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    One Consultant Does Not Fit All: Hiring the Right Consultant
    I constantly work with other consultants with or on behalf of my clients. Some are consultants I help my clients locate and other are consultants they have found themselves. 99% of the time, the relationships and projects have a successful result, but in the remaining 1% everyone wonders what went wrong.The business world is full of examples of consultants who end up providing less than desirable results. Sometimes, it's because the person is not really a consultant at all — they are in transition or just filling time between jobs. Other times, it may be the consultant is not the right fit for the organization or the project was not clearly defined.When you hire a consultant or contractor you must have the following:A person who is the right fit for your organization A relationship that is set up for success at the beginning A deal that is fair for both parties A project that is clearly defined I can't tell you how much time, energy and money is
    very willing to look at pretty much anything that could help.

    EXECUTING SURGERY

    Looking at himself was painful at first. We used Harrison Assessments and personal feedback from his CEO and selected managers of Factory B (both local and from Hong Kong) to provide the COO with a clearer picture of his strengths and important areas for improvement.

    We then went on a two-day retreat with the COO and the key local and Hong Kong managers at Factory B, seven people in all plus myself. During the first day we worked out a direction for Factory B following a process based on the GAP model. It included finding a clear understanding of where the factory should be in two years time and possible ways to achieve that. Moreover, it called for participants to outline a desired corporate success culture for Factory B, including core values and required leadership competencies that would support this culture.

    During Day 2 we worked on an action plan to implement the findings of Day 1, including a communication strategy and required development through group training and individual coaching. Intercultural training was one of the measures; this time, however, it was an integral part of the ‘surgery’.

    The positive side effects of this two-day retreat were an immense increase in trust among all participants and a very positive outlook. The completion of the 'surgery' followed by 'rehabilitation' lead to a turn-around in a timeframe of 6 months.

    CONCLUSION: The COO did a good

    How To Improve Project Delivery Through Good Business Requirements
    Creating good business requirements not only assures that the proposed project will address all of the organization's needs, but it helps to guarantee that the project is delivered on time and on budget.Here are some of the key reasons that improved project delivery can be achieved through good business requirements.· You are more likely to receive approval sooner from all stakeholders regarding the intended purpose of the software. This will accelerate the remaining phases of the project and help to insure that original project deadlines are met.· Risks will be identified and mitigated early on in the project lifecycle. This will reduce or eliminate unnecessary project delays, avoid losing the trust of the stakeholders, and reduce the likelihood that unexpected costs will result.· The design process will take less time and the results will be more accurate. This will also accelerate the remaining phases of the project and ensure that the development cycle goes m
    THE PROBLEM SITUATION

    Imagine you are the chief operating officer (COO) of a mid-sized corporation, say with 2,000 employees. Your company manufactures commodities like cables for cars. It’s headquartered in Hong Kong, but has factories in two different provinces in China, one in Southern China (Guang Dong) and the other in Northern China near Beijing.

    As COO, you are responsible for operations, i.e. administration including HR, Finance and Controlling, as well as for Manufacturing. The chief executive officer (CEO) holds functional responsibility for Sales & Marketing and R&D.

    Both factories in China were previously state-owned enterprises (SOE’s). Factory A in Southern China, acquired by your company three years ago, is highly productive. On the other hand, you keep struggling with Factory B in Northern China near Beijing, which was acquired five years ago.

    What’s the problem with Factory B? You notice high staff turnover, especially among the executives where in the past six months over 25% of them left. This makes the annualized turnover rate a whopping 50%. Also, there seem to be major difficulties between the Hong Kong managers you delegated to that factory and the local managers.

    In the past, you had additional difficulties with what you call “a lazy workforce.” You somewhat fixed that problem by firing people who were caught reading newspapers during working hours or hiding in some dark corner sleeping. This doesn’t happen anymore, but productivity levels are still rather low.

    You wonder if this is a cultural problem since you used the same approach for both factories after acquisition. Or perhaps it could be a language problem. The people in Factory A speak Cantonese, which is the mother tongue for most of your Hong Kong managers. The people in Factory B speak Putonghua. While all your managers are fluent in Putonghua, the people in Factory B still notice a Cantonese accent.

    This is actually a real story of one of our clients. Of course, I modified a few details to keep confidentiality intact.

    When this COO walked me through the past events, I again realized the strong limitation of models when it comes to working with human beings. I’m not saying that models are useless when working with people. I’m saying that we need to be very careful and highly sensitive in cases where models need to be adjusted depending on the human dynamics we encounter.

    I could see that this COO was highly frustrated that all the hard work of the past five years still did not yield a satisfactory situation at Factory B whereas Factory A thrived after only three years. He was in a real dilemma. The CEO and shareholders were demanding higher profits, which were curbed by the losses from Factory B. So what were his options?

    • Option A: Close down Factory B. This would result in a huge loss of face plus all the millions of dollars spent in the past years would be wasted. Additionally, closing down a factory doesn’t come free of charge.

    • Option B: Sell Factory B. But who would buy a factory with low productivity levels and a considerable debt burden? Any buyer would probably ask to receive rather than to pay money to take over Factory B. Not an attractive option either.

    • Option C: Make Factory B profitable. This would be the best solution, of course. But how to do it? Didn’t the COO already try everything he could to make it work?

    The COO thought that upgrading the intercultural competencies of both the Hong Kong and the local managers at Factory B would improve the situation. That’s why we were invited to talk with him.

    BAND-AID OR SURGERY?

    At first glance, this made sense to us. However, the longer I listened to the COO, the more I got the impression that an intercultural training program would be a small band-aid which would have only a minor positive effect on this heavily injured body. If things were to improve considerably, a band-aid wouldn’t do the job. Surgery would be required to save the patient.

    As it is so often the case, one of the root causes of this problem was the COO himself.

    I noticed that at first he talked about how tough he acted with the people at Factory B to weed out the lazy attitude. Later he talked about how he takes great interest in his people, that he cared about their backgrounds and surprised them with knowledge of details like that someone’s wife was in hospital, etc. Then again he talked about how the local Chinese managers don’t seem to understand what his company wants. Then he complained that the Hong Kong managers frequently lose their temper and are not sensitive enough with the local managers.

    THE ISSUE OF COMPLAINING

    In my experience, people who complain heavily about others actually complain about themselves. Let me explain. When we complain about someone, we state that we disagree with that person’s behavior (what they do or say). But complaining is more than that. It’s a strong judgment that such behavior is wrong.

    We make judgments based on our own experience and knowledge, which may be different from the experience and knowledge of the other person. Making a critical judgment therefore means that we don’t want to accept the other person’s way of thinking even though it is their current truth.

    Psychologists have found that people have difficulties accepting other people’s way of thinking only when they have difficulties accepting their own way of thinking. Once they fully accept the way they think and their own opinions, they will be more in a position to also fully accept the way other people think. Accepting in this case does not mean agreeing. It just means that we accept the other person as he or she is and then work from there.

    Back to our COO. To enable him to make Option C work, I had to first help him understand that unless he was ready to change himself, it would be difficult to make real and lasting positive change at Factory B. Luckily, given his desperate situation, he was very willing to look at pretty much anything that could help.

    EXECUTING SURGERY

    Looking at himself was painful at first. We used Harrison Assessments and personal feedback from his CEO and selected managers of Factory B (both local and from Hong Kong) to provide the COO with a clearer picture of his strengths and important areas for improvement.

    We then went on a two-day retreat with the COO and the key local and Hong Kong managers at Factory B, seven people in all plus myself. During the first day we worked out a direction for Factory B following a process based on the GAP model. It included finding a clear understanding of where the factory should be in two years time and possible ways to achieve that. Moreover, it called for participants to outline a desired corporate success culture for Factory B, including core values and required leadership competencies that would support this culture.

    During Day 2 we worked on an action plan to implement the findings of Day 1, including a communication strategy and required development through group training and individual coaching. Intercultural training was one of the measures; this time, however, it was an integral part of the ‘surgery’.

    The positive side effects of this two-day retreat were an immense increase in trust among all participants and a very positive outlook. The completion of the 'surgery' followed by 'rehabilitation' lead to a turn-around in a timeframe of 6 months.

    CONCLUSION: The COO did a good

    Horns and Scurs In Cattle
    In my opinion or what I think I have learned about what causes cattle to have horns, scurs, or to be polled? This opinion has been formed through much research and many years of cattle breeding.The polled or hornless condition is dominant over the horned condition in cattle. The scurred condition is the result of incomplete dominance. Although scurs look like horns, they are attached to the skin, not to the skull of the animal.In most breeds of cattle, horns are produced by a recessive gene, and the polled gene is dominant.If you breed two animals with horns, the offspring will have horns; but if you breed two polled animals, the offspring could be horned or polled.The horned calf out of two polled animals is a case of dominant genes (polled) masking a recessive gene (horns). Both the polled and horned genes were present, but only the results from the dominant polled gene was visible. This is known as a heterozygous gene arrangement for a trait.When both p
    vels are still rather low.

    You wonder if this is a cultural problem since you used the same approach for both factories after acquisition. Or perhaps it could be a language problem. The people in Factory A speak Cantonese, which is the mother tongue for most of your Hong Kong managers. The people in Factory B speak Putonghua. While all your managers are fluent in Putonghua, the people in Factory B still notice a Cantonese accent.

    This is actually a real story of one of our clients. Of course, I modified a few details to keep confidentiality intact.

    When this COO walked me through the past events, I again realized the strong limitation of models when it comes to working with human beings. I’m not saying that models are useless when working with people. I’m saying that we need to be very careful and highly sensitive in cases where models need to be adjusted depending on the human dynamics we encounter.

    I could see that this COO was highly frustrated that all the hard work of the past five years still did not yield a satisfactory situation at Factory B whereas Factory A thrived after only three years. He was in a real dilemma. The CEO and shareholders were demanding higher profits, which were curbed by the losses from Factory B. So what were his options?

    • Option A: Close down Factory B. This would result in a huge loss of face plus all the millions of dollars spent in the past years would be wasted. Additionally, closing down a factory doesn’t come free of charge.

    • Option B: Sell Factory B. But who would buy a factory with low productivity levels and a considerable debt burden? Any buyer would probably ask to receive rather than to pay money to take over Factory B. Not an attractive option either.

    • Option C: Make Factory B profitable. This would be the best solution, of course. But how to do it? Didn’t the COO already try everything he could to make it work?

    The COO thought that upgrading the intercultural competencies of both the Hong Kong and the local managers at Factory B would improve the situation. That’s why we were invited to talk with him.

    BAND-AID OR SURGERY?

    At first glance, this made sense to us. However, the longer I listened to the COO, the more I got the impression that an intercultural training program would be a small band-aid which would have only a minor positive effect on this heavily injured body. If things were to improve considerably, a band-aid wouldn’t do the job. Surgery would be required to save the patient.

    As it is so often the case, one of the root causes of this problem was the COO himself.

    I noticed that at first he talked about how tough he acted with the people at Factory B to weed out the lazy attitude. Later he talked about how he takes great interest in his people, that he cared about their backgrounds and surprised them with knowledge of details like that someone’s wife was in hospital, etc. Then again he talked about how the local Chinese managers don’t seem to understand what his company wants. Then he complained that the Hong Kong managers frequently lose their temper and are not sensitive enough with the local managers.

    THE ISSUE OF COMPLAINING

    In my experience, people who complain heavily about others actually complain about themselves. Let me explain. When we complain about someone, we state that we disagree with that person’s behavior (what they do or say). But complaining is more than that. It’s a strong judgment that such behavior is wrong.

    We make judgments based on our own experience and knowledge, which may be different from the experience and knowledge of the other person. Making a critical judgment therefore means that we don’t want to accept the other person’s way of thinking even though it is their current truth.

    Psychologists have found that people have difficulties accepting other people’s way of thinking only when they have difficulties accepting their own way of thinking. Once they fully accept the way they think and their own opinions, they will be more in a position to also fully accept the way other people think. Accepting in this case does not mean agreeing. It just means that we accept the other person as he or she is and then work from there.

    Back to our COO. To enable him to make Option C work, I had to first help him understand that unless he was ready to change himself, it would be difficult to make real and lasting positive change at Factory B. Luckily, given his desperate situation, he was very willing to look at pretty much anything that could help.

    EXECUTING SURGERY

    Looking at himself was painful at first. We used Harrison Assessments and personal feedback from his CEO and selected managers of Factory B (both local and from Hong Kong) to provide the COO with a clearer picture of his strengths and important areas for improvement.

    We then went on a two-day retreat with the COO and the key local and Hong Kong managers at Factory B, seven people in all plus myself. During the first day we worked out a direction for Factory B following a process based on the GAP model. It included finding a clear understanding of where the factory should be in two years time and possible ways to achieve that. Moreover, it called for participants to outline a desired corporate success culture for Factory B, including core values and required leadership competencies that would support this culture.

    During Day 2 we worked on an action plan to implement the findings of Day 1, including a communication strategy and required development through group training and individual coaching. Intercultural training was one of the measures; this time, however, it was an integral part of the ‘surgery’.

    The positive side effects of this two-day retreat were an immense increase in trust among all participants and a very positive outlook. The completion of the 'surgery' followed by 'rehabilitation' lead to a turn-around in a timeframe of 6 months.

    CONCLUSION: The COO did a good

    The Importance of Your Business Card
    What are you trying to say with you business card?We have talked about collecting other people's business cards and also about how they are often tough to differentiate from one another. These are things you should avoid for your own business card. It is easier to get into a conversation when you have a business card that speaks for itself. My card, BizMechanix, is so different, almost everyone remarks on how good the card looks. I have even had comments about it being the most professional and great looking card they have ever come across. You should make sure that yours is the same. Spend time with a graphic designer, and then also take time to buy good paper stock for printing. You are more likely to get notices and gain business if your card is extremely professional.Do not use the homemade variety, the serrated edges are a sure give-away that you do not value your card. Remember that you card is the first thing people will see on their desk after the event. It is also you
    e.

    • Option B: Sell Factory B. But who would buy a factory with low productivity levels and a considerable debt burden? Any buyer would probably ask to receive rather than to pay money to take over Factory B. Not an attractive option either.

    • Option C: Make Factory B profitable. This would be the best solution, of course. But how to do it? Didn’t the COO already try everything he could to make it work?

    The COO thought that upgrading the intercultural competencies of both the Hong Kong and the local managers at Factory B would improve the situation. That’s why we were invited to talk with him.

    BAND-AID OR SURGERY?

    At first glance, this made sense to us. However, the longer I listened to the COO, the more I got the impression that an intercultural training program would be a small band-aid which would have only a minor positive effect on this heavily injured body. If things were to improve considerably, a band-aid wouldn’t do the job. Surgery would be required to save the patient.

    As it is so often the case, one of the root causes of this problem was the COO himself.

    I noticed that at first he talked about how tough he acted with the people at Factory B to weed out the lazy attitude. Later he talked about how he takes great interest in his people, that he cared about their backgrounds and surprised them with knowledge of details like that someone’s wife was in hospital, etc. Then again he talked about how the local Chinese managers don’t seem to understand what his company wants. Then he complained that the Hong Kong managers frequently lose their temper and are not sensitive enough with the local managers.

    THE ISSUE OF COMPLAINING

    In my experience, people who complain heavily about others actually complain about themselves. Let me explain. When we complain about someone, we state that we disagree with that person’s behavior (what they do or say). But complaining is more than that. It’s a strong judgment that such behavior is wrong.

    We make judgments based on our own experience and knowledge, which may be different from the experience and knowledge of the other person. Making a critical judgment therefore means that we don’t want to accept the other person’s way of thinking even though it is their current truth.

    Psychologists have found that people have difficulties accepting other people’s way of thinking only when they have difficulties accepting their own way of thinking. Once they fully accept the way they think and their own opinions, they will be more in a position to also fully accept the way other people think. Accepting in this case does not mean agreeing. It just means that we accept the other person as he or she is and then work from there.

    Back to our COO. To enable him to make Option C work, I had to first help him understand that unless he was ready to change himself, it would be difficult to make real and lasting positive change at Factory B. Luckily, given his desperate situation, he was very willing to look at pretty much anything that could help.

    EXECUTING SURGERY

    Looking at himself was painful at first. We used Harrison Assessments and personal feedback from his CEO and selected managers of Factory B (both local and from Hong Kong) to provide the COO with a clearer picture of his strengths and important areas for improvement.

    We then went on a two-day retreat with the COO and the key local and Hong Kong managers at Factory B, seven people in all plus myself. During the first day we worked out a direction for Factory B following a process based on the GAP model. It included finding a clear understanding of where the factory should be in two years time and possible ways to achieve that. Moreover, it called for participants to outline a desired corporate success culture for Factory B, including core values and required leadership competencies that would support this culture.

    During Day 2 we worked on an action plan to implement the findings of Day 1, including a communication strategy and required development through group training and individual coaching. Intercultural training was one of the measures; this time, however, it was an integral part of the ‘surgery’.

    The positive side effects of this two-day retreat were an immense increase in trust among all participants and a very positive outlook. The completion of the 'surgery' followed by 'rehabilitation' lead to a turn-around in a timeframe of 6 months.

    CONCLUSION: The COO did a good

    Seven Steps To Great Print Ads
    1. Choose the right creative approach.Who are you selling to? What are they buying — really? Choose the angle that will attract customers’ attention, stimulate their interest, and “hook” them on what you offer. Don’t be in a hurry to start writing your ad. There are several components to the creative approach that must be decided before creative work begins.You’ll need to: - Identify the target market. - Define the offer — will you be promoting your overall brand, or a specific product or product line? - Choose a benefit with emotional appeal. What problem are you going to solve? What disaster will you keep at bay? Substantiate the claim. Prove how the company, the service, or the product delivers the benefit promised. Support your brand. Consider how the tone or style of the ad reflects on the public image you’ve created so far. Be consistent. - Before you start writing, jot down a few words summarizing each of these components of your creative approa
    erstand what his company wants. Then he complained that the Hong Kong managers frequently lose their temper and are not sensitive enough with the local managers.

    THE ISSUE OF COMPLAINING

    In my experience, people who complain heavily about others actually complain about themselves. Let me explain. When we complain about someone, we state that we disagree with that person’s behavior (what they do or say). But complaining is more than that. It’s a strong judgment that such behavior is wrong.

    We make judgments based on our own experience and knowledge, which may be different from the experience and knowledge of the other person. Making a critical judgment therefore means that we don’t want to accept the other person’s way of thinking even though it is their current truth.

    Psychologists have found that people have difficulties accepting other people’s way of thinking only when they have difficulties accepting their own way of thinking. Once they fully accept the way they think and their own opinions, they will be more in a position to also fully accept the way other people think. Accepting in this case does not mean agreeing. It just means that we accept the other person as he or she is and then work from there.

    Back to our COO. To enable him to make Option C work, I had to first help him understand that unless he was ready to change himself, it would be difficult to make real and lasting positive change at Factory B. Luckily, given his desperate situation, he was very willing to look at pretty much anything that could help.

    EXECUTING SURGERY

    Looking at himself was painful at first. We used Harrison Assessments and personal feedback from his CEO and selected managers of Factory B (both local and from Hong Kong) to provide the COO with a clearer picture of his strengths and important areas for improvement.

    We then went on a two-day retreat with the COO and the key local and Hong Kong managers at Factory B, seven people in all plus myself. During the first day we worked out a direction for Factory B following a process based on the GAP model. It included finding a clear understanding of where the factory should be in two years time and possible ways to achieve that. Moreover, it called for participants to outline a desired corporate success culture for Factory B, including core values and required leadership competencies that would support this culture.

    During Day 2 we worked on an action plan to implement the findings of Day 1, including a communication strategy and required development through group training and individual coaching. Intercultural training was one of the measures; this time, however, it was an integral part of the ‘surgery’.

    The positive side effects of this two-day retreat were an immense increase in trust among all participants and a very positive outlook. The completion of the 'surgery' followed by 'rehabilitation' lead to a turn-around in a timeframe of 6 months.

    CONCLUSION: The COO did a good

    What's the Difference Between a Delighted Customer and a Satisfied Customer?
    Most people think that “just turning up the effort” a bit is all that it takes to truly Delight a customer. They believe that customer satisfaction is a linear relationship, the more effort, the more you put into it the happier the customer. That just isn’t the case.There really is a couple of ways we can differentiate this. The differentiator: Something the customer expects Something the customer never expected, but values once he has it.First let’s look at something that a customer “expects.” If he isn’t getting what he expects he’s unhappy. When he finally gets it, he’s contented, satisfied. When a customer EXPECTS something you can only go from unsatisfied to satisfied, no higher. An example of that is when a customer expects something to work.. If it doesn’t work he’s VERY unhappy. If it works but just not quite like he expected he may be not be as unhappy. When it finally works to his expec
    very willing to look at pretty much anything that could help.

    EXECUTING SURGERY

    Looking at himself was painful at first. We used Harrison Assessments and personal feedback from his CEO and selected managers of Factory B (both local and from Hong Kong) to provide the COO with a clearer picture of his strengths and important areas for improvement.

    We then went on a two-day retreat with the COO and the key local and Hong Kong managers at Factory B, seven people in all plus myself. During the first day we worked out a direction for Factory B following a process based on the GAP model. It included finding a clear understanding of where the factory should be in two years time and possible ways to achieve that. Moreover, it called for participants to outline a desired corporate success culture for Factory B, including core values and required leadership competencies that would support this culture.

    During Day 2 we worked on an action plan to implement the findings of Day 1, including a communication strategy and required development through group training and individual coaching. Intercultural training was one of the measures; this time, however, it was an integral part of the ‘surgery’.

    The positive side effects of this two-day retreat were an immense increase in trust among all participants and a very positive outlook. The completion of the 'surgery' followed by 'rehabilitation' lead to a turn-around in a timeframe of 6 months.

    CONCLUSION: The COO did a good job in creating the structures, regulations and processes for Factory B. The results, however, were not satisfactory because the human dynamics at Factory B did not support his objectives. To turn around the situation, the COO had to first change himself and then work pro-actively with his management team to develop the desired direction and culture for Factory B. Creating mutual acceptance and trust was a precondition for success.

    Copyright 2006 Progress-U Ltd.

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