среда, 23 марта 2016 г.

10 Principles of Organizational Culture

Companies can tap their natural advantage when they focus on changing a few important behaviors, enlist informal leaders, and harness the power of employees’ emotions.



How often have you heard somebody — a new CEO, a journalist, a management consultant, a leadership guru, a fellow employee — talk about the urgent need to change the culture? They want to make it world-class. To dispense with all the nonsense and negativity that annoys employees and stops good intentions from growing into progress. To bring about an entirely different approach, starting immediately.
These culture critiques are as common as complaints about the weather — and about as effective. How frequently have you seen high-minded aspirations to “change the culture” actually manage to modify the way that people behave and the way in which they work? And how often have you seen noticeable long-term improvements?

What Is Corporate Culture?


At its worst, culture can be a drag on productivity. At its best, it is an emotional energizer. Here's how companies can use it to gain a competitive advantage.


If the answer to these last two questions is “rarely,” it wouldn’t surprise us. We don’t believe that swift, wholesale culture change is possible — or even desirable. After all, a company’s culture is its basic personality, the essence of how its people interact and work. However, it is an elusively complex entity that survives and evolves mostly through gradual shifts in leadership, strategy, and other circumstances. We find the most useful definition is also the simplest: Culture is the self-sustaining pattern of behavior that determines how things are done.
Made of instinctive, repetitive habits and emotional responses, culture can’t be copied or easily pinned down. Corporate cultures are constantly self-renewing and slowly evolving: What people feel, think, and believe is reflected and shaped by the way they go about their business. Formal efforts to change a culture (to replace it with something entirely new and different) seldom manage to get to the heart of what motivates people, what makes them tick. Strongly worded memos from on high are deleted within hours. You can plaster the walls with large banners proclaiming new values, but people will go about their days, right beneath those signs, continuing with the habits that are familiar and comfortable.
But this inherent complexity shouldn’t deter leaders from trying to use culture as a lever. If you cannot simply replace the entire machine, work on realigning some of the more useful cogs. The name of the game is making use of what you cannot change by using some of the emotional forces within your current culture differently.
Source: The Katzenbach Center
For further insights: See strategy-business.com/10PrinciplesCulture
Infographic: Opto Design/Peter Stemmler
Three dimensions of corporate culture affect its alignment: symbolic reminders (artifacts that are entirely visible), keystone behaviors (recurring acts that trigger other behaviors and that are both visible and invisible), and mind-sets (attitudes and beliefs that are widely shared but exclusively invisible). Of these, behaviors are the most powerful determinant of real change. What people actually do matters more than what they say or believe. And so to obtain more positive influences from your cultural situation, you should start working on changing the most critical behaviors — the mind-sets will follow. Over time, altered behavior patterns and habits can produce better results.
You may be asking: If it is so hard to change culture, why should we even bother to try? Because an organization’s current culture contains several reservoirs of emotional energy and influence. Executives who work with them can greatly accelerate strategic and operating imperatives. When positive culture forces and strategic priorities are in sync, companies can draw energy from the way people feel. This accelerates a company’s movement to gain competitive advantage, or regain advantages that have been lost.
Research shows that companies that use a few specific cultural catalysts — that is to say, those that use informal emotional approaches to influencing behavior — are significantly more likely to experience change that lasts. Of the companies that reported consciously using elements of their culture in Strategy&’s 2013 Global Culture & Change Management Survey, 70 percent said their firms achieved sustainable improvement in organizational pride and emotional commitment. That compares with 35 percent for firms that didn’t use culture as a lever. Although there is no magic formula, no brilliant algorithm, no numerical equation that will guarantee results, we have gleaned some valuable insights through decades of research and observation at dozens of enterprises, including some of the most successful companies in the world. By adopting the following principles, your organization can learn to deploy and improve its culture in a manner that will increase the odds of financial and operational success.
1. Work with and within your current cultural situations. Deeply embedded cultures cannot be replaced with simple upgrades, or even with major overhaul efforts. Nor can your culture be swapped out for a new one as though it were an operating system or a CPU. To a degree, your current cultural situation just is what it is — and it contains components that provide natural advantages to companies as well as components that may act as brakes. We’ve never seen a culture that is all bad, or one that is all good. To work with your culture effectively, therefore, you must understand it, recognize which traits are preeminent and consistent, and discern under what types of conditions these traits are likely to be a help or a hindrance. Put another way, there’s both a yin and a yang to cultural traits.
For example, a European pharmaceutical company with a solid product development pipeline had a tendency to be inward-looking. It had great execution capabilities and an excellent record of compliance with regulators around the world. However, when new products were ready to be launched, the company had a hard time marketing them to physicians and healthcare providers. Rather than bemoaning the company’s ingrained insularity — for example, its collective tendency to value the opinions of internal colleagues more than those of outside experts — the leaders decided to use this feature of its culture to its advantage. They set up a program through which employees were acknowledged and rewarded by colleagues for “going the extra mile” to support customers. By recognizing a new kind of internal authoritativeness, the company tapped a powerful emotional trigger already in place, and engendered a new (and strategically important) behavior in its sales force.
2.  Change behaviors, and mind-sets will follow. It is a commonly held view that behavioral change follows mental shifts, as surely as night follows day. This is why organizations often try to change mind-sets (and ultimately behavior) by communicating values and putting them in glossy brochures. This technique didn’t work well for Enron, where accounting fraud and scandal were part of everyday practice, even as the company’s espoused values of excellence, respect, integrity, and communication were carved into the marble floor of the atrium of its global headquarters in Houston. In reality, culture is much more a matter of doing than of saying. Trying to change a culture purely through top-down messaging, training and development programs, and identifiable cues seldom changes people’s beliefs or behaviors. In fact, neuroscience research suggests that people act their way into believing rather than thinking their way into acting. Changes to key behaviors — changes that are tangible, actionable, repeatable, observable, and measurable — are thus a good place to start. Some good examples of behavior change, which we’ve observed at a number of companies, relate to empowerment (reducing the number of approvals needed for decisions), collaboration (setting up easy ways to convene joint projects), and interpersonal relations (devising mutually respectful practices for raising contentious issues or grievances).
A telecommunications company was seeking to improve its customer service. Rather than trying to influence mind-sets by, for example, posting signs urging employees to be polite to disgruntled customers, or having employees undergo empathy training, the company focused on what psychologists call a “precursor behavior” — a seemingly innocuous behavior that reliably precedes the occurrence of problem behavior. Leaders had noticed that poor teaming led to poor customer service, so the company rolled out a plan to encourage better and more effective teaming within call centers. To accomplish this, they set up regular design sessions for improving practices. When employees felt they were part of a happy team, and sensed a greater level of support from colleagues, they began treating their customers better.
In another example, a resources company in the Middle East was seeking to make its workplace safer. Rather than erect placards threatening workers with consequences, the company focused on a relatively basic precursor behavior: housekeeping. It organized a litter drive. Picking up trash as a team helped employees take greater pride in the workplace, which engendered a greater sense of care for fellow employees and made them more likely to speak up when they noticed an unsafe situation. Changed behavior, changed mind-set.
3. Focus on a critical few behaviors. Conventional wisdom advocates a comprehensive approach — everybody should change everything that’s not perfect! But companies must be rigorously selective when it comes to picking behaviors. The key is to focus on what we call “the critical few,” a small number of important behaviors that would have great impact if put into practice by a significant number of people. Discern a few things people do throughout the company that positively affect business performance — for example, ways of starting meetings or talking with customers. Make sure those are aligned with the company’s overall strategy. Also check that people feel good about doing these things, so that you tap into emotional commitment. Then codify them: Translate those critical behaviors into simple, practical steps that people can take every day. Next, select groups of employees who are primed for these few behaviors, those who will respond strongly to the new behaviors and who are likely to implement and spread them.
At an Asian banking company, rapid inorganic growth had led to diverse ways of working across different units and geographies. To focus on improving teaming, customer outcomes, and the ability to realize synergies, the CEO and leadership embarked on a culture-led evolution program. They targeted just three critical behaviors: taking extra steps to delight customers, valuing performance over seniority, and backing up and supporting one another. They then converted these three general behaviors into specifics for each part of the company. Delighting customers, for instance, was translated into frontline staff collaborating with other colleagues to solve client problems and prioritizing the implementation of process improvements that affected customer outcomes. For all three behaviors, leadership recognized and celebrated examples in which people made an extraordinary effort. Senior leaders acted as role models, explicitly modeling these three new behaviors. The company also identified influential frontline, client-facing employees who could demonstrate these new behaviors in action.
4.  Deploy your authentic informal leaders. Authority, which is conferred by a formal position, should not be confused with leadership. Leadership is a natural attribute, exercised and displayed informally without regard to title or position in the organizational chart. Because authentic informal leaders, who are found in every organization, are often not recognized as such, they are frequently overlooked and underused when it comes to driving culture. It is possible to identify such leaders through interviews, surveys, and tools such as organizational network analysis, which allow companies to construct maps of complex internal social relations by analyzing email statistics and meeting records. Once identified, these leaders can become powerful allies who can influence behavior through “showing by doing.” In fact, when companies map out their organizations, they can identify leaders who exhibit different core leadership strengths (see “Four Types of Authentic Informal Leaders”).

Four Types of Authentic Informal Leaders

Every organization has people who influence and energize others without relying on their title or formal position in the hierarchy to do so. We call them “authentic informal leaders.” They are a powerful resource in spreading a critical few behaviors from the bottom up. Among the many types of informal leaders present in organizations, the following are seen most frequently.
Pride builders are master motivators of other people, and catalysts for improvement around them. Often found in the role of line manager, they understand the motivations of those with whom they work. They know how to foster a sense of excellence among others. They can be found at every level of a hierarchy; some of the most effective pride builders are close to the front line, where they can interact directly with customers as well as employees. Pride builders often have powerful insights about the culture and about what behaviors are likely to lead to improvement.
Exemplars are role models. They bring vital behaviors or skills to life, and others pay attention to them. They are well respected and are effective peer influencers in the middle and senior management cohorts.
Networkers are hubs of personal communication within the organization. They know many people, and communicate freely and openly with them. They serve as links among people who might not otherwise share information or ideas. If you want to see an idea travel virally through an enterprise, enlist your networkers.
Early adopters enthusiastically latch onto and experiment with new technologies, processes, and ways of working. Involve them in your performance pilots, or whenever you are trying to demonstrate impact quickly.
At one major oil company, an informal leader named Osama became known as the “turbo-collaborator.” His role gave him very little formal influence. But when he began working at the refinery, he walked the plant with the engineers, maintenance technicians, and operators, and took copious notes. As a result, he knew everyone and developed relationships across disciplines. Whenever somebody wanted to know how the place really worked, they would speak to Osama — who would either have the answer in his notebook or know precisely the right person to ask. When the company formed a buddy program between operations and maintenance aimed at using greater collaboration to improve plant reliability, it knew it needed Osama at the heart of it. He connected people, defined templates to encourage collaboration, and captured success stories. Identifying, engaging, and nurturing such informal leaders allows companies to harness their talents and further the company’s transformation efforts.
5.  Don’t let your formal leaders off the hook. Most organizations tend to shunt culture into the silo of human resources professionals. But leaders in all parts of the company are critical in safeguarding and championing desired behaviors, energizing personal feelings, and reinforcing cultural alignment. The signaling of emotional commitment sets the tone for others to follow. If staff members see a disconnect between the culture an organization promulgates and the one its formal leadership follows, they’ll disengage quickly from the advertised culture and simply mimic their seniors’ behavior. The people at the top have to demonstrate the change they want to see. Here, too, the critical few come into play. A handful of the right kind of leaders have to be on board to start the process.
When Jim Rogers was CEO of GE Motors in Fort Wayne, Ind., he became frustrated because his senior leadership group of more than 15 leaders seldom functioned together as a “real team.” As described by Jon Katzenbach and Douglas K. Smith in The Wisdom of Teams: Creating the High-Performance Organization (Harvard Business School Press, 1993), a real team is one with a high level of emotional commitment; the leadership role shifts easily among the members depending on their skills and experience and the challenges of the moment, rather than on any hierarchical positions. Team members hold one another accountable for the quality of their collective work. Interestingly, at GE Motors the senior leadership group members often demonstrated real team capabilities in running their individual business units and functions. So Rogers decided to find ways to break them into subteams of three or four members to address specific cross-organizational issues facing the larger group. Over time, he mixed the subgroupings to match emerging issues. By working in different subgroup settings, the executives developed camaraderie, which in turn improved the effectiveness of the group as a whole.
6.  Link behaviors to business objectives. When people talk about feelings, motivations, and values — all of which are vital elements of strong cultures — the conversation can often veer into abstractions. It may then range far afield of what it takes to succeed in the market. Too many employees walk away from culture-focused town halls or values discussions wondering how the advice on how to be a better person actually translates into the work they do. To avoid this disconnect, offer tangible, well-defined examples of how cultural interventions lead to improved performance and financial outcomes. Select behaviors that are aimed specifically at improving business performance and can be measured over time.
An oil company’s drive to reduce maintenance costs at an industrial installation highlights the importance of such an approach. The critical few behaviors included empowerment and good decision making. One of the company’s exemplars (employees who lead by example) decided it would be a smart move to make costs visible to workers. So he placed price tags on various pieces of machinery. These cues inspired behavioral changes related to decisions about whether to repair or replace equipment. Workers and managers began to recommend fixing expensive equipment rather than replacing it. The company celebrated and publicized cost savings identified by employees. The behaviors led to a change in focus and mind-set. When an employee noticed that fans were cooling the machinery during the winter, he felt empowered to call it out, and ask whether it was necessary to do so. It turned out that it wasn’t — and the company saved US$750,000 annually in power costs as a result.
7. Demonstrate impact quickly. We live in an age of notoriously short attention spans. That applies as much to organizational culture as it does to people’s media consumption habits. When people hear about new high-profile initiatives and efforts, and then don’t see any activity related to them for several months, they’ll disengage and grow cynical. That’s why it is extremely important to showcase the impact of cultural efforts on business results as quickly as possible. One effective method of doing so is to stage performance pilots — that is, high-profile demonstration projects. Pilots are relatively low-risk efforts that introduce specific behaviors that can then be evaluated and assessed. They often rely on a dashboard that defines desired impacts, the tactics used, and the specific metrics to be employed.
When Bell Canada first explored using new behaviors at the front line to improve its customer service and profitability, there were many more skeptics than believers within the leadership ranks. There simply wasn’t any numerical proof that the tactics would work. So CEO Michael Sabia decided to set up a pilot test in a sales unit near Toronto. The sponsors of the test blocked out a tight time frame of eight months, and developed realistic ways of measuring behavior change, customer reactions, and actual sales and margin performance. Armed with positive results in these areas — a 29 percent increase in customer satisfaction in retail stores, a 31 percent increase in revenue per call at call centers — the company went on to accelerate the expansion of these efforts across the front line in different geographies, functions, and businesses.
8. Use cross-organizational methods to go viral. Ideas can spread virally across organizational departments and functions, as well as from the top down and from the bottom up. One powerful way to spread ideas is through social media: blogs, Facebook or LinkedIn posts, and tweets — not from senior management, but from some of the authentic informal leaders mentioned in Principle 4.
By now it is well established that social media can be more effective at spreading information, news, and music than traditional modes of distribution. The same holds with critical behaviors. People are often more receptive to changes in “the way we do things around here” when those changes are recommended or shared by friends, colleagues, and other associates. This kind of credible social proof is more compelling than similar testimonials from someone whose job it is to sell something.
Just as there is an art to making content go viral, there’s a craft to making behavior go viral. For example, in a model that we have tested successfully in several situations, a company starts with a few carefully chosen groups of 12 to 15 informal leaders in three or four different parts of the business. After several weeks, an additional 10 to 15 groups of informal leaders are set up in every business unit. After about three months, the existing groups are encouraged to expand and bring in new people. After another three to six months have passed, the groups become more autonomous, allowed to control their own expansion. Meanwhile, the company facilitates connections among groups to share learning and insights. As behavior spreads, company leaders see increased performance as well as peer and leadership recognition.
9. Align programmatic efforts with behaviors. We’ve emphasized the role that informal leaders can play in helping ideas go viral. But it’s also important to match the new cultural direction with existing ways of doing business. Informal mechanisms and cultural interventions must complement and integrate with the more common formal organization components, not work at cross-purposes. By providing the structure in which people work — through disciplines such as organization design, analytics, human resources, and lean process improvement — the formal organization provides a rational motivation for employee actions, while the informal organization enables the emotional commitment that characterizes peak performance.
The U.S. Marine Corps provides a classic example of integrating formal and informal leadership efforts. The “rule of three” dictates how the Marines design their organizations and projects and how they execute in a hierarchy. (Three squads form into one of three divisions, which form one of three battalions.) The formal leaders of those units are expected to know the intent of the officer two levels above them — and to call out any order or situation they perceive to be incoherent or in conflict with that intent. But there are also informal leaders: Each of the four members of a frontline rifle team is prepared (and expected) to take the lead whenever the formal leader is disabled or loses the high-ground position. This means that the informal leaders also need to know the intent of that officer two levels above. Integrating informal norms with the formal structures helps enable the timely battlefield adjustments that have served the Marine Corps well for more than 200 years.
10. Actively manage your cultural situation over time. Companies that have had great success working with culture — we call them “culture superstars” — actively monitor, manage, care for, and update their cultural forces. Why? As we noted at the outset, when aligned with strategic and operating priorities, culture can provide hidden sources of energy and motivation that can accelerate changes faster than formal processes and programs. Even if you have a highly effective culture today, it may not be good enough for tomorrow.
Southwest Airlines stands as an example of a battle-tested company in which culture has been managed over time. Famous for its long-term success in an industry where even the largest players routinely fail, Southwest for 40 years has been energized by a deep sense of pride among all employees. Southwest has found that constructing an environment that puts its employees first — above customers and owners — fosters a sense of emotional commitment and pride that delivers excellent customer service. But at Southwest, the work on culture is never completed. Just as the airline’s strategy, tactics, and technologies have evolved to cope with a changing external environment, specific HR practices, including informal behaviors, have shifted over time.

Living in Your Culture

Although challenging, multidimensional, and often difficult to deal with, a company’s cultural situation constitutes a powerful set of emotional resources. As is the case with other resources — human, technological, financial — it is incumbent upon leaders to strive to get the most value out of it.
To a degree, culture can be compared to natural forces such as winds and tides. These elements are there in the background, sometimes unnoticed, sometimes obvious. Endowed with immense power, they can waylay plans and inhibit progress. They can’t really be tamed or fundamentally altered. But if you respect them and understand how to make the most of them, if you work with them and tap into their hidden power, they can become a source of energy and provide powerful assistance.
The best way to start is to ask yourself a series of questions. What are the most important emotional forces that determine what your people do? What few behavior changes would matter most in meeting strategic and operational imperatives? Who are the authentic informal leaders you can enlist? And what can you and your fellow senior leaders do differently to signal and reinforce those critical behaviors?
Of course, you shouldn’t plan for dramatic results overnight. Expect an evolution, not a revolution. One of the challenges of working with culture is that, as we’ve noted, it changes gradually — often too slowly for leaders facing fast-moving competitors. That’s the bad news. The good news? If you approach culture with respect and intelligence, as a milieu in which you and your enterprise live, you can use it to accelerate your competitive momentum. There’s no better time than the present to start.

BTM² – A Tool for Business Transformation Management




The Business Transformation Management Methodology (BTM²) is a four-phase holistic and integrated business transformation management methodology developed by the Business Transformation Academy,SAP Business Transformation Services and their extended network of academic and business partners throughout the world.
This post serves as an introduction to an intensely documented approach to holistic business transformation management, which addresses the transformation journey from strategy through to business benefit realisation and everything in between.

Listen to Rob Llewellyn Introduce BTM²




Strategy More Difficult to Deploy Than Develop

It is often said that strategy is three times more difficult to deploy than develop, which explains why so many strategies result in a painful execution journey for everyone involved. Budgets and timelines are frequently exceeded and stakeholders get tired of the noise excreted from the project, programme or portfolio due to inadequate transformation orchestration.
The colourful benefits on display in the business case begin to fade as it becomes clear that the planned return on investment is diminishing as more time and resources are sucked into the initiative. This is not to mention the fact that the people and business areas that will inherit the new world, are ill prepared.
This is a reality in many companies, because they lack the right transformation tools and transformation management capabilities. The failed BBC Digital Transformation is one example, and thousands of others are swept under the carpets of companies who thrive on operational excellence, but discover to their cost that, transformation excellence requires a very different set of capabilities.
“By 2018, 70% of siloed digital transformation initiatives will ultimately fail due to insufficient collaboration, integration, sourcing or project management.”
– IDC

Holistic Transformation

BTM² was the world’s first holistic business transformation management methodology that provides a framework with clear phases, deliverables and corresponding methods. It is a generic framework, which can be applied to different business transformation use cases, and is not specific to one business function, technology or industry.
BTM² is a leading holistic and integrated business transformation methodology which is based on academic and business research and has been used and validated in multiple business cases. It is described in this 348 page reference book which refers to countless external resources. So this article can serve only as a short introduction to the mission critical subject that many organisations still struggle to get right.

Four Phases of Transformation

There are four phases in the of BTM² transformation lifecycle, which are:
  • Envision
  • Engage
  • Transform
  • Optimise

Source: Business Transformation Academy

Nine Transformation Management Disciplines

BTM² consists of nine transformation management disciplines which are:
  • Meta Management (Leadership, Culture, Values, Communication)
  • Strategy Management (Transformation Direction)
  • Value Management (Transformation Direction)
  • Risk Management (Transformation Direction)
  • Project and Programme Management (Transformation Enablement)
  • Business Process Management (Transformation Enablement)
  • IT Transformation Management (Transformation Enablement)
  • Organisational Change Management (Transformation Enablement)
  • Competence and Training Management (Transformation Enablement)

Components of Transformation Management Disciplines
The illustrateion above shows a very high level of BTM². The next level down is shown in the chart below and a detailed body of knowledge resides within each of the 65 components shown below.

Source: Business Transformation Academy

An Introduction to the Nine Business Transformation Management Disciplines

Meta Management

In the context of business transformation, Meta Management provides the overarching frame for a business transformation and provides the linkages amongst the disciplines and also the management structure, which will allow the transformation process to be effective. It addresses individual disciplines which include guidelines, leadership, culture, values, and communication.

Strategy Management

In the context of business transformation, Strategy Management primarily addresses the Envision phase of the transformation life-cycle, during which a strategy is developed. Strategy Development involves the selection of appropriate team members, collection of data, analysis of transformation needs and readiness, design of a business vision, and a business model and the definition of an integrated transformation plan.

Value Management

In the context of business transformation, Value Management involves defining the business benefits and changes needed to realise them, evaluating the feasibility of making the changes successfully, and producing an evidence-based, rigorous business case and supporting benefits realisation plan. Value Management relies heavily upon the engagement of stakeholders in the preparation of the business case and benefits plan to create the knowledge and commitment required to realise the benefits described in the business case.

Risk Management

Risk management provides fundamental guidance to the planning, development and effective execution of a business transformation. It is vital that business transformation managers to manage the risks that relate to the process of transforming their organisation towards a desired future state and those risks that relate more to the possibility that this desired state becomes either obsolete or sub-optimal.

Business Process Management

Business Process Management defines the scope of process changes needed for the expected improvements in performance. To make the transformation effort a continuous success, business processes have to be considered from a strategic perspective. The identification of end-to-end business processes and the assignment of responsible process owners is a major task. It is important to understand that process management does not equal process modelling, but rather the relationship between IT, Business and People related tasks.

IT Transformation Management

IT Transformation Management evaluates the impact of current IT processes, competencies and systems on business transformation, and vice versa. It assesses and enables solution readiness of the business, defines and assesses the gap between the as-is and to-be of IT, deploys IT operations and services, and implements IT governance. It also improves IT operations and services, and manages the IT lifecycle.

Organisational Change Management

Organisational Change Management (OCM) addresses the human element of business transformation. It deals with the people who have to change their ways of working and involves setting up a foundation for effective OCM with respect to governance and assessing organisational change readiness. Establishing and implementing stakeholder communication and performance management strategies, and continuously receiving feedback to make improvements is key.

Competence and Training Management

Competence and Training Management provides qualification and enablement with respect to the competences required for business transformation, and the strategic core competences vital for the company’s future success. Competence and Training Management identifies and analyses training needs and objectives, develops training measures for the identified gaps, foster the learning transfer and analyses the success of the measures.

Project and Programme Management

Programme management aims to support the implementation of the transformation strategy in order to achieve the business benefits described in the business case. Programme management focuses on high-level specification and the “why and what” of transformation. It includes stakeholder management, benefit realisation, dependency management, transition management/change acceptance and integration with corporate strategies. Project management focuses on detailed specification and the “how” of implementation, along with control of activities to produce products.

The Business of Digital Transformation

If digital business transformation efforts are to be successful, all of the above nine transformation management disciplines need to be adequately addressed, and it is worth noting that technology is just one of nine disciplines in the list. This highlights the fact that transformation is less about technology and more about people and business.
Organisations need to ensure that their digital business transformation leaders do not fall into the pitfall of placing an unbalanced emphasis on technology, process and some project management, while paying lip-service or light touches to the other transformation management disciplines. Research has shown that this common error is the basis for countless failed and struggling transformation programmes throughout the world.

What are the advantages of using BTM²?

  • BTM² is based on extensive research between leading academics and some of the world’s leading transformation practitioners
  • BTM² helps its adopters build credibility among their business peers
  • BTM² is an objective, unbiased framework to identify business challenges and solve them
  • BTM² is a ideal tool for regular and quick assessments of business transformation initiatives
  • BTM² addresses both the rational and irrational aspects of business transformation
  • BTM² distinguishes managers and leaders that use a proven business transformation approach from those that do not
  • BTM² creates a competitive advantage
  • BTM² is not focused on any particular technology or company
  • BTM² is open for any organisation to benefit from without having to engage any particular consulting firm
  • BTM² provides guidance, support and structure needed for transformation programmes

Are there any certified BTM² experts I can turn to?

The Business Transformation Management Methodology (BTM²) is accompanied by two levels of certification:
  • Business Transformation Program Manager (BTPM)
  • Global Business Transformation Master (GBTM)
Both certification tracks are available through the Business Transformation Academy.
There are approximately 800 certified BTPM practitioners and 300 GBTM practitioners in the world. Many reside inside SAP Business Transformation Services, the Business Transformation Academy and other organisations such as Daimler, LG, Samsung, DHL, Unilever, etc. A handful operate as independent consultants, and these include CXO Transform founder Rob Llewellyn and CXO Weekly writer Shekhar Bhartiya.

More BTM² Resources

BTM²Handbook

The Handbook of Business Transformation Management Methodology is a 348 reference that describes BTM² in detail, and provides the knowledge required for the BTPM certification mentioned above.

Business Transformation Health Check

An assessment of transformation programmes in your organisation can be conducted using this business transformation health check template. A certified BTM² practitioner can undertake the assessment and provide an action-plan to improve the current-state of the business transformation.
https://bit.ly/3NxSf0c

вторник, 22 марта 2016 г.

How Agile And Lean Can Transform Marketing

How-Agile-And-Lean-Can-Transform-Marketing-Q1

 DAVID NEWBERRY 


The role of marketing is to connect an organization with the market in a way that benefits both customer and company. In simple terms, marketing is accountable for ensuring there is a discernable need in the market, which the company can address in a unique, differentiated and profitable way. To achieve this, marketing must bridge the roles of both the voice of the customer as well as company spokesperson. 
However, the voice of the customer is now the overriding influence in how brands are defined. Brands are no longer based on the brand promise created by the organization – instead, it is the actions and experiences delivered to the customer.Brand reputation wins over brand promise every time. 
In this age of customer obsession and corporate transparency, to deliver the best possible customer experience, brands must wrestle and overcome some key challenges:
  • Rapidly changing markets and customer needs
  • Media saturation and customer communication bombardment
  • Significant fall in customer attention span
  • More ways than ever to engage with the customer
In response to these challenges, marketing teams must become more flexible to changing marketing conditions, better optimize the resources they have available, ensure creativity and diversity of ideas. All this, while continually adapting and testing new techniques to achieve customer breakthrough.
This represents a significant change in the way that marketing teams currently operate. Historically marketing investments are baked into detailed plans that are often out of date before there is even a chance to begin. This marketing planning approach creates a high level of latency that in return, results in the introduction of new processes and procedures to manage and implement the required changes. This amplifies the inherent latency, establishes more complexity and thereby further hinders marketing teams from adapting, testing, creating and innovating to their full potential.
In addition, distance makes these changes harder. Most marketing teams are not co-located a single office. In many cases, marketing team members are located in different offices, countries and time zones with many companies also adopting remote and flexible working. This compounds the challenge of enabling agility and fluidity while maintaining direction, priorities, cohesion, consistency and knowledge flow.
Marketing this way is just not working. We have to find new ways to unlock the potential and talent of our marketing teams , wherever they are located, and to enable them to prosper. So how should marketing respond?
Are there other industry innovations and techniques that can transform marketing back to being a high-performance team? Two well-known methodologies have transformed other industries – could they do the same for the marketing function? They are:
  • Agile methodology
  • Lean manufacturing

So What Is Agile Methodology?

Agile methodology has been adopted by software developers and is an alternative to traditional project management. It helps teams respond to unpredictability and changing, or unknown market needs through incremental, iterative work cadences, known as sprints. It provides an alternative approach to sequential development, traditional waterfall thinking, and long-term planning. Agile teams are also generally highly distributed so they have insights on how best to overcome the lack of proximity of team members.

How Does This Compare To Lean Manufacturing?

The core idea of lean manufacturing is to maximize customer value while minimizing waste. Simply, lean means creating more value for customers with fewer resources. It is a customer-centric methodology used to continuously improve any process through the elimination of waste in everything you do, based on the ideas of “Continuous Incremental Improvement” and “Respect for People.”
My premise is that by adopting the best of Agile and Lean methodologies, a marketing function can be transformed.  So which adopted principles can work for marketing?

Agile Methodology

Agile methodology is based on an Agile Manifesto that contains 12 key fundamental principles focusing on an “inspect-and-adapt” approach to all activities. When taken as a collective group these can be consolidated into five principles that are directly applicable to a marketing team:
  1. Responding to change over following a plan
  2. Customer collaboration over internal views
  3. Individuals and interactions over processes and tools
  4. Real-time pivot over extended deliberation
  5. Team perspective over individual viewpoints
Translating these principles into key behaviors that resonate with how a high-performance marketing team should operate, we have the following:
A1.  Adapt For The MomentPlans should only be implemented for the right reasons, and that is to deliver a desired outcome. Plans should not be seen as a tick box, an activity that needs to be undertaken just because it was planned. Any activity should be under constant review to ensure it provides the best way to deliver the desired result.
A2.  Seek Real Customer ValidationDevelop use cases that can be shared with customers for validation. Run tests or create demonstrations that will bring the customer experience to life and enable real customer feedback. Don’t rely on hypothetical answers to survey questions or academic research, but rather focus on capturing actual behaviors instead. Actions speak a lot louder than words!
A3.  Self-Organize
The vast majority of the Intellectual Property (IP) of a company is held within the talent of the organization.  It is imperative that this talent is unlocked so it can contribute where it can deliver the most value.
A4.  Remove ImpedimentsTime, or lack of time, is one of the greatest obstacles that teams face in acting and creating value. Lack of availability, latency of responses, and poor time keeping for meetings saps the energy of teams and leads to team underperformance. Teams need to become more dynamic and use technologies that promote spontaneous meetings, synchronous communication, and team connectivity.
A5.  As ONE TeamUltimately it all comes down to creating an environment where success is seen through the eyes of the team rather than the individual. It requires a working environment and culture where self-organizing, networked teams can evolve and develop without hindrance. Where a community can work seamlessly together without the potential source of conflict that gets created with overt rules, processes, authority and power imbalance. It is where team success takes precedence and where recognition is given to teams rather than to specific individuals.

Lean Manufacturing

In the book Lean Thinking (1996) by James P. Womack and Daniel T. Jones, they distilled the lean philosophy into the following five key principles:
  • Specify the value desired by the customer
  • Identify the value stream for each product providing that value and challenge all of the wasted steps currently necessary to provide it
  • Make the product flow continuously through the remaining value-added steps
  • Introduce pull between all steps where continuous flow is possible
  • Manage toward perfection so that the number of steps and the amount of time and information needed to serve the customer continually falls
Translating these principles into key behaviors that resonate with a high-performance marketing team, we have the following:
L1.  Connect Core Purpose To Customer ValueEverything the team does must be seen as being of value to the customer as defined by your core purpose. By value, we mean it needs to have influenced or changed an existing position and made that customer’s life better. Capture that change from prior state to future state in a measurable way, in order to validate what value can be delivered. If you cannot validate it, then don’t do it.
L2.  Focus On The Desired OutcomeAdopt a Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) approach where the team looks at the entire process to ensure that the role and impact of each step in that process is fully understood and aligned. There is no point in doing four things well if one thing doesn’t work and breaks the chain. What this means is that you shouldn’t use a proxy, as defined by Seth Godin, as a means of evaluating success. Success of the team can only be measured by the final outcome, not on how well each activity was delivered.  A great example of where this should apply is the customer lifecycle where marketing, sales, and support all need to take collective responsibility for establishing customer advocates.
L3.  Devolve From Command And ControlAuthority for decision-making needs to be devolved to those team members that have the best understanding of the task at hand. By empowering the team members at the front-line and by giving them ownership for both the problem and the solution, you will be able to create a more dynamic, passionate and energetic team. This will not only speed up the process, but it will also unlock new innovative and creative ideas that can further improve the final outcome.
L4.  Promote Knowledge FlowInformation needs to be set free. It is imperative that every team member has access to relevant information when they need it. It is also important that any latency in regard to information flow is reduced, so everyone has the same real-time information at the same moment. This knowledge flow will help identify dependencies as well as ensure that transitions from one team member to another are seamless and cohesive. Knowledge must be seen as a collective team asset not as individual information.
L5.  Strive For SimplicityIt is not about what you need to put in to achieve a goal, but it is what you are able to leave out and still achieve the same result. It is important to recognize that a decision to leave something out is just as important as a decision to include something. Always strive for simplicity and ensure what you do will always exceed the expectation of the customer. 
In summary, by combing both “agile and lean principles”, marketing teams of the future will be characterized by:
  • L1: In one direction; as they know, understand and support the core purpose of the organization, its key priorities, and goals.
  • A1: Adapted for the moment; by doing what is right based on the available information at that precise moment, rather than some historical plan.
  • L2: Focusing on the desired outcome; to ensure that everything you do comes together to create real discernable value for the customer.
  • A2: Validated by the customer; as defined by the customer through real-life behavior and response rather than by some internal perspective or assumption.
  • A3: With the right resources; by enabling teams to assemble the right people to contribute the required insights, innovation and creativity to deliver the most efficient and effective solution.
  • L3: To make the best decisions; by ensuring that the collective views of all team members are considered and incorporated to achieve one voice for the benefit of both the customer and the company.
  • L4: With the best insights; where those decisions are made with the best information available and where every team member can make a considered judgment, based on a consistent team understanding.
  • A4: Without impediments; by bringing everyone together in real-time, without delay, and by avoiding the latency of delayed communication tools to ensure the quickest decision-making and execution possible.
  • L5: In a simplified way; by taking out anything that complicates the relationship to ensure that what is delivered can be the best it can be.
  • A5: As one team; to create a result where the successful outcome is based on overall team effort and collective wisdom rather than individual performance.
By following this combination of agile and lean principles, marketing teams will work better together, irrespective of where individual members are located. It will be transformational and will ensure that the right people, do the right work, in the right moment.