Beat Back the Alligators

Lawrence had been a manager for only a couple of months and was having trouble letting go of the supervisor responsibilities from his previous position. His resistance is captured by David in response to Monday’s post.

But how do you get out of the weeds? So much stuff hits my desk it takes me hours to sift through it all to determine what really needs to be done. By then, the day is over and I have not done anything. The next day, it starts all over.

Dig a little, beat back the alligators, dig a little more. Understand that this is not a time- management problem. You cannot organize your way to greatness.

This is the secret, the keys to the kingdom. Your only hope (and hope is a strategy) is to improve your delegation skills. Delegation and training. The only thing that will keep a manager out of the weeds is to build a team to support the position. When a company gets big enough, it is called infrastructure. Without that support, there is no hope.

As a manager, I look for two strata (levels) of support for the manager. Strata I does the work. Strata II (supervisor) makes sure the work gets done. Strata III (manager) creates the system and makes the system better. -TF

Create the System

His brow furrowed. Lawrence had to concentrate to understand. No one had ever really explained his new role as a Manager. “But I thought a Manager was supposed to manage. I thought I was supposed to manage everything on the floor.”

“You’re not a supervisor anymore,” I said. “Your new focus is on the system. Your role is to create the system and make the system better. When you became the Manager, you promoted Nicole to be the supervisor. Whenever you do Nicole’s job, you are not paying attention to the system.”

“I thought I was just trying to help,” defended Lawrence.

“And if you continue to help by doing Nicole’s job, you will continue to ignore the system, and you will fail as a Manager.”

“Give me an example,” challenged Lawrence.

“Nicole is busy scheduling her team around vacations, people calling in sick, having doctor’s appointments and such. That’s her job.

“As the Manager, you just received a revised a production forecast from sales. Three weeks from now, you historically ramp up into your busy season. I looked at your headcount from last year. You are down three people and Charlie just gave notice, his last day is Friday. Everything looks fine, now, but four weeks from now, your production is going to get slammed and Nicole won’t have enough people to schedule from. As the Manager, you have to look ahead and build your labor pool. Now.

“If you are too busy scheduling this week’s production, you will be so far in the weeds, you won’t see what’s coming down the road in four weeks.” -TF

Doing the Right Thing

Lawrence relented. We had been talking about the role of the manager. Two months into the job, Lawrence was feeling stretched way too thin.

“Okay, if I give up scheduling the plant floor and let my supervisor, Nicole, do that, I am afraid our department won’t meet our goals.” Lawrence shifted, very uncomfortable.

“Lawrence, you have a new role. It is Nicole’s turn to make sure the work gets done. It is her job to make sure things are done right.

“Your new job, as a manager, is to focus on the system, to make sure the right things get done. Remember last year, when our demand went to 125 units per day. Our big machine could only produce 100 units per day, so all the raw materials got stacked up in front. By Friday, we were 125 units behind. We went into overtime, hired more forklift drivers (browse around here) and rented extra space to store the raw materials. Our costs were increasing and we still only produced 100 units per day.

“It was only when George, the old manager, decided to run the big machine 3 hours extra each day that we worked through the backorders. We were able to get out of our storage space and let go the extra forklift drivers. Our costs went down and we were running 140 per day.

“Effectiveness is not only doing things right, but doing the right things.” -TF

Stop Being the Supervisor

Last week, I spent a lot of time with Nicole, a new supervisor in her company, talking about the difference between actually doing the work (what she used to do) and making sure the work got done (her new role). It was Nicole’s new job to coordinate people and materials, to pace production so that, at the end of the day, her team met its target goals.

It was interesting. One reason Nicole was having difficulty with her new role, is that her manager was doing it for her. Her manager was still doing the counting, still doing the scheduling, making sure things were efficient. His name was Lawrence.

It was time for me to have a conversation with Lawrence.

“Lawrence, you have been a manager now, for how long?”

“Two months. It’s really different, but it seems like a lot. Not only am I doing all the stuff I was doing before, but now I have new stuff to do on top of that.”

“Who said you were supposed to keep all the tasks you were doing before?” I queried.

“Well, my boss said I was still responsible for scheduling the people and making sure the materials were ordered. He said if we didn’t meet our daily targets, my butt was still on the line,” defended Lawrence.

“Okay, I understand. And does that mean you are the person who actually has to make up the workload schedule?”

“Yeah, but if it’s wrong, I am still in trouble.”

“Lawrence, do you have to create it to make sure it is right, or do you just have to check it to make sure it is right?”

Lawrence knew the answer, but it was tough to get him to say it. The toughest thing to do as a new manager is to stop being the supervisor. -TF

Uninterrupted Time

Travis had too many important things hanging at the end of the day. Your responses were helpful and from different angles.

There was a recommendation for a book, Getting Things Done, delegation and identifying “time eaters.”

One insightful idea had to do with segmenting larger projects into smaller pieces. Travis may find it easier to complete small pieces over a couple of days rather than avoiding the large daunting project that looms on his schedule.

Gail gets the book Power of Attitude by Mac Anderson for her explanation of reserving uninterrupted quiet time. As a Manager what impact can you have on your Key Result Areas if you had just one hour of uninterrupted time each week? What if you had two hours each week?

What if you had two hours each day?

Gail has some great ideas. Read her entire response along with the rest of the comments. Good stuff. -TF

What’s Your Discipline

Travis looked at me over the rim of his glasses. I had just explained the time management principle of working through a task completely before starting the next task. He was skeptical. “I can’t ever get anything finished before I have to start on the next thing,” he lamented.

“Of course you can’t. The modern American manager gets interrupted every nine minutes. It is not unusual for you to have multiple tasks going on simultaneously. But the principle is still the principle. At the end of the day, how many tasks are still left hanging?”

“Want to know the truth?” Travis continued, assuming that I did. “If I start ten things today, only two will get finished and eight will be left hanging for tomorrow. So, then I will have eight things to start with, plus ten more things tomorrow. Two things will get finished, so I will have sixteen things to carry over to the next day. It’s no wonder I am always behind.”

“So, do you think that no one else has this problem?”

“No, I guess not,” Travis replied.

“Then why do some people get things accomplished while others get mired down and hopelessly behind?”

And that’s the question for today. How do you get things accomplished while others get hopelessly behind? What is your discipline of time management? Best idea gets a signed copy of The Power of Attitude by Mac Anderson. -TF

Make Sure the Work Gets Done

Nicole was still stymied over our discussion about the role of the supervisor. “But if I am not actively working on the line with everyone else, I don’t feel like I have accomplished anything at the end of the day.”

“Nicole, let’s talk about the value-add of the supervisor. While your team members do the work, your job is to make sure the work gets done. The value you bring to the party as the supervisor is that the work is complete, at the target volume, at the defined quality standard and on time. To make that happen, your job is to schedule the appropriate materials, schedule the appropriate team members and make sure the right machines are available. Your value-add is consistency, thoroughness (no gaps) and completeness (the job gets finished).

“The Mom and Pop just starting out doesn’t have to worry about that stuff. They just have to finish today’s job for today’s customer. As organizations grow, as volume increases and there are more customers than you can count with fingers and toes, these are the issues that make or break a company. Is the right volume of product (or service) produced, of consistent quality, on time? Successful supervisors are responsible for taking the organization to that next level. It is a different sense of accomplishment, yet critical for the company to grow.” -TF

Push Me, I Will Go Faster

I was on Henrik’s wheel. We had eight miles to go with 43 miles behind us. I was thinking, as long as Henrik kept this pace, I could hang on. If he went faster, I was toast. One thing was certain. I could not handle another shift on the front. My legs were rubber.

Henrik pulled to the left, sat up and looked over. No way, I said to myself. I can’t. Henrik just stared at me. I stood on my pedals and dug in, pulling ahead. Henrik fell in behind allowing me to block the wind for the next stretch of road.

Sometimes I ride by myself, but I never get the workout, I never get the push unless I ride with someone else. Left to our own devices, we coast when it’s convenient, dog the hill with some justification about the heat or the wind.

Push me and I will go faster, challenge me and I will find that bit of energy left that I did not know I had.

Everyone needs a coach. -TF

No Pizza

Nicole’s team beat yesterday’s numbers. “Nicole, I want to add another element to your day. I want you to add three 5-minute huddles with your team. One in the morning, one after the mid-morning break and one at the afternoon break.

“In this meeting, I want you to go over the numbers from yesterday. If we beat yesterday, I want you to give your team a complimentary remark. No pizza. No days off. Just a little appreciation.

“Use these meetings to focus your team on the goal.” -TF

Improvement Over Yesterday

Nicole had the numbers posted. She was still working side by side, helping on the line, but at least the numbers were posted.

“But, we didn’t make our goal numbers. That’s why I was afraid to write them on the white board,” Nicole defended.

I ignored her body language. “Nicole, I want you to add another number to your white board. I want you to post yesterday’s numbers next to the goal numbers. For right now, I just want you to focus your team on improvement over yesterday.”

“Well, that should be easy,” snorted Nicole.

“That’s the point. Make improvement easy. Then focus on it.” -TF