The
six Ds in the path to improving productivity by Ken Hudson
I am yet to meet a leader who wasn’t overworked,
under pressure and time-poor. Increasingly, they are being asked to deliver
more and more with less and less. I nod with empathy at how hard they are
working.
Yet I am amazed that so many of them are not doing
anything to change this situation. Perhaps leaders see this as a badge of
honour or they feel so overwhelmed that they just accept the status quo.
Perhaps they are so concerned with demanding
productivity improvements in everyone else that they have literally no time to
improve their own performance.
The purpose of this blog therefore is to outline a
better approach to improving individual and group productivity based on what I
call the six Ds.
1.
Delete
The first step for any leader is to decide what they
can delete from their to-do list. Perhaps it is a report that no one reads
anymore or a presentation that could be given monthly rather than weekly.
Work for many leaders just seems to incrementally
add up and every now and then a time-conscious leader should review everything
they do and delete what is not relevant along with anything that fails to add
value.
2.
Decline
I am surprised at how many leaders find it difficult
to decline, for example, a meeting request. Meetings eat up an incredible
amount of time and when I have asked managers what they achieved today they
often complain that they did not reach their goals because they were caught up
in meetings all day.
If this is the case why not decline some or most of
the meeting requests? If the meeting is not of value to the leader then don’t attend,
or if the purpose of the meeting is not clear then decline the invitation. A
leader’s time is a precious asset and should be guarded at all costs. Leaders
do not waste money so why should they waste their time?
3.
Delegate
This is an ‘oldie but a goodie’. If there is work to
be done and it cannot be deleted (i.e. it is deemed valuable) and it cannot be
declined then perhaps it can be delegated. Leaders cannot do everything and the
best leaders know what to delegate, when to do it and to whom. For the best
results, leaders should agree with the person they are delegating to what
exactly has to be delivered and leave the how to them.
4.
Decide
Ultimately, how a leader invests their time is based
on making a decision. The nature of leadership is decision making. It is not
procrastination or over-analysis. One of the major criticisms of the Prime
Minister Kevin Rudd was that he could not make a decision and to make the
situation worse he felt that he had to make every decision.
Decision making is a skill which can be improved
with practice and experience, but it can never be shirked. Decision making is
all about ensuring that the high-priority goals are identified and sufficient
time is allocated to achieving these.
5.
Design
Another approach to improving productivity is to
redesign an existing process, project or activity. Start with the ultimate
goal, for example I need this report by the 10th of each month to make an
informed decision, and then design back to the start. If this report is completed
by the 10th what needs to happen before this etc.
Continue this step-by-step approach until the entire
process has been redesigned to deliver a better outcome. Remember the process
serves the outcome, not the other way round.
6.
Destroy
A busy leader has to continuously review their
entire productivity performance and delete, decline, delegate, decide and
design. But sometimes even this is not enough. What is needed is a complete
destruction of what exists at the moment.
For example, I have seen so many marketing, brand
and business plans that are an incremental extension of last year’s approach.
This is fine if the results are on or exceed budget but not so helpful if the
results are way below what needs to be achieved.
In these cases a much better approach is to destroy
what has gone on before and start with a blank piece of paper. In this way the
brand or business plans will more accurately reflect the urgency of the current
situation.
Improving productivity is one of the key challenges
of leaders today. Only by improving the productivity of their own performance
can leaders expect others to accept this challenge. The six Ds framework can
help each and every leader and manager in your organisation to deliver more and
more with less and less and still feel energised and engaged.
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