Tuesday, January 8, 2013

The Circles That Make the Foundation for My Management Platform



So I’ve spent the last few of my blogs talking about learning, environments and my epiphanies about the correlation between sales and management.  Kind of a hodgepodge of thoughts but when I eventually put them together it formed the solid foundation upon which I would build my coaching and feedback philosophies.

To recap the path I took to this realization is actually pretty simple as it’s read but it was a long time formulating and putting this into something that was coherent.  Then it had to be dynamic; modifiable.  Then it had to be teachable. 

If you’ve ever looked at a book on drawing you probably remember drawing a series of circles and shapes to give you a rough outline and proportion of your subject.  An oval for the head; circles where the ears should go, etc.  That was your foundation.  Even if it didn’t come close to looking like the finished example you saw in that instruction book it sure looked better than before you drew your little series of shapes.  Here were my little circles.  I just had to find a way to put them together to form the picture I wanted:

·         Most people want to learn and are teachable
So often people are not given encouragement or feedback of any kind.  People get bored, feel unchallenged and are not supported in any way.  It could be an 11 year old boy not getting this support from his little league coach.  That 11 year old boy might eventually turn out to be an all star hitter someday but it’s usually because of external forces like private hitting coaches, practicing on his own, or simply playing for a more effective coach.  Often times they just get discouraged and give up.

·         You can’t motivate anybody but you can create a motivating environment
You try the quick fixes to improve your environment but it doesn’t work.  Or you “shock and awe” by bringing in a specialist or radically changing processes and procedures.  You give out rewards and kudos for a while and motivation and morale goes up but then it falls back after a short time.  You’re pushing water uphill and all that’s left is the puddle at the bottom.  You need to change the culture of your environment and it’s always a lot of work.  That’s why some managers won’t or don’t do this.

·         Don’t reinvent the wheel – do what other successful managers do
Even if you don’t have a mentor or are unfamiliar with your situation you can always get off your butt and do some research.  There are tons of forums, support groups, books, periodicals and seminars you can access.  Anything from how to effectively coach an agent to setting up your business in the most efficient manner.  You have more of a support group than you think too.  Your IT department, HR Generalist, and your peers can guide you.  Shut up and listen.

·         Put your own spin and flair on your job; personalize it
You will not stick to a diet if you don’t like the food.  Just because you’re copying a successful business plan doesn’t mean it has to be done just like your mentor or boss.  If you don’t make it personal to you then you definitely will resent it and at the worse stop doing it.  Your co workers will see your passion and be much more receptive if they see your buy in.  

·         If it doesn’t work modify it or stop doing it
You’re making this mistake if it’s the path of least resistance. Maybe it’s working just enough to keep your boss off your tail but it will eventually lead to failure.  These are dynamic times; we wear many hats and have to adjust accordingly.  If it’s not working stop and think about your options.  Stop and ask for directions like your wife (or hubby) told you to do 5 miles back.  It’s okay to ask for help and different opinions.

·         You need to be consistent
This starts with a plan.  Consistency is much more easily maintained if there’s a focus that everybody involved is aware of.  Coaching and feedback, rewards and recognition and other daily events should always be on schedule.  Also be prepared for changes in these routines.  Hardly anything is written in stone but you certainly should keep everybody in the loop when things take a different turn.  Are you changing key metrics at your client’s last minute request?  Have a plan before this happens on how you disseminate the information to your employees and how you will handle any changes in their coaching and feedback for example.  Including frequency.

·         You need to be fair
There’s always some group within the organization that appears to be the golden children.  There’s also somebody that seems to get more attention and kudos than others.  Be aware of this.  It’s a tough situation to be in but you can definitely take the focus off of these people by implementing a solid recognition and rewards program and by having specific focus groups, responding personally to suggestions, and performing other actions that include ALL employees.  Just remember what you do for one person or group you should do something similar for others.

·         You need to understand sometimes people choose not to learn
Some people cannot or chose not to play ball.  They are most of the times the core of your toxic environment and it doesn’t take many of them to foul up the carburetor.  Even the best coaching and support system makes no difference in their performance and attitude.  You gotta have a system in place to weed these people from your organization.

I’ve not gotten into any specifics here because everybody’s environment is different.  But everybody can build off the same solid foundation of circles whether you’re an outbound sales-focused call center or an inbound technical support center.

Take some time to draw on your own experiences from each of the above bullet points until you can come up with one or two examples.  It will only stick in your brain if you personalize it.  Take a chance and start changing some things that aren’t working for you now.  In my next blog I’ll start laying out the path I took after I turned all those circles into a final picture.

Thursday, January 3, 2013

Foundation Builder Needed – No Experience Necessary?


When I entered the call center arena as an Operations Manager I was given the job of improving the coaching and feedback process to improve metrics that our client had set for us.  I had ZERO call center experience and limited managerial chops under my belt.  Archie Bunker would have felt like this if they had taken him out of his cab and placed him in the cockpit of a 767.  I was in over my head.

I had just come from the road as a sales representative for a concrete building materials company.  It was 1998 and our company had just been bought and all of us found ourselves out of work.  I don’t remember how I was even introduced to this OM job.  I tell people I “Kramered” into the spot referring to the Cosmo Kramer character on “Seinfeld” – he’s one of those guys that find opportunities and you just scratch your head wondering how he stumbled into that.  I was a salesman.  I wasn’t planning on staying a manager there for long.  And being charged with something so alien to me as improving metrics on a large scale was going to speed that process exponentially either by my hand or my call center director’s hand. 

My management process was sporadic (and that's probably being too kind).  I had focus groups with agents but they were not really that focused and I would sometimes lose control of the meeting.  The only thing I learned was that they either didn’t like their supervisor, was friends with their supervisor, or they didn’t know their supervisor.  Three different responses with three different solutions and nothing productive for me to use.  

I tried being one of those walking managers who tried to get along with everybody.  This micro management approach only bit me in the rear end because some people felt there was favoritism shown by me.  Worse is that in a call center that size I did miss talking and bonding with some agents.  Even worse was I had agents who read my intentions another way and felt that they could bypass their immediate supervisor and come to me directly.  That gave a whole new definition to open door policy.  What a mess.

I soon realized that management was a lot like sales and I knew how to sell.  I was making mistakes as a manager I never would have made in the sales arena.  The same salesman’s mantra kept creeping back into my brain.  It was a definition of a word we are all familiar with:

Insanity – “Doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result”


At least Tommy had a plan!
I’ve watched a lot of sales reps go down in flames doing this and I was heading down the same path as a manager.  Sometimes all they would do is make “comfort calls” – visits to their 2 or 3 core customers they would take to lunch every week and scratch out the same small orders from them every visit.  Then they would wonder why their sales were stagnant year after year.   There was no plan; no foundation.

I failed miserably at my first stab as a salesman.  It was a summer job with a publishing company selling bible concordances and study guides door to door.  This company put my group in the heart of the Bible belt – Oklahoma.  We would start each morning to eat breakfast together and sing uplifting and inspiring chants before we went to our designated selling areas.  I thought this was a load of crap.  We had two weeks of sales training very specific to what we would be doing but I refused to pay attention.  How hard was it to go from house to house and sell these books?  I didn’t plan my day or my route. 

The realization that I had the same net worth in Oklahoma at the end of the summer than when I left Ohio was sobering.  I was stubborn and thought I knew what was best about an industry I knew nothing about.  What a wake up call!
 
I had no solid foundation.  Oh wait, yes I did; I just chose not to build on that foundation!  The publishing company I sold for had over 40 years of people who grew very prosperous on that foundation.  The one I thought was a load of crap.   

After that summer I vowed never to be that arrogant again.  I certainly had been doing the same thing over and over expecting different results.  In my future sales positions I was determined to blueprint the same strategies that were successful to other salesman.  Now as an Operations Manager I would adopt the same philosophy.  And it worked.

Now my focus groups had purpose.  Now when I walked the floor I had a reason.  Now my meetings had agendas, take aways, and accountability.  Most importantly if I did something and it didn’t work I moved on and didn’t dwell.  I didn’t repeat the same thing over and over expecting different results.  We create our solid foundation and we build on that foundation.

I promise to start sharing some of the coaching and feedback principles in this blog.  Nobody really wants to hear endless stories about my sales career or even Archie Bunker.  What’s important to me is that people see and understand the path that led me to these principles that work.  As managers you are going to have to draw on your own experiences (wherever you got them) to be effective leaders and it’s critical that you infuse your own passion and understanding.

Once you have that solid foundation your passion is what will help you create that great environment I spoke about in my last blog.  And I guarantee there will be nothing toxic about it.