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TUESDAY
November/December, 2011
YEAR 2 | No 24
Read my tips
By: Simon Brown
London Business School (BSR)
Julian Birkinshaw, author of Reinventing
Management and co-founder of MLab, names
10 books that ought to be on the bookshelf of
anyone interested in management innovation.
page 3
Friday Rant: A Five-Step Plan
By: Jason Busch
spendmatters.com
Even though most companies would likely be
better off blowing up their AP function, not paying
vendors for 30 days while they slam in a partial
hosted automation solution and then started a
new... Read More.
page 3
The Secret to Ensuring
Follow-Through
By: Peter Bregman
Harvard Business Review Blog Network
“Listen, I would love the reorg to work. But
I just can’t trust them.”
I had called Mary* as part of my preparation
for an offsite with the leaders of a fasttalking about the newly reorganized HR
department.... Read More.
page 2
HR Portals
By: Barbara Hodge
ssonetwork.com
Whenever I speak with leaders of an HR services
center I am impressed with just how much data
they need to support. From the new graduate
trainee to the CEO, you can be sure that everyone
will, at some time or other... Read More.
page 4
The Secret to Ensuring
Follow-Through
By: Peter Bregman
Harvard Business Review Blog Network
“Listen, I would love the reorg to work. But I just can’t trust
them.”
I had called Mary* as part of my preparation for an offsite
with the leaders of a fast-growing financial services firm. Mary
was talking about the newly reorganized HR department.
Before, when she could trust them, Mary had a dedicated HR
person — Lucinda — to address her needs. But now? Now
she had to call a shared services group who were, collectively,
responsible for following through on her requests.
“Why can’t you trust them?” I asked.
Mary had a hard time answering. It wasn’t that they had failed
to deliver — but she was pretty sure they would. With so
many different people involved, how could things not fall
through the cracks?
“The more people juggling,” Mary told me, “the higher the
risk of someone, somewhere, dropping a ball.”
True. But there’s another, more positive, side to group
juggling: the more people juggling, the more likely someone,
somewhere will be able to catch a ball that an otherwise busy,
overwhelmed individual would have dropped.
“How do we keep them accountable?” Mary asked, still
uncomfortable. “At least with Lucinda, responsibility was
clear.”
Mary had a point. Which got me thinking: when does a ball
usually get dropped? I thought of all the mishaps, mishandles,
and mistakes I had witnessed in the past month and realized
they could all be traced to a single point in time: the handoff.
For the most part, problems didn’t arise because of
incompetence, laziness, or disinterest. They arose because
of poor communication. At the moment two people were
discussing what needed to get done, something, somehow,
went awry.
The solution can’t be as simple as one point of contact
because, in a large, complex, global organization, one point of
contact is never simple. The solution has to be even simpler
than that. It has to work with one point of contact or many.
It has to work across the hierarchy, across departments, and
across all silos.
As I finished my pre-offsite interviews, I made a single
request of each leader: read The Checklist Manifesto by Atul
Gawande.
A physician and writer, Gawande describes doctors who
resist the checklist — it’s too simple, insulting even — and
then shows us how hospital staff who follow a checklist save
more lives than most medical “miracle drugs” or procedures.
Gawande makes a strong case for why experts need checklists,
especially for the most mundane of tasks. The more expert
we are in something, the more we take things for granted,
and, as a result, miss the obvious.
Most of us think we communicate well. Which, ironically, is
why we often leave out important information (we believe
others already know it). Or fail to be specific about something
(we think others already understand it). Or resist clarifying
(we don’t want to insult other people).
Thankfully, there’s a simple solution: create a checklist and
use it during every handoff.
During the offsite, the leadership team looked at where
problems happened in the past and where they were likely to
happen in the future. Almost all were during handoffs.
So we developed the following mandatory “handoff
checklist” — questions that the person handing off work
must ask the person taking accountability for delivery:
Handoff Checklist
•
What do you understand the priorities to be?
•
What concerns or ideas do you have that have not
already been mentioned?
•
What are your key next steps, and by when do you
plan to accomplish them?
•
What do you need from me in order to be
successful?
•
Are there any key contingencies we should plan for
now?
•
When will we next check-in on progress/issues?
•
Who else needs to know our plans, and how will we
communicate them?
Time it takes to go through the checklist? One to five minutes.
Time (and trust) saved by going through the checklist?
Immeasurable.
We came up with this checklist because it addressed the
most common reasons for dropping balls in this particular
organization. Your handoff checklist may be different.
Here’s what’s compelling about an established checklist: it
not only reduces mistakes, it reduces the need for courage.
Why would we need courage? Imagine you just finished
explaining the priorities of a project to someone. Wouldn’t it
seem a little patronizing, a little insulting to their intelligence,
to ask them to tell you what they understood the priorities
to be?
With an established checklist, it’s no longer offensive;
it’s standard. And when they answer, often with a slight
www.institutodegestao.com.br
2
misunderstanding of the priorities, you can correct them on
the spot, saving them two weeks of misguided work and the
loss of trust that goes along with it. That’s the power of the
checklist.
A few months after the offsite, I called Mary to ask her how it
was working. Was the new HR Shared Services organization
delivering? Did she miss Lucinda?
“Sure I miss Lucinda,” she told me, “but I don’t need her.”
Then she pulled out her checklist to make sure we were both
on the same page for our work going forward.
Read my tips
By: Simon Brown
London Business School (BSR)
Read my tips
01 The Future of Management, Gary Hamel (with Bill Breen)
Is your company stodgy? Hamel urges you to abandon a
command-and-control management style. The organisations
that adapt to rapid change, shed legacy management beliefs,
embrace unconventional management practices and make
necessary changes represent the future of management. (288
pages, Harvard Business School Press, 2007)
02The Age of Heretics: A History of the Radical Thinkers
Who Reinvented Corporate Management, Art Kleiner
Kleiner defines a ‘heretic’ as someone fiercely loyal to the
company yet identifies truths that defy conventional wisdom.
This book is a collection of fascinating stories that offer
wisdom from those who sought and found new ways to lead.
(432 pages, Jossey-Bass, 2008)
03The Future of Work: How the New Order of Business
Will Shape Your Organization, Your Management Style and
Your Life, Thomas W. Malone
Malone’s book is even more relevant today with the rise of
Web 2.0 marketing tools. Since its publication, technology has
allowed small firms access to outsourcing, global connections
and less hierarchy. Decentralisation has unlocked energy and
creativity, creating new markets and relationships. (240 pages,
Harvard Business School Press, 2004)
04Management Innovators: The People and Ideas that Have
Shaped Modern Business, Daniel A. Wren and Donald G.
Greenwood
This concise volume profiles more than 31 innovators, from
Eli Whitney to Peter Drucker. Each person featured is placed
within the business and social context of his time, thus
providing a much broader context for breakthrough thinking.
(272 pages, Oxford University Press, 1998)
05Strategy and Structure: Chapters in the History of the
American Industrial Enterprise, Alfred D. Chandler, Jr.
Chandler provides one of the first investigations into how
70 of the largest US companies retooled when facing rapid
expansion. He analyses how companies such as DuPont and
GM became modern decentralised corporations. (480 pages,
Beard Books, 2003)
06Maverick! The Success Story Behind the World’s Most
Unusual Workplace, Ricardo Semler
At only 21, Semler rebuilt his father’s Brazilian firm, Semco,
by applying radical ideas: allowing employees to determine
their own schedules, pay scales and dress codes while
reducing paperwork and abolishing bureaucracy. (332 pages,
Random House, 2001)
07Birth of the Chaordic Age, Dee Hock
‘Chaordic’ (from ‘chaos’ and ‘order’) describes a new form
of organisation. Hock believes not only that order can be
born of chaos but also that the chaordic age will be the
dawning of new individuality, liberty, community and ethics.
(345 pages, Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 1999)
08What’s the Big Idea? Creating and Capitalising on the Best
Management Thinking, Thomas H. Davenport and Laurence
Prusak with Jim Wilson
It isn’t enough to recognise a good idea. Idea practitioners
must assess, scan and track ideas to the marketplace. To do
this, they must refine the right idea for their organization,
package and sell it all the way to successful implementation.
(256 pages, Harvard Business School Press, 2003)
09Enterprise 2.0: New Collaborative Tools for Your
Organization’s Toughest Challenges, Andrew McAfee
McAfee’s case studies illustrate how leaders are using Web
technologies to discover new ideas, markets and ways to
make decisions. This is a must read for executives, strategic
planners and information technology leaders. (240 pages,
Harvard Business School Press, 2009)
10The Wisdom of Crowds, James Surowiecki
Surowiecki believes, under the right circumstances, groups are
smarter than the smartest individual. He shows how collective
wisdom can succeed or fail, with practical applications for
any organization. (336 pages, Abacus, 2005)
Birkinshaw is a professor of Strategic and International
Management, Senior fellow of the Advanced Institute of
Management Research and Deputy Dean for programmes
in London Business School. His latest book is Reinventing
Management: Smarter Choices for Getting Work Done
Friday Rant: A Five-Step Plan
By: Jason Busch
spendmatters.com
Even though most companies would likely be better off
blowing up their AP function, not paying vendors for 30 days
while they slam in a partial hosted automation solution and
then started anew (even requiring new vendor registration
www.institutodegestao.com.br
3
for existing suppliers) such a drastic step could likely lead
to the corporate version of a cold turkey withdrawal from
dangerous substances. Bottom line: probably not worth going
there, as attractive as it might sound, especially for those like
me who believe AP is typically such a corporate scourge. So
if you have the time to plan and transform AP correctly, why
not aspire to something greater and work backwards?
One thing you might aspire to is what I’ll call a “supply chain
finance function.” I firmly believe supply chain finance is an
awful term, as few really know what it means. But if we can
define supply chain finance as a means of creating new value
for both suppliers (in the form of early payments based on a
reasonable APR) and buyers (in many potential forms) based
on specific financing and payment mechanisms, at least we
have some type of common understanding about what it
is. Regardless, turning AP into supply chain finance, at least
as a core functional area, is not something you’ll be able to
do overnight. I see such a migration taking the form of five
specific steps:
1.
Investing in an electronic invoicing solution that
addresses over 90% of your suppliers. I leave it to your
organization to debate the merits of how best to avoid
duplicate payments, minimize human touch points, etc.
Regardless of whether your electronic invoicing program
becomes a full-fledged AP automation initiative (or not), it’s
essential to capture invoices early enough to enable laterstage supply chain finance payment triggers, options and
mechanisms.
2.
Reducing AP “clerk-level” staff by 80% or reassign
them to other areas (if you can’t achieve this after Step 1,
above, then get a new electronic invoicing platform or BPO
partner). When it comes to supply chain finance, you’ll want
a hands-off approach that lets suppliers determine their own
payment scheme. AP staff getting involved can only muck
things up (unless an exception absolutely requires human
intervention).
3.
Either merge AP into treasury (from a functional
perspective, although reporting can stay separate) or
have it join forces, functionally and reporting-wise, with
procurement. From a supply chain finance standpoint, every
function that touches suppliers can theoretically benefit (e.g.,
the early payable of an invoice based upon a reasonable APR
can play a material role in reducing business risk and helping
an organization to become a customer of choice). Yet for
working capital (and potentially even the ability to even book
the “savings” from paying earlier as revenue) treasury should
take the lead in administering programs alongside or separate
from procurement.
4.
Investigate all of the supply chain finance options
available. I’ve been impressed with a wide range of very
divergent offerings. From the truly bank-agnostic and
ambitious (e.g., Oxygen Finance) to the market-based (e.g.,
Pollenware) to bank-based programs (e.g., Citi), options
abound. Get smart on everything that’s available. And make
a decision that leaves you in control without forcing your
suppliers to cut off their pinky in return for early payment.
5.
Sit back and let suppliers determine their own fate
(and start banking the proceeds). Supply chain finance should
always be about management by exception. Just like AP used
to be. Right.
Regardless of whether or not your organization ends up
evaluating whether AP really should continue to consume
corporate air or whether it would be better off ten feet under,
I would urge you to take the time to evaluate what supply
chain finance can mean for your company. Even though the
concept can be somewhat nebulous and the phrase reeks
of jargon, what successful programs can actually enable
suggests that AP can become so much more than what it is
today. And in the process, it can give itself an entirely new
name -- and charter.
- Jason Busch
About the Editor
Jason Busch is Founder and Managing Director of Azul
Partners, a boutique advisory firm. He is also Editor of
the highly trafficked sourcing, trade and supply chain blog
www.spendmatters.com. Jason is regarded as one of the
leading technology pundits and thought leaders in the trade,
procurement and operations worlds. His current research and
interest areas include the future of P2P technologies, global
sourcing, risk management, performance management, and
the growth of communities of interest and online social
networking within the business to business environment.
HR Portals
By: Barbara Hodge
ssonetwork.com
Whenever I speak with leaders of an HR services center I
am impressed with just how much data they need to support.
From the new graduate trainee to the CEO, you can be sure
www.institutodegestao.com.br
4
that everyone will, at some time or other, access information
regarding benefits, vacations (the number one search item, by
the way), or some other “personnel”-related question.
So where is the hitch? It’s all mostly automated, right? Well,
yes and no. There is no end to the steady supply of tools
and technologies that simplify a given part of your process.
But what about the user-experience? Isn’t the challenge to get
your employees to use the system? For them to come back?
And to recommend it to colleagues? Gartner lists a desirable
Tier Zero (T0) resolution as 66%. How do you get there – or
higher?
I just finished listening in on a webinar that talked about HR
portals and making them more user-friendly. In a nutshell:
if you cannot give your employees what they are looking for
WITHIN TWO CLICKS (think about that: two clicks) you’ll
lose them; not only that – it means they won’t come back
AND they’ll move onto plan B: a phone call to HR. (Just
what you are trying to get away from.)
So what makes your HR portal falter? Three reasons were
offered by Enwisen’s Dave Detweiler and Roger Woehl in
today’s webinar: Portals fail if they are, 1. not searchable; 2.
not personalized; and 3. not on-demand. Most importantly,
they say, you need to provide information in context to
transactions. Make the information relevant – and they’ll
come back.
Enwisen shared three tips for making your portal more
effective, namely to include what they refer to as three “valueadd” layers to your content:
Organize – enable intuitive navigation
Contextualize – tie to events to make information meaningful;
link to transactions
Personalize – optimize by roles; configure by end user; enable
widgets
The main message: Intuitive interlinks drive contextualization.
In other words: Organize the same information in different
ways depending on how the user thinks of it.
If this sounds like a lot of hard work – it is. A tip: instead of
building your own, consider integrating a ready knowledge
base like Enwisen’s into SharePoint.
Editores
Conselho Editorial
Rodrigo Lang
Thaissa Lemos
Vanessa Saavedra
Caio Fiuza
Eduardo Saggioro
Vitor Marques
Diagramação
Jessica Müller
Contato: pesquisas@institutodegestao.com.br
www.institutodegestao.com.br
5
Shared Services News | Edição 24
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