Should I Train or "Tune up" My Organization?

Jan 27
08:18

2009

Adele Sommers

Adele Sommers

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Is there a standard cure for every performance gap? When your organization detects areas it wants to improve, it's critical to prescribe the right remedy for each situation. This article explores two ways of many to close achievement gaps, using 1) training and 2) organizational tune-ups to remove "burning hassles" and obstacles that hinder productivity.

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Is there a standard cure for every performance gap? When your organization detects areas it wants to improve,Should I Train or "Tune up" My Organization? Articles it's critical to prescribe the right remedy for each situation. Otherwise, it's very tempting to view every symptom as a nail because you just happen to have a hammer handy!

This article explores two ways of many to close achievement gaps using training and organizational tune-ups to remove "burning hassles" and obstacles that hinder productivity.

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Training: A Powerful Solution When Appropriate

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Training is the "how-to" information people need to perform effectively on the job. (This presumes that their natural talents are a good fit for their job responsibilities. If not, a job reassignment might be in order.) People usually need training when they:

-- Are brand new on the job

-- Need to develop proficiency on new or more advanced procedures

-- Require a brush-up on industry changes, or

-- Need to refresh forgotten skills

How do you know whether people already possess the job knowledge they need?

Dr. Robert Mager suggests that if people could perform the tasks if their lives depended on it, they already have the knowledge to do the job. They might, however, need more practice, other kinds of information, or resources, such as:

1. A clearer understanding of what is expected of them. For example, they might need better access to, or more knowledge of, standards that would tell them exactly how well to perform the work in each case. This is critical in industries where several levels of rules and regulations govern quality requirements for various processes.

2. Electronic support systems that can provide many procedural details, data entry tools, calculations, or even expert advice -- especially crucial for complex, rapidly changing industries.

3. Supervised practice and feedback. Supervised practice can significantly enhance the proficiency and effectiveness of your personnel when it includes timely, constructive feedback.

4. Just-in-time facilitated workshops. This approach combines training and live practice, using the participants' job-related projects as case studies. The workshops reinforce what participants are learning by helping them apply the new skills directly to their jobs.

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Organizational Tune-ups: Removing Obstacles to Success

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If people already know how to do their jobs and yet aren't producing as desired, look for obstacles that are impeding their progress. Involve everyone in identifying them, and prioritize them for correction. These issues could account for about 85% of poor organizational performance:

1. Troubleshoot any clogged communications that delay or distort important broadcasts. These could be dragging down both productivity and morale. When you communicate via meetings, use agendas and summaries to avoid meeting hassles.

2. Identify missing information, such as nonexistent, incomplete, outdated, or inaccurate meeting summaries, procedures, standards, schedules, facts, or data needed to do a job. Supply the information as soon as possible, and be sure to maintain it regularly.

3. Be alert for poor cooperation from managers, peers, or suppliers. And by all means, please don't "shoot the messenger" when people report these problems!

4. Investigate any absent or inadequate tools, equipment, resources, space, lighting, supplies, or any inherent constraints in the workflow that would naturally limit the rate of throughput. Such conditions can seriously reduce the ability to do one's job.

5. Flag uncalibrated machines or uncontrolled processes that may be causing unnecessary variability in product quality. These issues are often beyond the individual worker's control.

6. Uncover overly complex procedures that can be simplified, automated, or even eliminated. The simpler you can make your processes, the better!

7. Correct any work environments or conditions that are problematic or unsafe. Do everything possible to avoid accidents and liability concerns.

8. Recognize where task support ought to be coming from supervision, job aids, quick reference guides, or online assistance. If it's missing, supply it!

9. Look for and reduce extreme work pressure due to unattainable deadlines or workloads. People can't sustain their productivity under these conditions.

10. Be sure people have regular, complete feedback on work-related quality, including timely access to data about customer desires and concerns.

11. Sort out any conflicting priorities or directions from management, especially when people work on multiple projects. Also be sure people have the authority as well as the responsibility to do what's expected of them.

12. Align consequences in the organization. This includes ensuring that no one discourages people from doing what needs to be done, while also encouraging the behaviors, actions, attitudes, and results that you do want to see.

In conclusion, if people have true skill deficiencies or not enough job practice, you would remedy those through training and/or more task repetition. But if people already know how to do their jobs and are facing roadblocks, you would perform an organizational tune-up to get rid of the headaches!