Musashi's Dokkodo (The Way of Walking Alone)
Download 1.13 Mb. Pdf ko'rish
|
dokkodo
Businessman:
While the infantry soldier might look to a rifle as his primary weapon of war, in business our “weapons” could be considered the tools we use to conduct all the imperatives of running a successful business. Our key processes are automated or augmented with software, that is the plethora of applications we use to develop a strategy and chart the course for our enterprise, manage our human resources, capital, and supply chain, design and produce our products/services, sell and deliver goods to our customers, administer warranty claims, expand our market share, pay our bills, continuously improve our processes and systems, and much, much more. Virtually everything we use from the tools in our factories to our timekeeping and payroll systems requires software of one type or another. There challenge is that there’s not only an overabundance of applications, but also that the marketplace of tools is continuously growing, evolving, and changing. For example, business intelligence can be defined as the process of boosting our company’s performance by arming key decision-makers with the insight they need to make good choices. Analytical software used for this purpose ranges from simple spreadsheets (such as Microsoft Excel) to statistical software packages (such as StatSoft Statistica) to sophisticated business intelligence software suites (such as those provided by IBM, Oracle, or SAP). The goal is faster and more informed decisions, yet each choice in how to accomplish that aim has strengths and weaknesses which must be balanced against the cost of purchase, the learning curve for use, and the ongoing expenditures needed for support and maintenance. In some respects this is an advantage that small businesses have over larger ones; they cannot afford to let their software grow out of control so an overabundance of tools is rarely an issue. In major corporations, government agencies, and educational institutions, however, this can become a significant challenge, one that is not easily resolved… We may have a compelling desire to follow Musashi’s admonishment and not collect or employ tools beyond what is useful, but unless we have a centralized command and control structure it is very difficult standardize on singular solutions that can satisfy all the competing demands that can and often will crop up across the enterprise. This means that in order to be successful we must develop and ruthlessly enforce enterprise-wide standards and robust change control measures to control the chaos. Anything new must “buy its way in” to the system, meaning that the business case must be compelling even after we consider the holistic impact of multiple tools to learn, integrate, support, and maintain. Without this centralization we sub- optimize as most major corporations have done today, making certain departments or functions happy while damaging the efficiency and effectiveness of the company as a whole. For those who have never worked for a Fortune® 100-sized enterprise, hence have not experienced tool bloat, it’s likely unfathomable to think that this sort of predicament exists, but believe you me it is far too commonplace to ignore. Look to your phone’s app store for a more familiar example. Even basic applications such as those that let us use our phones as flashlights have dozens if not hundreds of competing choices. Now, imagine that you downloaded the top six apps for everything, including audio, games, family, books, business, comics, communication, education, entertainment, finance, fitness, health, libraries, lifestyle, live wallpaper, media, medical, music, news, personalization, photography, productivity, reference, shopping, social media, sports, tools, transportation, travel, video, weather, widgets, and so on. You’d have a lot more stuff, clearly, but would your phone be easier or harder to use? Would you want or need all that functionality? It’s a safe bet that if your phone came with all that bloat the first thing you’d do would be to spend a few hours uninstalling all the stuff you didn’t want, need, or ever intend to use right? That’s what I’d do… To facilitate the solution to tool bloat there needs to be a single point of accountability, a sort of tool Tsar if you will, to own and control the process. In order to be successful this must be someone who is highly respected and senior enough pull together all the right stakeholders, evaluate their needs and desires, and create a consensus on how to proceed. This person typically leads a group of architects, technologists, and businesspeople who act as a change board to balance competing interests and force everyone along the right path. In this fashion we do not collect or practice with weapons beyond what is useful for optimally running our organization. All this bureaucracy would likely make Musashi’s head explode, but businesspeople should follow his precept nonetheless. Even the most complex corporations can embrace continuous improvement. |
Ma'lumotlar bazasi mualliflik huquqi bilan himoyalangan ©fayllar.org 2024
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling