting quality employees. Most people consider working in the tire business only a little more appealing than getting a root canal. The industry is often thought of as dirty, unprofessional, and sometimes even dishonest. So why would people come work for us? Not to sell tires, but to improve the lives of customers, employees, and the world at large. After all, it's people, not tires, that make the world go round. As any CEO should, I served as a walking advertisement for our mission statement, as illustrated by this story offered up by my co-founder, Don Gullett. Don, whose development department was in charge of remodeling and upgrading our stores, chartered a small four-seat aircraft one day so that he, a contractor, a real estate agent, and I could visit all four of our stores in and near North Dakota. We landed in Fargo first and rented a car. "As we were driving into the parking lot of our store there," Don recalled, "Tom jumped out while the car was still rolling, ran over, and started talking to two people. The three of us just looked at each other, wondering what he was doing." I had spotted the couple coming out of the store and had sensed by their expressions that they weren't happy. I asked if there was a problem. (There shouldn't have been, because a big part of our mission was empowering store employees to resolve customer complaints.) I found out what they were upset about, got them to walk back inside, got it resolved, and turned them into happy customers. "It would have been very easy for someone in Tom's position to have remained in the car until we had finished parking," Don noted. "But by the time we had gotten out of the car and into the store, those people would have driven off. So Tom jumped out and went out of his way to introduce himself and correct the situation. I'm sure he left a lasting impression on that store's personnel, not to mention those customers." Our corporate commandment Thou shalt be caring was like a global positioning satellite that helped our people navigate the choppy waters of day-to-day decision making. More important, it helped managers identify and capitalize on "coachable moments" instances when an employee's actions conflicted with our mission. For instance, our follow-up system required us to contact customers not more than 48 hours after providing a price quote. On a regular systems-review visit to a suburban Minneapolis store, I checked the phone log and saw that a teammate was skipping the follow-up call. It turns out he hadn't been properly trained and wasn't sure how to do it. So I spent some time teaching him the ropes. When it was time for him to make an actual call, I listened in. The woman he called told him she had opted to buy new tires from Firestone. "Oh, that's too bad," he said. "You really missed out." After he hung up, I said, "Wow, you basically told her she made a bad decision. How do you think that made her feel? Do you remember what our mission is?" He stammered, "To give caring, worldclass service to our guests?" I asked if that phone call was consistent with the mission. He acknowledged it wasn't. "If somebody tells us their needs were taken care of," I said, "our reply should be, 'I'm glad you got what you needed. Your car is safer and will handle better now, and that's what's most important. Next time you're in the market, we'd love to have another opportunity to serve you.' " I stressed that alienating a potential customer today means we're also slamming the door shut on future sales. But that's not why people should be treated with respect. When you genuinely care about their well-being, without regard to expectations and outcomes, the goodwill generated benefits everyone. We upheld our mission statement's integrity just as vigilantly for our "internal customers." If an employee treated a colleague rudely, I challenged him. I wanted amends made and behavior corrected immediately. "How would you feel if somebody treated you that way?" I'd ask. "How would you react?" I'd remind the offender in no uncertain terms that our mission called for everyone in the company to deliver caring service to each other, and that caring about and being of service to others was what we were all about. Emphasizing worker civility isn't just the right thing to do. It's also practical. The average Fortune-1000 boss spends 13 percent of his or her time refereeing his or her staff, according to a study by the Marshall School of Business at the University of Southern California. Do the math. That's seven squandered weeks every year, a crippling price for neglecting to put your manners where your mission is. RETOOLING YOUR MISSION If your company's mission is in mothballs, I have two words: huge opportunity. Reigniting your mission can set off sparks that fire up the whole team. Stir things up at the next executive-team meeting. Ask if anyone can state the mission from memory, or at least its essence. If the executives can't, chances are no one can. And that means your mission registers a big fat zero on the inspiration scale. Looks like it's time for an update. First, convene a brainstorming session with top brass. The leaders (hopefully) have an innate sense of the company's purpose. Start by describing what your company offers. Ask, "Why is that important?" Challenge what the group comes up with, asking again and again, "How does that help our customer?" Go deeper still until you finally punch through the brick wall of logic and tap into people's hearts. After five or six iterations the whole thing could take two or three sessions odds are you'll nail the essence of why you're in business. Now, it's tweak time. Create opportunities for every employee to pitch in. Reach out to resident wordsmiths and deep thinkers by posting drafts of the mission wherever people will see it elevators, bathrooms, paycheck envelopes. Send it out in an email blast. Call a companywide meeting. Tell people how to submit their ideas. Getting everyone involved and assuring them that all suggestions will be valued builds trust and teamwork. Before you know it, a wellscrubbed mission statement will be hanging on your office wall, and in your teams' hearts and minds. TURNING VISION INTO REALITY Championing your mission statement was a good start. Now that everyone's on board the mission train, how do you keep everyone on track without derailing into complacency or chaos? And how can they pick up a head of steam while they're at it? Hitch up the engine to the ol' Double-V vision and values. Unlike your mission, which states your firm's purpose, a vision statement asserts where your company is headed. And a statement of operating values spells out the personal trai Crisis Management - A Team Approach to Addressing Business Problems mployees? Or, is it brought out like a what-were-they-thinking wedding gift that sees the light of day only when the in-laws visit?During the course of day-to-day business, only one thing can be expected. That is that problems how will arise. Some businesses hold individual managers responsible to resolve problems. Others address problems through teams of managers aligned either organizationally or functionally with the problem. And yet other businesses intentionally or unintentionally ignore problems until they are so impactful on business outcomes that they must be addressed in some manner. The latter usually requires additional resource due to the crisis nature of the problem. In that business problems are a given, there should be a consistent methodology for addressing problems as they arise. The purpose of this document is to summarize one of the most effective was to identify, address and resolve business problems.Identifying business problems.One of the greatest challenges in business is separating problems from the numerous daily issues, challenges, competitive pressures and change. Many if not most of these are part of the day-to-day and must be addressed by the individual managers with functional or organizational accountability in the area where they arise. This is not to minimize the importance of these. It is just that they must be acted upon by the individuals who have accountability and responsibility where they arise. There are other business problems that go beyond the accountability of the individual manager. Some of their characteristics are: - They impact the revenue top line against the business plan - They impact the cost and/or expense against the business plan - They impact market share against what was targeted in the business plan - They impact customer satisfaction against the measure in place - They impact employee retention and/or satisfaction against the measure in placeWhile there may be business problems beyond the A mission statement is fundamentally immutable. Carve it in granite and display it behind unbreakable glass. Market forces, business strategies, and senior management may shift, but a good company's core purpose is timeless. Through boom and bust, 3M's mission will always be "To solve unsolved problems innovatively." Likewise, even when aggressive competition impacts Sony's marketing tactics, its mission remains "To experience the joy of advancing and applying technology for the benefit of the public." These missions don't reference profits or shareholder value. Their purpose is to inspire people to throw themselves into the work they love and make a difference in the world. The power of a well-stated mission lies in its unifying effect. Like a maestro, it directs everyone to play the same song at the right tempo and in the right key. Without a codified mission or when a mission statement gathers dust like a gold-plated plaque in some long-forgotten storeroom exuberance and gusto give way to inertia and apathy. MISSION IN MOTION "To help restore people to full life." That's the essence of Minneapolisbased Medtronic's six-part, 171-word mission. It's also the mantra Ann Krzmarzick heard in each of the eight interviews she endured to become a communications specialist at the worldrenowned medical technology company. It was a test of sorts. If Medtronic's mission didn't resonate, the human resources manager told her, she should look elsewhere for employment. Ann smiled and nodded. It was a catchy sound bite, but she figured it would have about as much impact as a bumper sticker on her day-to-day duties. She figured wrong. Ann quickly discovered that those seven words were the beating heart of Medtronic's corporate body. "I didn't realize," she said, "that the light of that mission would shine so brightly on the everyday work in communications, given that we're fairly removed from direct patient care." The mission was consistently almost reverently referenced in every meeting and memo. It informed every decision at every level. It even reached all the way to the annual holiday party, where six bona fide patients share their stories of heartache, hope, and renewal. There's never a dry eye in the house. Surveys reveal that nearly every one of Medtronic's twenty-six thousand employees knows the company's mission statement and how it applies to his or her job. The employees are inspired because they know their work makes a big difference in people's lives. Is it any wonder that Medtronic always appears on Fortune magazine's list of 100 Best Companies to Work For? I was the CEO of the $200 million Tires Plus before I sold it in 2000 to Bridgestone/Firestone. We expressed the guiding principle of our company's existence through our 13-word mission: "Deliver caring, world-class service to our guests, our community, and to each other." A noble sense of purpose was essential for attracting quality employees. Most people consider working in the tire business only a little more appealing than getting a root canal. The industry is often thought of as dirty, unprofessional, and sometimes even dishonest. So why would people come work for us? Not to sell tires, but to improve the lives of customers, employees, and the world at large. After all, it's people, not tires, that make the world go round. As any CEO should, I served as a walking advertisement for our mission statement, as illustrated by this story offered up by my co-founder, Don Gullett. Don, whose development department was in charge of remodeling and upgrading our stores, chartered a small four-seat aircraft one day so that he, a contractor, a real estate agent, and I could visit all four of our stores in and near North Dakota. We landed in Fargo first and rented a car. "As we were driving into the parking lot of our store there," Don recalled, "Tom jumped out while the car was still rolling, ran over, and started talking to two people. The three of us just looked at each other, wondering what he was doing." I had spotted the couple coming out of the store and had sensed by their expressions that they weren't happy. I asked if there was a problem. (There shouldn't have been, because a big part of our mission was empowering store employees to resolve customer complaints.) I found out what they were upset about, got them to walk back inside, got it resolved, and turned them into happy customers. "It would have been very easy for someone in Tom's position to have remained in the car until we had finished parking," Don noted. "But by the time we had gotten out of the car and into the store, those people would have driven off. So Tom jumped out and went out of his way to introduce himself and correct the situation. I'm sure he left a lasting impression on that store's personnel, not to mention those customers." Our corporate commandment Thou shalt be caring was like a global positioning satellite that helped our people navigate the choppy waters of day-to-day decision making. More important, it helped managers identify and capitalize on "coachable moments" instances when an employee's actions conflicted with our mission. For instance, our follow-up system required us to contact customers not more than 48 hours after providing a price quote. On a regular systems-review visit to a suburban Minneapolis store, I checked the phone log and saw that a teammate was skipping the follow-up call. It turns out he hadn't been properly trained and wasn't sure how to do it. So I spent some time teaching him the ropes. When it was time for him to make an actual call, I listened in. The woman he called told him she had opted to buy new tires from Firestone. "Oh, that's too bad," he said. "You really missed out." After he hung up, I said, "Wow, you basically told her she made a bad decision. How do you think that made her feel? Do you remember what our mission is?" He stammered, "To give caring, worldclass service to our guests?" I asked if that phone call was consistent with the mission. He acknowledged it wasn't. "If somebody tells us their needs were taken care of," I said, "our reply should be, 'I'm glad you got what you needed. Your car is safer and will handle better now, and that's what's most important. Next time you're in the market, we'd love to have another opportunity to serve you.' " I stressed that alienating a potential customer today means we're also slamming the door shut on future sales. But that's not why people should be treated with respect. When you genuinely care about their well-being, without regard to expectations and outcomes, the goodwill generated benefits everyone. We upheld our mission statement's integrity just as vigilantly for our "internal customers." If an employee treated a colleague rudely, I challenged him. I wanted amends made and behavior corrected immediately. "How would you feel if somebody treated you that way?" I'd ask. "How would you react?" I'd remind the offender in no uncertain terms that our mission called for everyone in the company to deliver caring service to each other, and that caring about and being of service to others was what we were all about. Emphasizing worker civility isn't just the right thing to do. It's also practical. The average Fortune-1000 boss spends 13 percent of his or her time refereeing his or her staff, according to a study by the Marshall School of Business at the University of Southern California. Do the math. That's seven squandered weeks every year, a crippling price for neglecting to put your manners where your mission is. RETOOLING YOUR MISSION If your company's mission is in mothballs, I have two words: huge opportunity. Reigniting your mission can set off sparks that fire up the whole team. Stir things up at the next executive-team meeting. Ask if anyone can state the mission from memory, or at least its essence. If the executives can't, chances are no one can. And that means your mission registers a big fat zero on the inspiration scale. Looks like it's time for an update. First, convene a brainstorming session with top brass. The leaders (hopefully) have an innate sense of the company's purpose. Start by describing what your company offers. Ask, "Why is that important?" Challenge what the group comes up with, asking again and again, "How does that help our customer?" Go deeper still until you finally punch through the brick wall of logic and tap into people's hearts. After five or six iterations the whole thing could take two or three sessions odds are you'll nail the essence of why you're in business. Now, it's tweak time. Create opportunities for every employee to pitch in. Reach out to resident wordsmiths and deep thinkers by posting drafts of the mission wherever people will see it elevators, bathrooms, paycheck envelopes. Send it out in an email blast. Call a companywide meeting. Tell people how to submit their ideas. Getting everyone involved and assuring them that all suggestions will be valued builds trust and teamwork. Before you know it, a wellscrubbed mission statement will be hanging on your office wall, and in your teams' hearts and minds. TURNING VISION INTO REALITY Championing your mission statement was a good start. Now that everyone's on board the mission train, how do you keep everyone on track without derailing into complacency or chaos? And how can they pick up a head of steam while they're at it? Hitch up the engine to the ol' Double-V vision and values. Unlike your mission, which states your firm's purpose, a vision statement asserts where your company is headed. And a statement of operating values spells out the personal tra Characteristics of a Good Franchisor Leader Medtronic's twenty-six thousand employees knows the company's mission statement and how it applies to his or her job. The employees are inspired because they know their work makes a big difference in people's lives. Is it any wonder that Medtronic always appears on Fortune magazine's list of 100 Best Companies to Work For?A lot of seminars have been given about good leadership qualities and how to manage franchisees. But with all these information and different ideas about what a good franchiser leader should have, I have narrowed it down to six key elements that I think is what a good franchiser leader should have as the success of a franchise network depends on the franchiser leader and his relationship with his franchisees.A good franchiser leader should have a clear vision. Although this has been said a thousand times, this is true. He must have an accurate vision of what his franchise network should be.A good franchiser leader must have integrity. This is especially true if you want your franchisees to trust and respect you as these two are needed for the success of any franchise network.A good franchiser leader must guarantee his franchisees of intelligent strategies when it comes to the needs of the customers, the franchisees need themselves and the market in which its product revolves. He must be able to make a good judgment in every decision he makes.A good franchiser leader must be flexible and can adapt to changes. He must be able to recognize changes in the market and the needs of the customers, and he must be able to share his vision with others and make others realize his vision.A good franchiser leader can identify and manage conflicts within his company. As his franchisees have different needs and expectations, it can often lead to conflicts within the company. He, therefore, must be able to identify the conflicts and be able to handle them. He also must take into consideration the many talents and opinions of his different franchisees and be able to coordinate them.A good franchiser leader must be sensitive enough in the use of his power as the franchiser leader. As power can sometimes corrupt a person, he must I was the CEO of the $200 million Tires Plus before I sold it in 2000 to Bridgestone/Firestone. We expressed the guiding principle of our company's existence through our 13-word mission: "Deliver caring, world-class service to our guests, our community, and to each other." A noble sense of purpose was essential for attracting quality employees. Most people consider working in the tire business only a little more appealing than getting a root canal. The industry is often thought of as dirty, unprofessional, and sometimes even dishonest. So why would people come work for us? Not to sell tires, but to improve the lives of customers, employees, and the world at large. After all, it's people, not tires, that make the world go round. As any CEO should, I served as a walking advertisement for our mission statement, as illustrated by this story offered up by my co-founder, Don Gullett. Don, whose development department was in charge of remodeling and upgrading our stores, chartered a small four-seat aircraft one day so that he, a contractor, a real estate agent, and I could visit all four of our stores in and near North Dakota. We landed in Fargo first and rented a car. "As we were driving into the parking lot of our store there," Don recalled, "Tom jumped out while the car was still rolling, ran over, and started talking to two people. The three of us just looked at each other, wondering what he was doing." I had spotted the couple coming out of the store and had sensed by their expressions that they weren't happy. I asked if there was a problem. (There shouldn't have been, because a big part of our mission was empowering store employees to resolve customer complaints.) I found out what they were upset about, got them to walk back inside, got it resolved, and turned them into happy customers. "It would have been very easy for someone in Tom's position to have remained in the car until we had finished parking," Don noted. "But by the time we had gotten out of the car and into the store, those people would have driven off. So Tom jumped out and went out of his way to introduce himself and correct the situation. I'm sure he left a lasting impression on that store's personnel, not to mention those customers." Our corporate commandment Thou shalt be caring was like a global positioning satellite that helped our people navigate the choppy waters of day-to-day decision making. More important, it helped managers identify and capitalize on "coachable moments" instances when an employee's actions conflicted with our mission. For instance, our follow-up system required us to contact customers not more than 48 hours after providing a price quote. On a regular systems-review visit to a suburban Minneapolis store, I checked the phone log and saw that a teammate was skipping the follow-up call. It turns out he hadn't been properly trained and wasn't sure how to do it. So I spent some time teaching him the ropes. When it was time for him to make an actual call, I listened in. The woman he called told him she had opted to buy new tires from Firestone. "Oh, that's too bad," he said. "You really missed out." After he hung up, I said, "Wow, you basically told her she made a bad decision. How do you think that made her feel? Do you remember what our mission is?" He stammered, "To give caring, worldclass service to our guests?" I asked if that phone call was consistent with the mission. He acknowledged it wasn't. "If somebody tells us their needs were taken care of," I said, "our reply should be, 'I'm glad you got what you needed. Your car is safer and will handle better now, and that's what's most important. Next time you're in the market, we'd love to have another opportunity to serve you.' " I stressed that alienating a potential customer today means we're also slamming the door shut on future sales. But that's not why people should be treated with respect. When you genuinely care about their well-being, without regard to expectations and outcomes, the goodwill generated benefits everyone. We upheld our mission statement's integrity just as vigilantly for our "internal customers." If an employee treated a colleague rudely, I challenged him. I wanted amends made and behavior corrected immediately. "How would you feel if somebody treated you that way?" I'd ask. "How would you react?" I'd remind the offender in no uncertain terms that our mission called for everyone in the company to deliver caring service to each other, and that caring about and being of service to others was what we were all about. Emphasizing worker civility isn't just the right thing to do. It's also practical. The average Fortune-1000 boss spends 13 percent of his or her time refereeing his or her staff, according to a study by the Marshall School of Business at the University of Southern California. Do the math. That's seven squandered weeks every year, a crippling price for neglecting to put your manners where your mission is. RETOOLING YOUR MISSION If your company's mission is in mothballs, I have two words: huge opportunity. Reigniting your mission can set off sparks that fire up the whole team. Stir things up at the next executive-team meeting. Ask if anyone can state the mission from memory, or at least its essence. If the executives can't, chances are no one can. And that means your mission registers a big fat zero on the inspiration scale. Looks like it's time for an update. First, convene a brainstorming session with top brass. The leaders (hopefully) have an innate sense of the company's purpose. Start by describing what your company offers. Ask, "Why is that important?" Challenge what the group comes up with, asking again and again, "How does that help our customer?" Go deeper still until you finally punch through the brick wall of logic and tap into people's hearts. After five or six iterations the whole thing could take two or three sessions odds are you'll nail the essence of why you're in business. Now, it's tweak time. Create opportunities for every employee to pitch in. Reach out to resident wordsmiths and deep thinkers by posting drafts of the mission wherever people will see it elevators, bathrooms, paycheck envelopes. Send it out in an email blast. Call a companywide meeting. Tell people how to submit their ideas. Getting everyone involved and assuring them that all suggestions will be valued builds trust and teamwork. Before you know it, a wellscrubbed mission statement will be hanging on your office wall, and in your teams' hearts and minds. TURNING VISION INTO REALITY Championing your mission statement was a good start. Now that everyone's on board the mission train, how do you keep everyone on track without derailing into complacency or chaos? And how can they pick up a head of steam while they're at it? Hitch up the engine to the ol' Double-V vision and values. Unlike your mission, which states your firm's purpose, a vision statement asserts where your company is headed. And a statement of operating values spells out the personal tra Are You on Track for Sucess for Your Business? 'm sure he left a lasting impression on that store's personnel, not to mention those customers."There are people who put their dreams in a little box and say, "Yes, I've got dreams, of course, I've got dreams." Then they put the box away and bring it out once in a while to look in it, and yep, they're still there. These are great dreams, but they never even get out of the box. It takes an uncommon amount of guts to put your dreams on the line, to hold them up and say, "How good or how bad am I?" That's where courage comes in.Answer honestly... Yes or No... ( ) YES, I am on track for achieving my top 3 goals this year. ( ) NO, I am still struggling. As I have been saying all year long, achieving your goals comes down to turning your dreams into tangible objects upon which you can apply power. If you do not achieve "tangibility", you have no need for power. Great IDEAS remain great ideas, until you TRANSFORM the idea into something PHYSICAL. You can have massive personal power. But if you dissipate it each day pursuing the ephemeral, all your power is wasted. It is simply dissipated as HEAT into the universe. (It's called the Second Law of Thermodynamics. Heat simply goes out to ENTROPY.) This is not an abstract concept. It is why some people succeed brilliantly, while others simply use up their power... confusing effort with results.Successful people apply their power to a physical object. Little of their power is wasted. However... People who struggle have nothing tangible upon which to apply their power. Consequently, they produce fewer results and take more time to do it. They waste not only TIME, but their precious LIFE as well.An immutable law... 1) You must GENERATE power. 2) You must HARNESS your power. 3) You must APPLY that power... 4) In a highly FOCUSED manner... 5) To the OBJECT of your desire.Herein lies the "secret" to making your dreams real... to making SUCCESS Our corporate commandment Thou shalt be caring was like a global positioning satellite that helped our people navigate the choppy waters of day-to-day decision making. More important, it helped managers identify and capitalize on "coachable moments" instances when an employee's actions conflicted with our mission. For instance, our follow-up system required us to contact customers not more than 48 hours after providing a price quote. On a regular systems-review visit to a suburban Minneapolis store, I checked the phone log and saw that a teammate was skipping the follow-up call. It turns out he hadn't been properly trained and wasn't sure how to do it. So I spent some time teaching him the ropes. When it was time for him to make an actual call, I listened in. The woman he called told him she had opted to buy new tires from Firestone. "Oh, that's too bad," he said. "You really missed out." After he hung up, I said, "Wow, you basically told her she made a bad decision. How do you think that made her feel? Do you remember what our mission is?" He stammered, "To give caring, worldclass service to our guests?" I asked if that phone call was consistent with the mission. He acknowledged it wasn't. "If somebody tells us their needs were taken care of," I said, "our reply should be, 'I'm glad you got what you needed. Your car is safer and will handle better now, and that's what's most important. Next time you're in the market, we'd love to have another opportunity to serve you.' " I stressed that alienating a potential customer today means we're also slamming the door shut on future sales. But that's not why people should be treated with respect. When you genuinely care about their well-being, without regard to expectations and outcomes, the goodwill generated benefits everyone. We upheld our mission statement's integrity just as vigilantly for our "internal customers." If an employee treated a colleague rudely, I challenged him. I wanted amends made and behavior corrected immediately. "How would you feel if somebody treated you that way?" I'd ask. "How would you react?" I'd remind the offender in no uncertain terms that our mission called for everyone in the company to deliver caring service to each other, and that caring about and being of service to others was what we were all about. Emphasizing worker civility isn't just the right thing to do. It's also practical. The average Fortune-1000 boss spends 13 percent of his or her time refereeing his or her staff, according to a study by the Marshall School of Business at the University of Southern California. Do the math. That's seven squandered weeks every year, a crippling price for neglecting to put your manners where your mission is. RETOOLING YOUR MISSION If your company's mission is in mothballs, I have two words: huge opportunity. Reigniting your mission can set off sparks that fire up the whole team. Stir things up at the next executive-team meeting. Ask if anyone can state the mission from memory, or at least its essence. If the executives can't, chances are no one can. And that means your mission registers a big fat zero on the inspiration scale. Looks like it's time for an update. First, convene a brainstorming session with top brass. The leaders (hopefully) have an innate sense of the company's purpose. Start by describing what your company offers. Ask, "Why is that important?" Challenge what the group comes up with, asking again and again, "How does that help our customer?" Go deeper still until you finally punch through the brick wall of logic and tap into people's hearts. After five or six iterations the whole thing could take two or three sessions odds are you'll nail the essence of why you're in business. Now, it's tweak time. Create opportunities for every employee to pitch in. Reach out to resident wordsmiths and deep thinkers by posting drafts of the mission wherever people will see it elevators, bathrooms, paycheck envelopes. Send it out in an email blast. Call a companywide meeting. Tell people how to submit their ideas. Getting everyone involved and assuring them that all suggestions will be valued builds trust and teamwork. Before you know it, a wellscrubbed mission statement will be hanging on your office wall, and in your teams' hearts and minds. TURNING VISION INTO REALITY Championing your mission statement was a good start. Now that everyone's on board the mission train, how do you keep everyone on track without derailing into complacency or chaos? And how can they pick up a head of steam while they're at it? Hitch up the engine to the ol' Double-V vision and values. Unlike your mission, which states your firm's purpose, a vision statement asserts where your company is headed. And a statement of operating values spells out the personal tra Answer Job Interview Questions & Score Big the right thing to do. It's also practical. The average Fortune-1000 boss spends 13 percent of his or her time refereeing his or her staff, according to a study by the Marshall School of Business at the University of Southern California. Do the math. That's seven squandered weeks every year, a crippling price for neglecting to put your manners where your mission is.It doesn't really matter how awesome the r?sum? reads, how many great laurels you can rest upon, or how much knowledge and experience you have acquired, you can bet that whether or not you land a job will have a great deal to do with how you answer job interview questions. It's really no secret that a lot of prospective employees below their chances of landing a coveted job by not being prepared for their interview.As a result, they stumble over their words, say the wrong things, or resort to making up responses. The interviewer can immediately see through that kind of charade, and will not give the applicant a second thought once the session is finished. There's no reason for this to happen, so don't be one of them. By spending a bit of time researching the best way to answer job interview questions, you'll give yourself a huge advantage over your competition.There are several sources you can go to in order to learn how to answer job interview questions. The very first place I would suggest that you look is the World Wide Web. There are a seemingly endless array of web sites devoted to job seekers and many of them will coach on how to answer job interview questions.These are the folks who do the actual hiring for many human resource offices so they really know their stuff so you would be well advised to follow their advice. On the websites, you'll find numerous examples of how a confident, well-spoken candidate would answer job interview questions. Many of the questions that you'll run into our of the more common variety so you'll have a pretty good idea how to answer them when they're asked to you.Another great source that will help you prepare to answer job interview questions is software designed specifically to help people write r?sum?s. As I'm sure you already know, when you're writing your r?sum? you really want to look RETOOLING YOUR MISSION If your company's mission is in mothballs, I have two words: huge opportunity. Reigniting your mission can set off sparks that fire up the whole team. Stir things up at the next executive-team meeting. Ask if anyone can state the mission from memory, or at least its essence. If the executives can't, chances are no one can. And that means your mission registers a big fat zero on the inspiration scale. Looks like it's time for an update. First, convene a brainstorming session with top brass. The leaders (hopefully) have an innate sense of the company's purpose. Start by describing what your company offers. Ask, "Why is that important?" Challenge what the group comes up with, asking again and again, "How does that help our customer?" Go deeper still until you finally punch through the brick wall of logic and tap into people's hearts. After five or six iterations the whole thing could take two or three sessions odds are you'll nail the essence of why you're in business. Now, it's tweak time. Create opportunities for every employee to pitch in. Reach out to resident wordsmiths and deep thinkers by posting drafts of the mission wherever people will see it elevators, bathrooms, paycheck envelopes. Send it out in an email blast. Call a companywide meeting. Tell people how to submit their ideas. Getting everyone involved and assuring them that all suggestions will be valued builds trust and teamwork. Before you know it, a wellscrubbed mission statement will be hanging on your office wall, and in your teams' hearts and minds. TURNING VISION INTO REALITY Championing your mission statement was a good start. Now that everyone's on board the mission train, how do you keep everyone on track without derailing into complacency or chaos? And how can they pick up a head of steam while they're at it? Hitch up the engine to the ol' Double-V vision and values. Unlike your mission, which states your firm's purpose, a vision statement asserts where your company is headed. And a statement of operating values spells out the personal traits required of you and your employees to achieve your company's mission and vision. Imagine you've just received an advance copy of Business Week. The cover date is 10 years in the future. To your delight, the cover story features your company. Before you riffle through the pages, pause for a moment. What would you like that article to say about your company its image, its culture, its values, its accomplishments? This future description of your company is your vision. Your vision should be both bold and fearless, like John F. Kennedy's famous 1961 speech to Congress: "I believe that this nation should commit itself to achieving the goal, before this decade is out, of landing a man on the Moon and returning him safely to the Earth." Telescope out seven to 10 years. Peering that far requires visionary thinking and a willingness to look beyond current capabilities and market conditions. Then start thinking, what can you do today to turn those hoped-for Business Week headlines into scrapbook clippings? Your responsibility as CEO is to champion your company's mission until it guides every member of your team like the North Star. Consistently breathe new life into your mission and vision by keeping them updated and relevant. Only then can they evolve into a force that shapes employee behavior.The synergy of mission, vision, and values can unleash a torrent of opportunities for excitement, enrichment, and enlightenment. Be a catalyst of creative energy until your efforts take hold and begin to crest. TO PROMOTE AWARENESS OF YOUR MISSION: -Use it as a litmus test in one-on-one and group meetings: "Is this in sync with our mission?" -Ask people to commit it to memory. At team meetings, randomly call on someone to recite it. Reward a correct answer with a gift certificate. -Hold an annual team meeting to make everyone aware of the company's mission and how it meshes with his or her daily routine. -Hold an essay contest with a topic like, How our mission helped me make an important decision. Or, How our mission inspires me to give my best. Or, simply, What our mission means to me. Post the entries on your intranet or bulletin board and award a prize to everyone who enters. -Start a "Mission Mentions" section in the company newsletter to officially recognize employees for embodying the mission through words and deeds. At smaller shops, low-tech bulletin boards work just as well as high-speed e-letters. -Post a suggestion box and solicit comments about how the company can follow through on its mission. -Encourage employees to speak up if they run into circumstances that clash with the mission. Make various reporting channels available.
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