It’s not a race to complete the most tasks.
If you have too much to do, that means you have more tasks than time. And because time is limited, the only way out is to change how you think about your task list.
If you have too many tasks, you haven’t yet decided which tasks are important and which are less important. Until you rank tasks by importance, you’ll think you have too many.
When you have more tasks than you can handle, you don’t. You can handle what you can handle. No problem there. What you have are expectations that are out of line with the reality of what one person can get done in a day. What you can get done is what you can get done. Then end. The thing to understand about task lists is they don’t give a damn about work content. They are perfectly happy to get longer when new tasks are added, regardless of your capacity to get them done. That’s just how it goes with task lists. Why do you think it’s okay to judge yourself negatively for a growing task list?
Just because a task is on a task list doesn’t mean it must get done. A task list is just a tool to keep track of tasks, nothing more. A task list helps you assess which tasks are most important so you can work on the right one until it’s time to go home.
Here are some tips on how to handle your tasks.
Identify your top three most important tasks and work on the most important one until it’s complete.
When the most important task is complete, move each task one step closer to the top and work on the most important one until it’s complete.
If you’re not willing to finish a task, don’t start it. (Think switching cost.)
Don’t start a task before finishing one. (No partial for a half-done task.)
The fastest way to complete a task is to simply remove it from the list. (Full credit for deleting a task of low importance.)
Complete the tasks you can complete and leave the rest. (And no self-judgment or guilt.)
It’s not about completing the most tasks. It’s about completing the most important ones.
Image credit — kosmolaut
No Time for the Truth
Company leaders deserve to know the truth, but they can no longer take the time to learn it.
Company leaders are pushed too hard to grow the business and can no longer take the time to listen to all perspectives, no longer take the time to process those perspectives, and no longer take the time to make nuanced decisions. Simply put, company leaders are under too much pressure to grow the business. It’s unhealthy pressure and it’s too severe. And it’s not good for the company or the people that work there.
What’s best for the company is to take the time to learn the truth.
Getting to the truth moves things forward. Sure, you may not see things correctly, but when you say it like you see it, everyone’s understanding gets closer to the truth. And when you do see things clearly and correctly, saying what you see moves the company’s work in a more profitable direction. There’s nothing worse than spending time and money to do the work only to learn what someone already knew.
What’s best for the company is to tell the truth as you see it.
All of us have good intentions but all of us are doing at least two jobs. And it’s especially difficult for company leaders, whose responsibility is to develop the broadest perspective. Trouble is, to develop that broad perspective sometime comes at the expense of digging into the details. Perfectly understandable, as that’s the nature of their work. But subject matter experts (SMEs) must take the time to dig into the details because that’s the nature of their work. SMEs have an obligation to think things through, communicate clearly, and stick to their guns. When asked broad questions, good SMEs go down to bedrock and give detailed answers. And when asked hypotheticals, good SMEs don’t speculate outside their domain of confidence. And when asked why-didn’t-you’s, good SMEs answer with what they did and why they did it.
Regardless of the question, the best SMEs always tell the truth.
SMEs know when the project is behind. And they know the answer that everyone thinks will get the project get back on schedule. And the know the truth as they see it. And when there’s a mismatch between the answer that might get the project back on schedule and the truth as they see it, they must say it like they see it. Yes, it costs a lot of money when the project is delayed, but telling the truth is the fastest route to commercialization. In the short term, it’s easier to give the answer that everyone thinks will get things back on track. But truth is, it’s not faster because the truth comes out in the end. You can’t defy the physics and you can’t transcend the fundamentals. You must respect the truth. The Universe doesn’t care if the truth is inconvenient. In the end, the Universe makes sure the truth carries the day.
We’re all busy. And we all have jobs to do. But it’s always the best to take the time to understand the details, respect the physics, and stay true to the fundamentals.
When there’s a tough decision, understand the fundamentals and the decision will find you.
When there’s disagreement, take the time to understand the physics, even the organizational kind. And the right decision will meet you where you are.
When the road gets rocky, ask your best SMEs what to do, and do that.
When it comes to making good decisions, sometimes slower is faster.
Image credit — Dennis Jarvis
Effectiveness at the Expense of Efficiency
Efficiency is a simple measurement – output divided by resources needed to achieve it. How much did you get done and how many people did you need to do it? What was the return on the investment? How much money did you make relative to how much you had to invest? We have efficiency measurements for just about everything. We are an efficiency-based society.
It’s easy to create a metric for efficiency. Figure out the output you can measure and divide it by the resources you think you used to achieve it. While a metric like this is easy to calculate, it likely won’t provide a good answer to what we think is the only question worth asking– how do we increase efficiency?
Problem 1. The resources you think are used to produce the output aren’t the only resources you used to generate the output. There are many resources that contributed to the output that you did not measure. And not only that, you don’t know how much those resources actually cost. You can try the tricky trick of fully burdened cost, where the labor rate is loaded with an overhead percentage. But that’s, well, nothing more than an artifact of a contrived accounting system. You can do some other stuff like calculate the opportunity cost of deploying those resources on other projects. I’m not sure what that will get you, but it won’t get you the actual cost of achieving the output you think you achieved.
Problem 2. We don’t measure what’s important or meaningful. We measure what’s easy to measure. And that’s a big problem because you end up beating yourself about the head and shoulders trying to improve something that is easy to measure but not all that meaningful. The biggest problem here is local optimization. You want something easy to measure so you cull out a small fraction of a larger process and increase the output of that small part of the process. The thing is, your customer doesn’t care about the efficiency of that small piece of that process. And, improving that small piece likely doesn’t do anything for the output of the total process. If more products aren’t leaving the factory, you didn’t do anything.
Problem 3. Productivity isn’t all that important. What’s important is effectiveness. If you are highly efficient at the wrong thing, you may be efficient, but you’re also ineffective. If you launch a product in a highly efficient way and no one buys it, your efficiency numbers may be off the charts, but your effectiveness numbers are in the toilet.
We have very few metrics on effectiveness. But here are some questions a good effectiveness metric should help you answer.
- Did we work on the right projects?
- Did we make good decisions?
- Did we put the right people on the projects?
- Did we do what we said we’d do?
- After the project, is the team excited to do a follow-on project?
- Did our customers benefit from our work?
- Do our partners want to work with us again?
- Did we set ourselves up to do our work better next time?
- Did we grow our young talent?
- Did we have fun?
- Do more people like to work at our company?
- Have we developed more trust-based relationships over the last year?
- Have we been more transparent with our workforce this year?
If I had a choice between efficiency and effectiveness, I’d choose effectiveness.
Image credit – Bruce Tuten
Bringing Your Whole Self to Work
Do you bring your whole self to work? If not, how do you feel about that?
When you demonstrate your unique goodness and it’s met with “You don’t fit in.” they may say they want you to fit in, but, really, that’s objective evidence that they need your unique goodness.
Witches were burned at the stake because their special powers frightened people.
If it’s a good idea, don’t block it because people call it heresy.
The Universe doesn’t care if it’s heresy, as long as it’s a good idea.
The Universe doesn’t discriminate against witches.
If you’re a plumber that fixes pipes and fixes potholes, they’ll expect you to fix pipes and fill potholes.
Sometimes you’ve got to withhold the solution If you want the organizational learning to happen.
If you fill all the potholes, the company never learns that someone’s not doing their job.
A plumber who fixes pipes and fills potholes should be paid more than a plumber that just fixes pipes.
When no one listens to reason, the only thing left to do is let the wheels fall off.
And if you really care about the long-term success of the company, you’ll let them fall off.
If you see things differently, you’re obligated to say so, even if you’re wrong.
When you speak truth to Power, does Power thank you or kick you?
If after speaking unsayable truth to Power, they kick you, that says a lot about Power.
When you’re satisfied with what you have, striving-based motivation tactics have no power.
It’s easy to mentor down into the organization, but it takes a special person to mentor uphill.
Never do your boss’s job.
When successful thinking becomes geriatric, it’s time for hospice.
Successful business models change only after they become unsuccessful.
Change happens only after exhausting all other possibilities. And it takes special people to make it happen.
If you ‘re afraid and hold back because you’re concerned about being burned at the stake, you should put your magic wand in your pocket, jump on your broom (or vacuum cleaner), and find another job.
Image credit — Jerzy Kociatkiewicz
Battling Judgment
Judging results when things are different than our expectations.
If you don’t like being judged, stop judging yourself.
No one can judge you without your consent, even you.
If someone judges you, that’s about them.
People’s judgment of you is none of your business.
When you see a friend judging themselves, give them a hug. A virtual one will do.
Judging someone means you want them to be different than they are.
If someone gives you a gift and you don’t accept it, it’s still theirs. Judgment is like that.
If you’re afraid of being judged for trying something new, be afraid, and try it anyway.
Judgment is objective evidence of disapproval if you accept it.
Judging someone won’t change their behavior, other than make them angry.
When you see a friend being judged, give them a hug (in a social distance way.)
When someone judges you, don’t worry. In ten years, no one will remember.
When someone tries to judge you, let them try.
If you do your best, why do you think it’s okay to judge yourself about the outcome?
If you don’t do your best, don’t judge. Ask why.
Judgment can debilitate, but only if you let it.
Image credit — Stuart Richards
The Power of Prototypes
A prototype moves us from “That’s not possible.” to “Hey, watch this!”
A prototype moves us from “We don’t do it that way.” to “Well, we do now.”
A prototype moves us from “That’s impossible.” to “As it turns out, it was only almost impossible.”
A prototype turns naysayers into enemies and profits.
A prototype moves us from an argument to a new product development project.
A prototype turns analysis-paralysis into progress.
A prototype turns a skeptical VP into a vicious advocate.
A prototype turns a pet project into top-line growth.
A prototype turns disbelievers into originators of the idea.
A prototype can turn a Digital Strategy into customer value.
A prototype can turn an uncomfortable Board of Directors meeting into a pizza party.
A prototype can save a CEO’s ass.
A prototype can be too early, but mostly they’re too late.
If the wheels fall off your first prototype, you’re doing it right.
If your prototype doesn’t dismantle the Status-Quo, you built the wrong prototype.
A good prototype violates your business model.
A prototype doesn’t care if you see it for what it is because it knows everyone else will.
A prototype turns “I don’t believe you.” into “You don’t have to.”
When you’re told “Don’t make that prototype.” you’re onto something.
A prototype eats not-invented-here for breakfast.
A prototype can overpower the staunchest critic, even the VP flavor.
A prototype moves us from “You don’t know what you’re talking about.” to “Oh, yes I do.”
If the wheels fall off your second prototype, keep going.
A prototype is objective evidence you’re trying to make a difference.
You can argue with a prototype, but you’ll lose.
If there’s a mismatch between the theory and the prototype, believe the prototype.
A prototype doesn’t have to do everything, but it must do one important thing for the first time.
A prototype must be real, but it doesn’t have to be really real.
If your prototype obsoletes your best product, congratulations.
A prototype turns political posturing into reluctant compliance and profits.
A prototype turns “What the hell are you talking about?” into “This.”
A good prototype bestows privilege on the prototyper.
A prototype can beat a CEO in an arm-wrestling match.
A prototype doesn’t care if you like it. It only cares about creating customer value.
If there’s an argument between a well-stated theory and a well-functioning prototype, it’s pretty clear which camp will refine their theory to line up with what they just saw with their own eyes.
A prototype knows it has every right to tell the critics to “Kiss my ass.” but it knows it doesn’t have to.
You can argue with a prototype, but shouldn’t.
A prototype changes thinking without asking for consent.
Image credit — Pedro Ribeiro Simões
Words To Live By
What people think about you is none of your business.
If you’re afraid to be wrong, you shouldn’t be setting direction.
Think the better of people, as they’ll be better for it.
When you find yourself striving, pull the emergency brake and figure out how to start thriving.
If you want the credit, you don’t want to make a difference.
If you’re afraid to use your best judgment, find a mentor.
Family first, no exceptions.
When you hold a mirror to the organization, you demonstrate that you care.
If you want to grow people and you invest less than 30% of your time, you don’t want to grow them.
When someone gives you an arbitrary completion date, they don’t know what they’re doing.
When the Vice President wants to argue with the physics, let them.
When all else fails, use your best judgment.
If it’s not okay to tell the truth, work for someone else.
The best way to make money is not the best way to live.
When someone yells at you, that says everything about them and nothing about you.
Trust is a result. Think about that.
When you ask for the impossible, all the answers will be irrational.
No one can diminish you without your consent.
If you don’t have what you want, why not try to want what you have?
When you want to control things, you limit the growth of everyone else.
People can tell when you’re telling the truth, so tell them.
If you find yourself watching the clock, find yourself another place to work.
When someone does a great job, tell them.
If you have to choose between employment and enjoyment, choose the latter.
If you’re focused on cost reduction, you’re in a race to the bottom.
The best way to help people grow is to let them do it wrong (safely).
When you hold up a mirror to the organization, no one will believe what they see.
If you’re not growing your replacement, what are you doing?
If you’re not listening, you’re not learning.
When someone asks for help, help them.
If you think you know the right answer, you’re the problem.
When someone wants to try something new, help them.
Whatever the situation, tell the truth, and love everyone.
Image credit — John Fife
When it’s Time to Make a Difference
When it’s time to make meaningful change, there’s no time for consensus.
When the worn path of success must be violated, use a small team.
When it’s time for new thinking, create an unreasonable deadline, and get out of the way.
The best people don’t want the credit, they want to be stretched just short of their breaking point.
When company leadership wants you to build consensus before moving forward, they don’t think the problem is all that important or they don’t trust you.
When it’s time to make unrealistic progress, it’s time for fierce decision making.
When there’s no time for consensus, people’s feelings will be hurt. But there’s no time for that either.
When you’re pissed off because there’s been no progress for three years, do it yourself.
When it’s time to make a difference, permission is not required. Make a difference.
The best people must be given the responsibility to use their judgment.
When it’s time to break the rules, break them.
When the wheels fall off, regardless of the consequences, put them back on.
When you turn no into yes and catch hell for violating protocol, you’re working for the wrong company.
When everyone else has failed, it’s time to use your discretion and do as you see fit.
When you ask the team to make rain and they balk, you didn’t build the right team.
When it’s important and everyone’s afraid of getting it wrong, do it yourself and give them the credit.
The best people crave ridiculous challenges.
When the work must be different, create an environment that demands the team acts differently.
When it’s time for magic, keep the scope tight and the timeline tighter.
When the situation is dire and you use your discretion, to hell with anyone who has a problem with it.
When it’s time to pull a rabbit out of the hat, you get to decide what gets done and your special team member gets to decide how to go about it. Oh, and you also get to set an unreasonable time constraint.
When it’s important, to hell with efficiency. All that matters is effectiveness.
The best people want you to push them to the limit.
When you think you might get fired for making a difference, why the hell would you want to work for a company like that?
When it’s time to disrespect the successful business model, it’s time to create harsh conditions that leave the team no alternative.
The best people want to live where they want to live and do impossible work.
Image credit — Bernard Spragg. Nz
Want to succeed? Learn how to deliver customer value.
Whatever your initiative, start with customer value. Whatever your project, base it on customer value. And whatever your new technology, you guessed it, customer value should be front and center.
Whenever the discussion turns to customer value, expect confusion, disagreement, and, likely, anger. To help things move forward, here’s an operational definition I’ve found helpful:
When they buy it for more than your cost to make it, you have customer value.
And when there’s no way to pull out of the death spiral of disagreement, use this operational definition to avoid (or stop) bad projects:
When no one will buy it, you don’t have customer value and it’s a bad project.
As two words, customer and value don’t seem all that special. But, when you put them together, they become words to live by. But, also, when you do put them together, things get complicated. Here’s why.
To provide customer value, you’ve got to know (and name) the customer. When you asked “Who is the customer?” the wheels fall off. Here are some wrong answers to that tricky question. The Board of Directors is the customer. The shareholders are the customers. The distributor is the customer. The OEM that integrates your product is the customer. And the people that use the product are the customer. Here’s an operational definition that will set you free:
When someone buys it, they are the customer.
When the discussions get sticky, hold onto that definition. Others will try to bait you into thinking differently, but don’t bite. It will be difficult to stand your ground. And if you feel the group is headed in the wrong direction, try to set things right with this operational definition:
When you’ve found the person who opens their wallet, you’ve found the customer.
Now, let’s talk about value. Isn’t value subjective? Yes, it is. And the only opinion that matters is the customer’s. And here’s an operational definition to help you create customer value:
When you solve an important customer problem, they find it valuable.
And there you have it. Putting it all together, here’s the recipe for customer value:
- Understand who will buy it.
- Understand their work and identify their biggest problem.
- Solve their problem and embed it in your offering.
- Sell it for more than it costs you to make it.
Image credit — Caroline
The Most Important People in Your Company
When the fate of your company rests on a single project, who are the three people you’d tap to drag that pivotal project over the finish line? And to sharpen it further, ask yourself “Who do I want to lead the project that will save the company?” You now have a list of the three most important people in your company. Or, if you answered the second question, you now have the name of the most important person in your company.
The most important person in your company is the person that drags the most important projects over the finish line. Full stop.
When the project is on the line, the CEO doesn’t matter; the General Manager doesn’t matter; the Business Leader doesn’t matter. The person that matters most is the Project Manager. And the second and third most important people are the two people that the Project Manager relies on.
Don’t believe that? Well, take a bite of this. If the project fails, the product doesn’t sell. And if the product doesn’t sell, the revenue doesn’t come. And if the revenue doesn’t come, it’s game over. Regardless of how hard the CEO pulls, the product doesn’t launch, the revenue doesn’t come, and the company dies. Regardless of how angry the GM gets, without a product launch, there’s no revenue, and it’s lights out. And regardless of the Business Leader’s cajoling, the project doesn’t cross the finish line unless the Project Manager makes it happen.
The CEO can’t launch the product. The GM can’t launch the product. The Business Leader can’t launch the product. Stop for a minute and let that sink in. Now, go back to those three sentences and read them out loud. No, really, read them out loud. I’ll wait.
When the wheels fall off a project, the CEO can’t put them back on. Only a special Project Manager can do that.
There are tools for project management, there are degrees in project management, and there are certifications for project management. But all that is meaningless because project management is alchemy.
Degrees don’t matter. What matters is that you’ve taken over a poorly run project, turned it on its head, and dragged it across the line. What matters is you’ve run a project that was poorly defined, poorly staffed, and poorly funded and brought it home kicking and screaming. What matters is you’ve landed a project successfully when two of three engines were on fire. (Belly landings count.) What matters is that you vehemently dismiss the continuous improvement community on the grounds there can be no best practice for a project that creates something that’s new to the world. What matters is that you can feel the critical path in your chest. What matters is that you’ve sprinted toward the scariest projects and people followed you. And what matters most is they’ll follow you again.
Project Managers have won the hearts and minds of the project team.
The Project manager knows what the team needs and provides it before the team needs it. And when an unplanned need arises, like it always does, the project manager begs, borrows, and steals to secure what the team needs. And when they can’t get what’s needed, they apologize to the team, re-plan the project, reset the completion date, and deliver the bad news to those that don’t want to hear it.
If the General Manager says the project will be done in three months and the Project Manager thinks otherwise, put your money on the Project Manager.
Project Managers aren’t at the top of the org chart, but we punch above our weight. We’ve earned the trust and respect of most everyone. We aren’t liked by everyone, but we’re trusted by all. And we’re not always understood, but everyone knows our intentions are good. And when we ask for help, people drop what they’re doing and pitch in. In fact, they line up to help. They line up because we’ve gone out of our way to help them over the last decade. And they line up to help because we’ve put it on the table.
Whether it’s IoT, Digital Strategy, Industry 4.0, top-line growth, recurring revenue, new business models, or happier customers, it’s all about the projects. None of this is possible without projects. And the keystone of successful projects? You guessed it. Project Managers.
Image credit – Bernard Spragg .NZ
When It’s Time to Defy Gravity
If you pull hard on your team, what will they do? Will they rebel? Will they push back? Will they disagree? Will they debate? And after all that, will they pull with you? Will the pull for three weeks straight? Will they pull with their whole selves? How do you feel about that?
If you pull hard on your peers, what will they do? Will they engage? Will they even listen? Will they dismiss? And if they dismiss, will you persist? Will you pull harder? And when you pull harder, do they think more of you? And when you pull harder still, do they think even more of you? Do you know what they’ll do? And how do you feel about that?
If you push hard on your leadership, what will they do? Will they ‘lllisten or dismiss? And if they dismiss, will you push harder? When you push like hell, do they like that or do they become uncomfortable, what will you do? Will they dislike it and they become comfortable and thankful you pushed? Whatever they feel, that’s on them. Do you believe that? If not, how do you feel about that?
When you say something heretical, does your team cheer or pelt you with fruit? Do they hang their heads or do they hope you do it again? Whatever they do, they’ve watched your behavior for several years and will influence their actions.
When you openly disagree with the company line, do your peers cringe or ask why you disagree? Do they dismiss your position or do they engage in a discussion? Do they want this from you? Do they expect this from you? Do they hope you’ll disagree when you think it’s time? Whatever they do, will you persist? And how do you feel about that?
When you object to the new strategy, does your leadership listen? Or do they un-invite you to the next strategy session? And if they do, do you show up anyway? Or do they think you’re trying to sharpen the strategy? Do they think you want the best for the company? Do they know you’re objecting because everyone else in the room is afraid to? What they think of your dissent doesn’t matter. What matters is your principled behavior over the last decade.
If there’s a fire, does your team hope you’ll run toward the flames? Or, do they know you will?
If there’s a huge problem that everyone is afraid to talk about, do your peers expect you get right to the heart of it? Or, do they hope you will? Or, do they know you will?
If it’s time to defy gravity, do they know you’re the person to call?
And how do you feel about that?
Image credit – The Western Sky