“So, habits are connected to competence. Why is that so important?” I asked. Muriel was one of my former students, even before she was promoted from supervisor to manager.
“Sometimes, when I am faced with a problem, especially a new problem, it’s difficult to solve. Competence is the ability to bring my thinking and resources to the problem quickly. Not just quickly, but easily. Almost like an instinct. Only I know it’s not instinct, because it is something I learned and had to practice,” she replied.
“Give me an example,” I said, looking for clarity.
“Okay, planning. As a manager, I know it is very tempting, when faced with a problem, to just jump in and solve it, dictate a course of action and move on. What I found was, that whenever I did that, I would fail to notice some critical element, misdirect my people and end up with my team losing its confidence, in me.
“It took me a while to learn that I needed to slow down, get to the root cause of the problem, then create a plan. It was painful, in the beginning, because planning was not me.
“I would have to stop everything, clear the decks, drag out my books on planning. It was excruciating, worse, it took too long. Sometimes we would miss a deadline because the process took too long. It was difficult not to go back to jumping in, dictating a course and moving on, even if it was in the wrong direction.
“It was only when I committed the planning model to memory, that things began to change. Once I had it in my head, I could access the steps without having to look them up in my book. I began to break down every problem this way. Planning became quicker and quicker. Better yet, I was able to involve my team in creating the solution by using the steps. We seldom overlooked critical items. The best part was that everyone was on-board when we finished planning.
“Now, planning is a habit. My team does it all the time. It is a competence.”
Tom, I think you nailed a hot topic. A topic that has been noticed for awhile; if it is still a problem, then it has not been fixed. Think about it. Palm pilots, day planners, calendars, programs, critical paths, etc., etc. have all been introduced to plan more effectively. If technology has not provided an answer, then may be there is a different root problem. May be planning is a virtue. Like responsibility, you cannot technogize a solution.
Looks like Muriel changed from unaware incompetent in planning to aware incompetent and moved on to aware competent and finally anaware competent. This is a learning process and like all learning processes it takes energy and time. Like most things, taking the first step towards change is the must difficult one.