|
Don't
Let Missing Information Undermine Your Business Success
by Adele Sommers, Ph.D.
When people lack information they need to do their
jobs, work performance and product and service quality suffer.
Why? If critical procedures, knowledge, standards, schedules,
facts, or data are missing, people will have to guess: 
- What to do
- How to do it
- Where to do it
- When to do it
- Who should do it
- Why they ought to do it
- How much to do it
- How well to do it, and even
- For whom to
do it!
Missing information is a perplexing issue that can
cause major stumbling blocks for your business success. This article
shows you five ways to avoid these pitfalls.
Before proceeding, we should consider what might occur if all of these information deficits
existed on a larger scale. Can you imagine living in a world where everyone
had so little insight into how to do their jobs? Lets take
a closer look at what could happen.
Pandemonium,
Anyone?
When personnel don't know exactly what to do (or how, where, when, why, how much, how well, or for whom to do it) they might not be able to produce anything at all. Or, if they actually do deliver something, there's a good chance it won't work as intended because the necessary facts, data, procedures, schedules, or standards were not available.
For example, we might see many products thrown away as scrap
because no one knew what to make or how to make it correctly.
This situation arises when companies have incomplete or obsolete work orders and instructions, or none at all. (Imagine how continually scrapping products at your company would
negatively impact the bottom line!)
We'd have transportation systems, such as buses, planes, trains, ships, and trucks, not delivering anything on time or according to a regular
schedule because the when to information was missing.
Wed have physicians, pharmacists, dentists,
and other health care professionals giving incorrect diagnoses
and prescriptions because they lacked access to accurate, up-to-date facts and data about their patients.
We'd have customers who couldn't use products correctly or safely because the directions were incorrect or missing.
If these conditions existed globally, we would experience societies full of:
Inept services
- Malfunctioning products
- Chronic delays
- Safety hazards, and
- Irritated — or even endangered — consumers everywhere!
We know that such inconveniences can and do exist, but in this day and age,
weve come to expect so much more. If you are
at all like me, you probably tend to feel a bit impatient whenever
any consumer snafu occurs such as an error on a bank statement or a defective widget.
Ask yourself: Inside your own organization, do your own personnel,
associates, and customers have access to the information they need, on
time, and in the right sequence? If not, read on for remedies you can pursue.
Five
Ways to Close Information Gaps
1. Make sure your company compiles a set of
complete, current, and accurate procedures, standards, schedules,
facts, and data needed to do each type of job. If your standards or regulations vary depending on the types of products you produce, publish clear instructions on when and how to apply them.
2. Be sure documentation libraries are
accessible and updated regularly. Maintaining your libraries electronically — either online or in a database — can streamline the process of modifying your documentation. It also makes documents easy for employees, customers, or both to access with just a few keystrokes. By requiring your personnel to retrieve and use the latest official versions immediately, you'll avoid problems with outdated procedures that can cause waste or confusion.
3. Overhaul any overly complex procedures by
simplifying, automating, or even eliminating them. The simpler you can make your processes the better.
That alone can lead to higher quality and faster delivery, a shorter learning curve for mastering a job or using a product, and far greater employee and customer satisfaction.
4. Give personnel access to job
support systems. Examples include printed job aids, quick reference guides,
online assistance, or other reminders that people can refer to quickly and conveniently — whether they work at a desk, workstation, lab, customer site, or in the field. (See more ideas on using electronic support systems.)
5. Troubleshoot any clogged communications that may be delaying or distorting critical employee broadcasts. If everyone doesn't hear the same thing at the same time, a disorganized reaction and poor morale can result.
Is There a
Standard Cure for Every Problem?
Not really. Even if your organization does detect
a problem with information holes, its critical to prescribe
the right remedy for each situation. Its very easy to specify
the wrong cure when, say, every symptom looks like
a nail and coincidentally, you happen to have a hammer.
For example, the wrong cure could be prescribing how-to
information to solve a quality problem when the people already
know how to produce the desired quality.
The employees simply might
not have access to, or enough knowledge about, standards that should tell them exactly how
well to do the work in each case. This is especially critical in industries with different levels of regulations for different products.
Training (how-to information) is therefore not a cure-all for undesirable results. It's appropriate only if personnel have skill deficits — a true lack of job knowledge — or not enough job practice.
When people need more job knowledge or proficiency, you should provide training and/or more repetition on the job. But if they know how to do the job and aren't producing as desired, look next for obstacles to productivity. Missing standards or other information gaps could be the real cause of a quality problem, for example.
In conclusion, with a little research and careful diagnosis, you can
prescribe the correct solution for each type of information gap. By systematically providing access to key information, and by using training appropriately, you can
avert potential disasters, bolster employee morale, and cement a
solid foundation for business success.
~~~~~~~~~~~
About the Author
Adele Sommers, Ph.D. is author of Straight Talk
on Boosting Business Performance: 12 Ways to Profit from Hidden
Potential. To learn more about her book and sign up for more
free tips like these, visit her site at www.LearnShareProsper.com
This article may be distributed freely on your Web
site, as long as this entire article, including the links and full
About the Author section, are unchanged. Please send
a copy of, or link to, your reprint to Adele@LearnShareProsper.com.
Copyright 2007 Adele Sommers, The Enterprise Prosperity
Guild, All Rights Reserved.
972 words
Return to the Free Articles
index |