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  • Answer Upon - 9 Mantras For Effecting Change - When Previous Attempts Have Failed

    How Multi-Millionaire Business Owners Make Their Business Work - So They Don't Have To
    Picture this…The typical business owner starts a business. Usually it’s just them by themselves or maybe one or two other people.They do a great job. As the number of staff is small everyone is working together and they are getting things done.They become successful and it’s time to employ some more people.A couple more people are employed – but some cracks start to appear.As the business employs some more staff – the cracks become wider and wider.Soon the business owner notices that there’s not much money being made by the business.There’s staff problems.There may be some customers complaining. Some customers may even be lost.Things just aren’t working anymore.The business ‘plateaus’ and the owner becomes stressed, tired and overwhelmed.The business owner starts to ask whether it’s all worth it.Should they downsize and just go back to the way things were… Or do they grow.They want to grow
    ng> Mantra 8: Be lavish in your appreciation of other's contributions

    Remember, this is not the first and the last change management initiative that you would be heading. So be generous in showing appreciation of other's contributions. They will return the favour the next time they team up with you.
    Mantra 9: Enjoy what you are doing

    This is the most important thing to do. Your enthusiasm about the change should be contagious. It should not only trickle down to the team but also bubble up to the Sr. Management because they would be the influencers who would give you the required fire-power to effect the change.

    My experience tells me that mantras these can be applied to any change management initiative - particularly if previous attempts have failed - with slight adjustments to cater to the uniqueness of the environment / situation.

    CAUTION: Once you succeed in a major change management initiative, you will be called in again and again. So be prepared. But believe me, each is a challenge in its own and you will enjoy it - in fact, it might get addictive.

    Hope this helps you. God luck with leading change!!!

    About the Author Shaju Nair is heading the Technology Competence and

    Ralph Waldo Emerson Weighs In On Business Coaching
    I’ve been struggling to devise a distinction between management consulting and business coaching.Some of the apparent differences that come to mind are these:(1) Consultants tend to fly great distances on planes, while coaches are often locals who take the bus, hitchhike, or walk.(2) Consultants have MBA’s or a Ph.D. while coaches might have squeaked their way through high school.(3) Coaches come cheap. Consultants cost bigger bucks.(4) Consultants dress better and are generally better looking.(5) Consultants are fifty times more likely to have season tickets to the chamber orchestra.Well, as you can imagine, these differences aren’t very impressive.But I happened upon a quote, quite a famous one from Ralph Waldo Emerson, that great American philosopher and man of letters, that seems to separate the wheat from the proverbial chaff.Do you recall that Emerson said it is man’s fondest wish to find someone who will make

    Change is always for the better. And I enjoy effecting change in organizations. It gives me a great amount of satisfaction to see the machinery - that includes people and processes - change to achieve a better level of operational excellence.

    I have had considerable success in the numerous change management initiatives that I have led, however they have come with their own dose of challenges and associated learnings. As I reflect upon my past triumphs, there are 9 key steps - I call them mantras - that have ensured my success in all change management initiatives. The proof of the pudding lies in the fact that I have used these mantras successfully in managing and effecting change where such attempts had miserably failed. These are shared below for you to learn, adopt and adapt to your own unique environments & situations.

    Mantra 1: Do not advocate the change from day 1

    NEVER, NEVER, NEVER walk into an organization / a room and proclaim that you are there to make a change. Do that and you / your efforts would be shown the door. Always position yourself as a facilitator who is there to work with them to see if there is a more effective way to do things.
    Mantra 2: Understand why the previous attempts had failed

    To succeed, learn from previous mistakes. More importantly, understand why the previous attempts had failed. Dissect the cause to a great extent to get to the root cause of the failure. Get inputs from all quarters and people across the hierarchy to get about their views of why the previous attempts had failed. Now dissect the cause and arrive at your version of why the failure happened. This is what you will avoid at all costs.
    Mantra 3: Core team of key influencers

    Identify the groups that will be affected by the change that you are going to bring in. Now go into each affected group and find out who are the key influencers within them. This is the step that will define your success/failure. Create a core team with these people in it. Build a deep and trusting professional relationship with your core team. Get a view from everyone of how the team should approach this challenge.
    Mantra 4: Least Common Denominator

    Never try to force a process / model onto your core team. Rather, use your core team to first identify a least common denominator (LCD) i.e. the minimum that is acceptable to all affected parties. Thereafter evolve an elaborate model out of your LCD and bring it to the final state that you have envisoned but not shared (remember, you are not supposed to impose but rather extract and evolve). Your role during this stage would be that of a listener and a facilitator.
    Mantra 5: Sell change to Sr. Management

    Now that you have a blueprint for implementation, go ahead, show it to the Sr. Mgmt. Do remember to include the names of people who have contributed to this and whose inputs have been taken into consideration. This will greatly increase your chances of getting a buy-in from the Sr. Mgmt. More importantly, listen and watch to the facial expressions and body language of the Sr. Mgmt team as you are presenting your case. Listen and understand their questions and answer to the point - there is no room for beating around the bush when it comes to the Sr. Mgmt. Own up for anything that you would have missed out and give a plan of action to incorporate their recommendations. NEVER leave the room without getting an in-principle agreement to your recommendations. If their suggestions warrant a major change, then schedule a follow-on session there and then and set expectations that that session would be to go over the suggestions and sign off on the approach. Do this and you have struck gold. And now you move on to rolling out the change.
    Mantra 6: Before rollout, identify noise-makers and address them

    These are the people who could topple your applecart. Its easy to identify such people - there are 2 types. Ones have a loud voice, sly smiles, have been in the system for a long time, have an opinion about everything and have the ability to influence their teams through brute force. The second type are passively destructive in the sense that they won't speak up at meetings, have a closed body-language and believe in working 1:1 with people and influencing them - to not subscribe to your recommendations. A two-pronged strategy to deal with such people includes 1)Selecting influencers as part of your core team and 2)Working individually with these people and pre-empting their concerns during such 1:1 sessions.
    Mantra 7: Roll out the change phase-wise

    Slow and steady wins the race - this applies to change management more than anything else. Look for quick-wins. Traget the most pro-change entities within the organization to effect the change first. This will help boost the morale of your core team. After the first success, take the most difficult customer as your next target. You will need full support from your core team and might have to get in the big guns at times. Succeed here and the rest of your work becomes a cake-walk.
    Mantra 8: Be lavish in your appreciation of other's contributions

    Remember, this is not the first and the last change management initiative that you would be heading. So be generous in showing appreciation of other's contributions. They will return the favour the next time they team up with you.
    Mantra 9: Enjoy what you are doing

    This is the most important thing to do. Your enthusiasm about the change should be contagious. It should not only trickle down to the team but also bubble up to the Sr. Management because they would be the influencers who would give you the required fire-power to effect the change.

    My experience tells me that mantras these can be applied to any change management initiative - particularly if previous attempts have failed - with slight adjustments to cater to the uniqueness of the environment / situation.

    CAUTION: Once you succeed in a major change management initiative, you will be called in again and again. So be prepared. But believe me, each is a challenge in its own and you will enjoy it - in fact, it might get addictive.

    Hope this helps you. God luck with leading change!!!

    About the Author Shaju Nair is heading the Technology Competence and

    Centralised And Decentralised Books
    Inventory purchased by head office and sent to branches for them to sell can be invoiced to the branch at cost price or at an amount above cost (usually a fixed retail selling price). Invoicing the goods sent by head office to the branches at cost reduces head office inventory by the same amount as that at which the inventory was originally recorded in its accounting books. The transfer is not considered to constitute sales and therefore does not result in gross profit for the head office. Branches receive goods at cost price and earn gross profit when goods are sold.Where branch accounting records are kept by head office the information from head office's own documentation is supplemented by the information obtained from branch returns. In practice the branch returns will be summarised monthly and recorded in the relevant branch account in head office's accounting books.Where various branches exist, a separate account should be kept for each, although in a man
    he previous attempts had failed

    To succeed, learn from previous mistakes. More importantly, understand why the previous attempts had failed. Dissect the cause to a great extent to get to the root cause of the failure. Get inputs from all quarters and people across the hierarchy to get about their views of why the previous attempts had failed. Now dissect the cause and arrive at your version of why the failure happened. This is what you will avoid at all costs.
    Mantra 3: Core team of key influencers

    Identify the groups that will be affected by the change that you are going to bring in. Now go into each affected group and find out who are the key influencers within them. This is the step that will define your success/failure. Create a core team with these people in it. Build a deep and trusting professional relationship with your core team. Get a view from everyone of how the team should approach this challenge.
    Mantra 4: Least Common Denominator

    Never try to force a process / model onto your core team. Rather, use your core team to first identify a least common denominator (LCD) i.e. the minimum that is acceptable to all affected parties. Thereafter evolve an elaborate model out of your LCD and bring it to the final state that you have envisoned but not shared (remember, you are not supposed to impose but rather extract and evolve). Your role during this stage would be that of a listener and a facilitator.
    Mantra 5: Sell change to Sr. Management

    Now that you have a blueprint for implementation, go ahead, show it to the Sr. Mgmt. Do remember to include the names of people who have contributed to this and whose inputs have been taken into consideration. This will greatly increase your chances of getting a buy-in from the Sr. Mgmt. More importantly, listen and watch to the facial expressions and body language of the Sr. Mgmt team as you are presenting your case. Listen and understand their questions and answer to the point - there is no room for beating around the bush when it comes to the Sr. Mgmt. Own up for anything that you would have missed out and give a plan of action to incorporate their recommendations. NEVER leave the room without getting an in-principle agreement to your recommendations. If their suggestions warrant a major change, then schedule a follow-on session there and then and set expectations that that session would be to go over the suggestions and sign off on the approach. Do this and you have struck gold. And now you move on to rolling out the change.
    Mantra 6: Before rollout, identify noise-makers and address them

    These are the people who could topple your applecart. Its easy to identify such people - there are 2 types. Ones have a loud voice, sly smiles, have been in the system for a long time, have an opinion about everything and have the ability to influence their teams through brute force. The second type are passively destructive in the sense that they won't speak up at meetings, have a closed body-language and believe in working 1:1 with people and influencing them - to not subscribe to your recommendations. A two-pronged strategy to deal with such people includes 1)Selecting influencers as part of your core team and 2)Working individually with these people and pre-empting their concerns during such 1:1 sessions.
    Mantra 7: Roll out the change phase-wise

    Slow and steady wins the race - this applies to change management more than anything else. Look for quick-wins. Traget the most pro-change entities within the organization to effect the change first. This will help boost the morale of your core team. After the first success, take the most difficult customer as your next target. You will need full support from your core team and might have to get in the big guns at times. Succeed here and the rest of your work becomes a cake-walk.
    Mantra 8: Be lavish in your appreciation of other's contributions

    Remember, this is not the first and the last change management initiative that you would be heading. So be generous in showing appreciation of other's contributions. They will return the favour the next time they team up with you.
    Mantra 9: Enjoy what you are doing

    This is the most important thing to do. Your enthusiasm about the change should be contagious. It should not only trickle down to the team but also bubble up to the Sr. Management because they would be the influencers who would give you the required fire-power to effect the change.

    My experience tells me that mantras these can be applied to any change management initiative - particularly if previous attempts have failed - with slight adjustments to cater to the uniqueness of the environment / situation.

    CAUTION: Once you succeed in a major change management initiative, you will be called in again and again. So be prepared. But believe me, each is a challenge in its own and you will enjoy it - in fact, it might get addictive.

    Hope this helps you. God luck with leading change!!!

    About the Author Shaju Nair is heading the Technology Competence and

    Bootstrap Financing Your Way to Business Success
    Do you need to start or grow your business but have little money? Before you look to banks and similar sources of financing, why not bootstrap your way to business success?A bootstrap is a small loop of leather or other material that is found on the top rear or sides of a boot. The purpose of the bootstrap is to help you pull your boot on.In business, bootstrapping has come to mean helping oneself without seeking outside help. It means using your own resources to finance, promote, and develop your business.Here, then, are some ways of financing your own business by using your own initiative and depending less on outside bank financing.1. Operate a Home-Based BusinessOperating your business from home could save you a fortune. First of all, you eliminate the costs of expensive commercial rent, commuting, et cetera.As well, your business use of home expenses would be deductible for income tax purposes. Since
    ut not shared (remember, you are not supposed to impose but rather extract and evolve). Your role during this stage would be that of a listener and a facilitator. Mantra 5: Sell change to Sr. Management

    Now that you have a blueprint for implementation, go ahead, show it to the Sr. Mgmt. Do remember to include the names of people who have contributed to this and whose inputs have been taken into consideration. This will greatly increase your chances of getting a buy-in from the Sr. Mgmt. More importantly, listen and watch to the facial expressions and body language of the Sr. Mgmt team as you are presenting your case. Listen and understand their questions and answer to the point - there is no room for beating around the bush when it comes to the Sr. Mgmt. Own up for anything that you would have missed out and give a plan of action to incorporate their recommendations. NEVER leave the room without getting an in-principle agreement to your recommendations. If their suggestions warrant a major change, then schedule a follow-on session there and then and set expectations that that session would be to go over the suggestions and sign off on the approach. Do this and you have struck gold. And now you move on to rolling out the change.
    Mantra 6: Before rollout, identify noise-makers and address them

    These are the people who could topple your applecart. Its easy to identify such people - there are 2 types. Ones have a loud voice, sly smiles, have been in the system for a long time, have an opinion about everything and have the ability to influence their teams through brute force. The second type are passively destructive in the sense that they won't speak up at meetings, have a closed body-language and believe in working 1:1 with people and influencing them - to not subscribe to your recommendations. A two-pronged strategy to deal with such people includes 1)Selecting influencers as part of your core team and 2)Working individually with these people and pre-empting their concerns during such 1:1 sessions.
    Mantra 7: Roll out the change phase-wise

    Slow and steady wins the race - this applies to change management more than anything else. Look for quick-wins. Traget the most pro-change entities within the organization to effect the change first. This will help boost the morale of your core team. After the first success, take the most difficult customer as your next target. You will need full support from your core team and might have to get in the big guns at times. Succeed here and the rest of your work becomes a cake-walk.
    Mantra 8: Be lavish in your appreciation of other's contributions

    Remember, this is not the first and the last change management initiative that you would be heading. So be generous in showing appreciation of other's contributions. They will return the favour the next time they team up with you.
    Mantra 9: Enjoy what you are doing

    This is the most important thing to do. Your enthusiasm about the change should be contagious. It should not only trickle down to the team but also bubble up to the Sr. Management because they would be the influencers who would give you the required fire-power to effect the change.

    My experience tells me that mantras these can be applied to any change management initiative - particularly if previous attempts have failed - with slight adjustments to cater to the uniqueness of the environment / situation.

    CAUTION: Once you succeed in a major change management initiative, you will be called in again and again. So be prepared. But believe me, each is a challenge in its own and you will enjoy it - in fact, it might get addictive.

    Hope this helps you. God luck with leading change!!!

    About the Author Shaju Nair is heading the Technology Competence and

    Payroll Management - Start Planning Now
    Payroll management is an issue that is never too early to start considering. Obviously, in the early stages of your business, your payroll management will consist of paying yourself. As your business grows you will have to concern yourself with compensation for you and your employees.Payroll management in a business that has employees requires planning for salaries and hourly wages. There will also be payments to subcontractors for technical and sales related services to consider. You will eventually become too busy to do it all yourself and you will need help.Before you get to the stage where you need to hire additional help, it is a wise strategic move to think about your payroll management needs and plan accordingly.Payroll Management Issues Salary versus hourly wage Bonuses and commissions Compensation Package - vacation pay, time off, sick days, holidays Employee Benefits - health care, dental plan, pension Insurance - Disab
    ess them

    These are the people who could topple your applecart. Its easy to identify such people - there are 2 types. Ones have a loud voice, sly smiles, have been in the system for a long time, have an opinion about everything and have the ability to influence their teams through brute force. The second type are passively destructive in the sense that they won't speak up at meetings, have a closed body-language and believe in working 1:1 with people and influencing them - to not subscribe to your recommendations. A two-pronged strategy to deal with such people includes 1)Selecting influencers as part of your core team and 2)Working individually with these people and pre-empting their concerns during such 1:1 sessions.
    Mantra 7: Roll out the change phase-wise

    Slow and steady wins the race - this applies to change management more than anything else. Look for quick-wins. Traget the most pro-change entities within the organization to effect the change first. This will help boost the morale of your core team. After the first success, take the most difficult customer as your next target. You will need full support from your core team and might have to get in the big guns at times. Succeed here and the rest of your work becomes a cake-walk.
    Mantra 8: Be lavish in your appreciation of other's contributions

    Remember, this is not the first and the last change management initiative that you would be heading. So be generous in showing appreciation of other's contributions. They will return the favour the next time they team up with you.
    Mantra 9: Enjoy what you are doing

    This is the most important thing to do. Your enthusiasm about the change should be contagious. It should not only trickle down to the team but also bubble up to the Sr. Management because they would be the influencers who would give you the required fire-power to effect the change.

    My experience tells me that mantras these can be applied to any change management initiative - particularly if previous attempts have failed - with slight adjustments to cater to the uniqueness of the environment / situation.

    CAUTION: Once you succeed in a major change management initiative, you will be called in again and again. So be prepared. But believe me, each is a challenge in its own and you will enjoy it - in fact, it might get addictive.

    Hope this helps you. God luck with leading change!!!

    About the Author Shaju Nair is heading the Technology Competence and

    Balanced Scorecard Examples
    The idea of the Balance Scorecard (BSC) is to create feasible measurements that will give you a complete view of your company and that are linked to your general objectives as a company. Balanced Scorecard Management makes sure you can be able to measure economic internal processes that are decisive to make decisions at the right moment based on the knowledge and resources that substantiate your business model.Suppose that a customer service relationship with your clients is the vital aspect of your company. Then, the success of your company lies in its ability to create a competitive advantage in term of customer relationship or CMR as the specialists call it too. Does a financial performance valuation such as return-on-investment or operating profits, will reflect how are your doing with your customer relationships?While managers still require economic metrics to evaluate the overall condition of the company, they also need measures that could reflect more direct
    ng> Mantra 8: Be lavish in your appreciation of other's contributions

    Remember, this is not the first and the last change management initiative that you would be heading. So be generous in showing appreciation of other's contributions. They will return the favour the next time they team up with you.
    Mantra 9: Enjoy what you are doing

    This is the most important thing to do. Your enthusiasm about the change should be contagious. It should not only trickle down to the team but also bubble up to the Sr. Management because they would be the influencers who would give you the required fire-power to effect the change.

    My experience tells me that mantras these can be applied to any change management initiative - particularly if previous attempts have failed - with slight adjustments to cater to the uniqueness of the environment / situation.

    CAUTION: Once you succeed in a major change management initiative, you will be called in again and again. So be prepared. But believe me, each is a challenge in its own and you will enjoy it - in fact, it might get addictive.

    Hope this helps you. God luck with leading change!!!

    About the Author Shaju Nair is heading the Technology Competence and Consulting Division at a leading software products company in India. He has focused on the use of emerging technologies to differentiate products, processes and services and continuously seeks out opportunities for improvement.

    Shaju has proactively acquired cross-industry, multi-geography experience with large multinational companies as well as silicon valley startups. His educational background includes institutions like Berkeley (International Business Management and International Finance), San Jose State University (Executive Business Programme - Executive MBA equivalent), University of California, Santa Cruz (Honors in Project and Program Management) and Gujarat University (Masters in Computer Applications). Additionally, he has written and published papers on various topics around technology, business management and brand building.

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