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Spot Harmful Traditions that Keep You from Accomplishing 20 Times More
Spot Harmful Traditions that Keep You from Accomplishing 20 Times More
Spot Harmful Traditions that Keep You from Accomplishing 20
Times More by Donald
Mitchell
Accomplishing 20 times as much requires you to stop doing things
that waste time and resources. Tradition often binds us into
keeping harmful habits. Check to see if you or your organization
are following any of these practices.
If It Ain't Broke, Don't Fix It
A motorist asks a farmer for a glass of water. The farmer obliges,
using his hand pump to draw water from a well. The pump handle
turns close to a board, and the farmer curses as he scrapes his
knuckles against it.
Motorist: Why not move that board? It serves no purpose.
Farmer: It's been there since my father's time. If it was good
enough for him, it is good enough for me.
Aping Human Beings
Imagine a cage containing five apes. In the cage, hang a banana on
a string over some stairs. Before long, as the story goes, an ape
will decide to go up the stairs to grab the banana. As soon as that
ape touches the stairs, spray all the apes with cold water. After
awhile, another ape will approach the stairs with the same result:
All the apes are sprayed with cold water. Do this repeatedly and
then just watch when another ape tries to climb the stairs. The
other apes will try to stop the ape's attempt, even though no cold
water is sprayed on them.
Next remove one ape from the cage and replace that ape with a new
one. The new ape sees the banana and wants to climb the stairs. To
its horror, all of the other apes attack. After another thwarted
attempt, the new ape knows that if it tries to climb the stairs, it
will be assaulted. Now remove another of the original five apes and
replace it with a new one. The newcomer goes to the stairs and is
attacked. The previous newcomer enthusiastically takes part in the
punishment although it has no idea why it was not permitted to
climb the stairs.
After replacing the third, fourth, and fifth original apes, all the
apes that had been sprayed with cold water are gone from the cage.
Nevertheless, no ape ever again approaches the stairs.
Why not? "Because that the way it's always been around here." Sound
familiar?
The Pecking-Order Tradition: After You, Alphonse …
In most organizations, decisions have to follow a certain pathway.
Someone who needs a decision begins the process by asking his or
her boss. The boss asks her or his boss. This process continues
until someone has the authority and wants to decide. When the
decision is finally made, communicating the answer has to follow
the same path in reverse down through the organizational pathway.
Nothing has changed about this process since the days of feudal
kings and their lords. But is this the fastest way to make
progress? Hardly.
The Hazing Tradition: Get Down!
Organizations don't like to allow newcomers to become part of the
group until the new people are put through some ridiculous
initiation that had humbled the organization's veterans. Sharing
humiliating experiences makes everyone feel more comfortable with
one another. The apes in the cage would recognize the process.
The Slow Walking Tradition: Take the Tour
Few people like it when pressure is put on them. To avoid that
pressure, many people will act as though they are performing at
full effectiveness … while working well below their
self-perceived potential. When the big bosses arrive for an
inspection, those who host the visitors will take the big brass on
a long, slow tour designed to demonstrate that everyone is fully
and effectively engaged. Every stop will have been rehearsed for
weeks in advance, and everything will be perfect.
This tradition has been around for a long time. During a famine,
Catherine the Great took a tour of Russia to see how the peasants
were doing. A prosperous-appearing village was erected along the
banks of the river just before her arrival. That evening, the
village was disassembled and transported down river to be erected
again for viewing by the Czarina the next day in a new
location.
The Time-Is-Money Tradition: How Much Is This Conversation Going to
Cost Me?
Many organizations run themselves to be cost efficient. With stop
watches and clipboards in hand, cost analysts ensure that
activities not earning an adequate profit are ruthlessly slashed.
In this way, profits are increased. Or are they? Sometimes the
effects of the cost cutting actually harm profits. Here's an
example: There's no profit in taking back unsatisfactory products.
Stores will put as few people as possible working on this task.
There may be 30 customers in the store and 19 of them will be in
line to return items while a single clerk works as slowly as
possible. But wait in too many of these long lines and customers
will buy somewhere else … where the return lines aren't so
long. A lost customer can cost a company thousands in profits.
Sometimes that short-term cutting focus is the wrong way to look at
things.
The Isolation Tradition: Solitary Confinement for Learning
Development
Most organizations are reluctant to credit innovations and ideas
that have prospered in other organizations. Engineers often like to
refer skeptically to the sloppy work that everyone else does.
Ironically, this approach is more often known as the "Not Invented
Here" Syndrome that almost always means falling behind the
competition because everything "Not Invented Here" is considered
substandard.
The Inertia Tradition: Millwork Is My Trade
In 1848, gold was found at Sutter's Mill in northern California.
There were literally large nuggets sitting in the river beds that
could be picked up by the handful. Five minutes' labor would pay
for a week's expenses. Sutter lost his business as a result. He
kept trying to earn money with his sawmill while workers quit to
carry off fortunes in gold. Similarly, many organizations focus on
their past activities rather than grasping the great potential of
the present.
List Your Harmful Traditions
It's not enough to laugh at others who make large mistakes. You
need to identify which traditions hold back you and your
organization. If you jot those down now, you'll have taken a
helpful first step in eliminating those harmful traditions.
Copyright 2007 Donald W. Mitchell, All Rights Reserved
Donald Mitchell is chairman and CEO of Mitchell and Company, a
strategy and financial consulting firm in Weston, MA. He is
coauthor of six books including The 2,000 Percent Squared Solution,
The 2,000 Percent Solution, and The 2,000 Percent Solution
Workbook. Free advice on accomplishing 20 times more is available
to you by registering at =====> http://www.2000percentsolution.com
.
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