Thursday, August 27, 2009

Working our way out of a Recession

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Ireland was once an ideal manufacturing base, close to Europe, with highly skilled people, and an economically viable cost base. Today, as a country, we need to offer alternatives to ensure ‘Ireland Inc.’ is the country of choice for future investment. I believe that ‘Innovation and Creative Thinking’ are key attributes we need to strive towards in our business thinking. Ireland Inc. must have a vision and mission to be the most creative and innovative nation in the world. Business success is dependant on four elements: - Products, Processes, Competencies and Culture. A world class athlete fine tunes his/her technique, trains until it is perfected and then displays the behaviours that support success. Also, at any one time, they understand their goals. They understand what is expected of them. They can measure how well they are performing, and they have the resources they need to be successful. Most importantly, they are committed to the task. The loss of any one of the elements will result in failure. When we strive to improve organisations, we must collectively address each of the three critical elements – process, competencies and culture. This holistic view can present challenges for some as competence can be defined quite narrowly. This can result in organisations being led by technically brilliant people but they may lack the ‘softer’ competences and strategic skills.

Understand, Measure and Improve your Key ProcessesActive Image

The products that you make or the services that you provide are done through a set of key processes. From the point of Order Entry right through to customer delivery and usage, defines your manufacturing process. Process Mapping is one of the most fundamental, simplest, and most useful improvement tools to understand how your processes work. When you understand them you can then simplify them. Understand the elements that are critical, do those very well. Understand the elements that are not necessary, don’t do those at all. Utilising the principles of Lean Thinking allows you to focus on the different types of wastes. Lean Thinking defines seven different types of waste - transport, inventory, movement, waiting, overproduction, over processing and defects. The principles of Creative & Breakthrough Thinking identify solutions to eliminate/reduce these wastes. Six Sigma defines methodologies to reduce variability. Define key metrics for your organisation. Long term metrics define your strategy over the coming years. Short term metrics measure you performance over days, weeks and months. Put a governance structure in place to ensure you measure performance at the right time, with the right people. Simple concepts as Kaisen and 5S can also deliver immediate results. I believe that any organisation that understands the fundamental concepts of creative process improvement, Lean Thinking and the fundamentals of Six Sigma, has the capability to solve more than 80% of its issues.

Ensure People have the Competencies to Think, React and Develop

Imagine now, we have optimised the manufacturing processes. It is essential that everyone who is involved, understands how the process works, has learned and demonstrated the skills required to produce consistent results. This could be crudely defined as the competence to ‘Do’. As well as understanding how to operate the process under normal circumstances, it is imperative to understand what to do when a deviation occurs. These behavioural thinking skills are equally critical as they define how soon we get back into control. These skills include data analysis, data presentation, facilitation skills, problem solving skills, creativity skills, communication skills, report writing skills, etc. These could be defined as the competencies to ‘Fix’. Imagine another layer of competences on top of this one. This level of competence defines how we collaborate and align ourselves behind a common goal, how we behave in meetings, how we educate, motivate and recognise ourselves and others. These are the competencies to ‘Improve’. Having a strategy to deliver these competencies will deliver significant value add to any organisation.

Ensure the Culture Supports the Organisation.

Culture (from the Latin cultura, meaning "to cultivate,") generally refers to patterns of human activity and the symbolic structures that give such activities significance and importance. In a business context, culture can be defined as all the behaviours, ways of operating, beliefs, manners, dress, language, rituals and institutions that define that business. If the culture of an organisation is not congruent with its vision then success will be difficult. Culture manifests itself in the way we interact. For example, the way meetings are conducted, the way we respond to customers, the way we treat our staff. Most of us spend many hours in meetings, once defined as - “a place where minutes are taken and hours are lost”. If the culture is to talk all day, take no actions, allocate blame for failure, recognise the ‘arsonist turned fire fighter’ for solving today’s problem, then this culture will not promote the ideas of innovation, collaboration, creativity. We experience this culture every day but if these habits continue to happen then they become the accepted culture and hence remain unchallenged. We have all been in situations where the culture was just right. Everyone knew what they were trying to achieve. They knew their role and the role of others. They performed their jobs flawlessly. They supported and motivated each other. They collectively addressed problems with the mindset of achieving the end result. They encouraged positive behaviours and discouraged negative behaviours. Developing this culture of a team is very important. Many people think when we talk about team as a specific project team, but in reality the natural work team is a bigger contributor to success. Good communications, clear metrics & targets, feedback on performance, discussion on what is working and what we can improve are all essential elements. Team development activities can be a great support to developing the team when they are properly facilitated. Designing exercises to simulate desired characteristics in a safe environment can provide incredible results. Today, access to information is easy; we need to develop the skills to best use that information. The model outlined provides a framework to assess and develop those skills. Focus on Product, Process, Competency and Culture. Ensure expectations are known, Performance is measured and acted upon and resources are available.


We need to get back to 'Living Lean'


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Written by Finbarr Sheehy

If you asked any family in the western world today to move house, how long would it take? An hour, a day, a week, a month, six months? I would estimate between a month and six months. Think of all the planning needed to figure out what we need to bring, what we plan to dump, who will transport everything, where are we going to store it?

 If you asked a family in Africa to move house, how long would it take? I would propose probably less than an hour. Just pick up the key essentails and move.

So what's the difference?

I think it is partly because we have lost the ability to recognise what we need and what we want. We have become so materialistic. We are convinced that if we see something we like, then we must have it. We upgrade our phones every year because we are due an upgrade, not because there is a problem with the phone. We change our cars regularly because we want to better than our neighbours, not because the car is unreliable. Every house in the west has several cars, multiple TVs, excess furniture, too much food. We pay excess amounts for food we do not eat, we pay for services we do not need. We are convinced to invest in property we cannot afford to repay.

When finances are tight, we are forced to rethink what is important. We demand greater value for money. We have to rethink our vision for the future. Assuming we can survive the short term pain, this is ultimately a good thing. It forces us to take greater control over our own destiny. Lean Thinking forces us to figure out What is of Value (Family, Health, Identity, Spirit, Values, etc.) . It tells us to do those things very well and eliminate all other non value added activities. It says to understand the best ways to make and deliver those products and services and always strive for perfection (as defined by the customer) . Those who will survive and prosper in these times are those who have a vision of where they want to go and are determined to succeed. They show leadership ans share their ideas and vision with others.They do not spend their time acting as victims and blaming others.

Today in Ireland we have an opportunity to regain our ability to be creative, innovative, offer real value for money to the world. This we must do collaboratively.

Finbarr

Mind Mapping

Mind MapsActive Image


A mind map is a diagram used to represent words, ideas, tasks or other items linked to and arranged radially around a central key word or idea. It is used to generate, visualize, structure and classify ideas, and as an aid in study, organization, problem solving, decision making, and writing.



It is an image-centered diagram that represents semantic or other connections between portions of information. By presenting these connections in a radial, non-linear graphical manner, it encourages a brainstorming approach to any given organizational task, eliminating the hurdle of initially establishing an intrinsically appropriate or relevant conceptual framework to work within.



A mind map is similar to a semantic network or cognitive map but there are no formal restrictions on the kinds of links used.



The elements are arranged intuitively according to the importance of the concepts and they are organized into groupings, branches, or areas. The uniform graphic formulation of the semantic structure of information on the method of gathering knowledge, may aid recall of existing memories.





Applications


Mind maps have many applications in personal, family, educational, and business situations, including notetaking, brainstorming (wherein ideas are inserted into the map radially around the center node, without the implicit prioritization that comes from hierarchy or sequential arrangements, and wherein grouping and organizing is reserved for later stages), summarizing, revising and general clarifying of thoughts. For example, one could listen to a lecture and take down notes using mind maps for the most important points or keywords. One can also use mind maps as a mnemonic technique or to sort out a complicated idea. Mind maps are also promoted as a way to collaborate in colour pen creativity sessions.



Mindmaps can be drawn by hand, either as 'rough notes', for example, during a lecture or meeting, or can be more sophisticated in quality. Examples of both are illustrated. There are also a number of software packages available for producing mind maps (see below).


The best-selling fiction paperback (August 2007) in the UK , "The Naming of the Dead" by Ian Rankin, features a detective, Inspector Rebus who uses mind maps to solve crimes.


To see many examples of mind maps, just type mind map into Google and search the 'Images' rather that the 'websites'

I really liked the mindmaps produced by Shev Gul on his site mindbodyresources.com.





How to Draw a Mind Map

Tony Buzan suggests using the following foundation structures for Mind Mapping:


  1. Start in the center with an image of the topic, using at least 3 colors.

  2. Use images, symbols, codes, and dimensions throughout your Mind Map.

  3. Select key words and print using upper or lower case letters.

  4. Each word/image must be alone and sitting on its own line.

  5. The lines must be connected, starting from the central image. The central lines are thicker, organic and flowing, becoming thinner as they radiate out from the centre.

  6. Make the lines the same length as the word/image.

  7. Use colors – your own code – throughout the Mind Map.

  8. Develop your own personal style of Mind Mapping.

  9. Use emphasis and show associations in your Mind Map.

  10. Keep the Mind Map clear by using radial hierarchy, numerical order or outlines to embrace your branches.

An idea map is similar to a mind map but does not adhere to the above guidelines. Rules are constantly broken based on the purpose and application of the Map.


Tony Buzan has recently released IMindMap, a software package for developing mind maps. This is the best software tool that I have come across. It is very intuitative and easy to use. I would recommend it very much. Check it out at http://www.imindmap.com/