Bite Size Business Tips / 69 posts found

Great People or Great Processes?

by Iyas A
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Turn it into a process. Most businesses I work with are either doing this, or live in shame because they’re not! But can be an unhealthy obsession. I enjoyed Sam Carpenter’s Work the System. Along with The E-myth, it creates a compelling case for proceduralising what your business does. Rightly so. But the key justification I hear leaders cite for process is that it replaces the need to have great people. “If we have great processes” the logic goes, “we can create quality…
Board Unity

Dissent in the board / leadership room

by Iyas A
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Leaders should debate vigorously, then STFU and unify behind their decision. I’ve written elsewhere about what a company loses when its leaders shut down debate. This is more pronounced in those boards where dissent is viewed as treachery. People paid as decision-shapers effectively become an overpaid board of one. But I’ve also seen leadership teams where there is constructive disagreement and debate, and the founder or CEO / MD is happy to hear those views. But too often, those disagreements…

Decisions – Delay some, speed others through

by Iyas A
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Being decisive is a values business asset, especially for leaders and founders of businesses. For good reason – indecisiveness can kill businesses, projects and sometimes people. It’s the topic of much research and writing. I’m currently enjoying “The Little Black Book of Decision Making: Making Complex Decisions with Confidence in a Fast-Moving World”, kindly gifted to me by its author Michael Nicholas. I can’t really add to that discourse. But there are 2 principles…

“Grow Grow Grow Sell” Isn’t the Only Path for your Company

by Iyas A
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It’s interesting talking to founders of companies about where they’d like their companies to get to. There seems to be an implicit assumption that it should be grow, grow, grow, sell. Probably a result of the insane valuations and exits of those Silicon Valley companies, small in number, but large in PR column inches. Pursuing something else is often taken as a lesser goal. But really, although exit is absolutely a valid outcome, it really isn’t the only one. Growing a company…

Does your team over-commit?

by Iyas A
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How often have you seen members of your team commit to something that they then don’t do? How often have you done it yourself? It’s not because *they* (ahem) are bad people, or even that they didn’t intend to do it. But simply that they’d only made only one commitment, rather than the 2 that are needed. Commitment to others and commitment to themselves. In the heat of a request, or a meeting with many eyes, or a boss (you?) who they want to please, what they do looks like commitment,…

The Pure Tosh of “You’re better off starting your own company”

by Iyas A
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“There’s no such thing as job security in companies today, so better be secure in your own business than insecure in someone else’s.” Advice I keep hearing, usually to lure people into some business coaching programme or another. Advice that’s pure horse-manure. Here are the facts. The FT reports around 54% of UK startups fail within 3 years. While the most recent stats I’ve found show that you have a 1 in 77 chance of losing your job in the private sector in…
Reducing Work Interruptions

Are your communications tools actually destroying value?

by Iyas A
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I love Slack. From a collaboration perspective, I wish it’d been around a long time ago. But it’s contributing to an environment where everyone believes they have the right to disturb everyone else’s work and expect immediate responses. To be fair, I’ve seen email used the same way, with senior managers especially guilty of expecting replies within minutes. If someone on your team is in a response role (e.g. contact centre or support team), then fair enough. But if you’ve…

The grass is greener where you water it

by Iyas A
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The grass may *look* greener on the other side, but the truth is it’s greener where you water it. And that’s the difference between the peddlers of vision, and those that show you the vision AND the work you need to do to make it real.

The best leaders on your team may be ignoring your KPIs

by Iyas A
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When you’re evaluating leadership potential in your team, remember that all the metrics you have are proxy metrics. You can’t easily evaluate such a complex concept as leadership. If you’ve assigned them metrics, or SMART (spare me) objectives, again you’re measuring proxy. The best leaders go beyond them and do the bigger right thing. You can measure the quality of a developer’s code. The robustness of a builder’s wall. The speed of an F1 driver’s lap.…

“Employees First” isn’t the path to a successful business

by Iyas A
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Business Half-Truth #2: Look after your employees first. I’ve seen too many turn this into making customers a distant second (or third). Yes, team is important. And if you treat your team as an investment, rather than a cost, then your business should reap rewards. But “employees first” works well ONLY IF you have a culture that’s obsessive about creating value for your customers (and in my books, the community as well), or if there’s a unifying vision or purpose about creating…