Musashi's Dokkodo (The Way of Walking Alone)
Download 1.13 Mb. Pdf ko'rish
|
dokkodo
Businessman:
Due to revolutionary new technologies, a global economy, workforce demographics, a patchwork of international, national, state, and local rules and regulations, and ever evolving consumer preferences, the speed of business is unprecedentedly fast, far quicker today than it’s ever been at any time since the beginning of the Industrial Revolution. Product lifecycles are continuously growing shorter too, hence the need for unremitting innovation in product and service offerings that can keep up with ever changing demand. In order to remain relevant and profitable through all this churn, agility is paramount. Businesses that cannot keep up eventually fall by the wayside. While rapid change is part and parcel of startups, for more established companies this can be highly problematic. For example, while filmmaker Kodak has been around for 127 years, the company was forced into Chapter 11 Bankruptcy restructuring in 2013 in large part because they missed out on the digital photography revolution. Today they are a fraction of the size they used to be. Tens of thousands of employees lost their jobs while stockholders took a beating on their investments. They simply couldn’t react as fast as they needed to in order to remain relevant and the results were disastrous. This velocity imperative affects everyone in the marketplace, and it creates a tremendous strain on business leaders. Decisions must be made faster and faster, oftentimes without adequate data or evaluation time. While we must learn from the past and plan for the future, the focus in business oftentimes must be on the now, the things that are urgent and imperative at the present moment or that we believe will be in the very near term. We need to be able to make decisions quickly, oftentimes without the benefit of full information, and move on. In many instances if we were wrong we can course- correct afterwards, but not always, and rarely without cost. Nevertheless, even if we know we’ll be able to get things back on track it’s hard to “fire and forget,” knowing that we may be harming our business and/or our careers in the process. We can never know for certain ahead of time what decisions will prove benign and which ones may blow back to haunt us. For example, when former Reddit CEO Ellen Pao fired Victoria Taylor, a popular moderator of the company’s “Ask Me Anything” section of their website, the user base immediately revolted, ultimately costing Pao her job. In trying to reign in internet trolls Pao wound up in the crosshairs of hundreds of thousands of them and buckled under the pressure. This isn’t just a management thing, however, it affects everybody. Even folks on the lower rungs of the corporate ladder can materially impact a business as well as its employees, suppliers, and customers by the manner in which they make decisions every day. For example, while a bad strategy, failure to innovate, or poor product design decision at the executive level may sink a company, something as seemingly insignificant as a rude response to a customer inquiry or complaint by an entry-level call center employee can do much the same thing, costing millions of dollars in lost revenue or adverse publicity. Nobody’s perfect. We all make mistakes from time to time; inadvertently reaching suboptimal or ill-thought-out conclusions hence making poor decisions that with benefit of perfect hindsight we wish we could go back and reconsider. Overly focusing on or handwringing about past failures makes us fearful, however. Rather than leveraging previous errors to grow in wisdom and up our game to take on the next challenge, this often leads to analysis paralysis, where we timidly over-study and underperform. While it’s great to have data, to analyze markets, build business cases, and put together a holistic and comprehensive plan before acting, business simply moves too fast for that nowadays. We need to learn to trust ourselves and our team, make the hard choices quickly without the benefit of full information, and not regret what we’ve done. This is not easy, but oftentimes it helps to put things into perspective. One mistake is a learning experience. It’s only if we make the same mistake twice that we should consider it a failure. In other words, the more we are willing to take measured risks and do the best we can with the information and time available, the better we can become at rapid decision-making under pressure. If we truly want to keep up with the pace of business these days it’s vital to be willing to forgive ourselves, our bosses, and our subordinates when seemingly well- thought-out but ultimately ill-conceived decisions are made so long as we’re willing to learn from them and move forward. This is not to say that callous, unethical, or foolhardy choices should be tolerated, but rather that well-intentioned actions of goodhearted people should not be penalized. More often than not it’s not the mistake that kills us, it’s the way we handle the aftermath. The cover-up is worse than the crime so to speak. The first step in recovering from a mistake is to own up to it, take responsibility, and apologize. The next step is to make things right. This not only means making amends and fixing the problem, but also putting steps in place to proactively safeguard against a reoccurrence. This may require changes in process or procedures, but it should also include documenting the lessons we learned and communicating them to others who can benefit from our experience because they will likely find themselves in the same boat someday. In this fashion we turn the error into an event that adds value for both ourselves and our company. In business what gets measured gets done. If we want our organizations to embody the kind of dynamic culture that can defeat the competition it is vital to value measured risk-taking and assure that everyone is able to develop the business acumen and experience necessary to do it well. Aflac Insurance has repeatedly been honored at or near the top of Fortune magazine’s “Most Admired Companies,” Forbes magazine’s “America’s Best Managed Companies,” and Etisphere magazine’s “World’s most Ethical Companies.” Their CEO Dan Amos wholeheartedly embraces this philosophy, saying in a 2010 interview with reporter Jerry Grillo of GeorgiaTrend magazine, “If you’re not making a few mistakes, you aren’t taking enough chances. You want to make decisions that push the envelope a little bit. If everything you do is right, then maybe you’re in too safe a territory. Lot of times, people are scared to make a mistake, worried that they’ll be punished. Around here we don’t have that attitude. What gets you into trouble around here is if the mistake is there and you don’t correct it.” Like Aflac, we must all put in place a structure that rewards those who further the goals of the company and supports them when hard choices must be made. After all, if heads roll at the first mistake (metaphorically speaking, of course) no one will stick their neck out to take chances, even really good ones. Ultimately this will turn even the most dynamic enterprise into a hidebound relic of itself. Conversely, if we set folks up for success, prudent risk taking will become part of the organization’s DNA and we will not have to regret what we’ve done That’s the ultimate interpretation of this precept for business. |
Ma'lumotlar bazasi mualliflik huquqi bilan himoyalangan ©fayllar.org 2024
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling