Executive Coach Asks Leaders… “Should You Go Undercover?”

5 Reasons Why Going Undercover Could Save Your Business!

Executive Coach Asks You To Go Undercover

After watching the premier of CBS’ Undercover Boss last night after the Super Bowl,  we’re left here at Pathos Leadership Group wondering why more leaders don’t go “undercover” to identify first-hand what problems really are being faced day-in and day-out in their organizations.  In case you missed it, the Undercover Boss premise features a senior executive at a major corporation, who for one week works incognito in his/her own company as a newly-hired entry-level worker, to find out how the company really works (including the impact of “corporate policy”) and identify some of the unsung heroes among the workers.

Here are five reasons why if you are a leader you should schedule an undercover session ASAP:

  1. Find Efficiencies – We’d all like to think that our operations are running optimally.  Unfortunately, even though all the reports in the world say that we are, there’s still room for improvement.  For example, one business owner that we worked with had a fleet of delivery trucks.  While he believed that the delivery drivers were extremely honest, and the GPS systems he installed verified that they were working hard, until he actually went on ride-n-drives with them did he discover there was a lot more upside to the efficiency story than he had been reading about and being told.
  2. Production Bottlenecks – By working on the assembly line, production line, sales call routine, paperwork shuffle, etc. you’ll see first-hand where production is bottlenecking.  Most importantly, you can assess exactly what is causing the bottleneck.  Is it that your associates don’t have the right skills, tools, numbers, etc.?
  3. Human Capital Deployment – The adage “people are our most important asset” seems to be overstated yet underrated in the workplace.  With organizations attempting to do more with less and less, the opportunity exists to put together a business scenario for increasing new hires when the payoff is greater than associated expenses.  In other words, careful analysis can reveal if you’re running the operation too lean for your own bottom-line good!
  4. Strategic Policies & Procedures – The “Ivory Tower” is a long way away from where the action happens sometimes, and perhaps the best way to see what the ramifications of your decisions are is to talk to the people they are intended for.   An even better best practice would be to actively involve those that the decisions will ultimately effect in the actual decision making process.
  5. Avoid the “YES Man” Syndrome – As an Executive Coach working with leaders, I am often complemented that I ask the questions that the executive’s leadership team doesn’t!  While I’d love to admit that I have greater subject matter expertise all the time which I can tap to provide insight from, more times than not I ask the questions that the leadership team is scared to ask.  The New Orleanian saying “If you’re scared, just say you’re scared!” still doesn’t allow organization’s associates, regardless of level, to ask the scary questions.  I’ve come to realize that this has more to with job security than anything else (Yes, retribution and retaliation are alive and well in the minds of those that should ask these difficult questions!)

Management By Walking Around (MBWA) was a leadership fad that unfortunately seems to have come and gone.  By discovering the five undercover strategies listed above, leaders should rediscover the positive gains to be had!  What’s stopping you from going undercover?

Sam Palazzolo CPLP, PCC is President and Chief Influence Officer at Pathos Leadership Group. Since 2005, Sam and the team at Pathos have been helping leaders and their organizations get the influential edge, so that when they compete… They win! If you’re a leader and you’d like to see how you rank on the “Influential Leader” scale, complete the partial Influential Leader Inventory at http://www.pathosleadershipgroup.com/assessments/ILI/ today! For more information on Sam or Pathos, contact us at 877.455.3133 or email info@pathosleadershipgroup.com.

Job Satisfaction Hits New Low!

Seven Strategies to Improve Employee Job Satisfaction

Pathos Job Satisfaction

Americans workers, regardless of age or income, continue to grow increasingly unhappy in the workplace.  This is a long-term trend which should concern employers on the topics of productivity, employee engagement level, and the potential of retaining high performers when the economy ultimately rebounds.

It’s safe to say that most everyone today knows someone who complains about their job (or those who recently lost their jobs). Who hasn’t heard the wines from the coffee-clutch group, the fantasy football players, or the customer service agent who is anything but customer focused?

Why all the lack of satisfaction in the workplace? The answer might surprise you… Fewer Americans are satisfied with just about every aspect of their employment than at any time in the past two decades.

Worse yet, there appears to be no pattern or structure to the decline, as there is no age or income group trends with this drop in job satisfaction.

A survey of 5,000 U.S. households conducted for The Conference Board found that only 45.3 percent

of Americans today have job satisfaction, down from 61.1 percent in 1987. Only 12 percent say they are “very satisfied” among the 45.3 percent who say they are “content.”

Money Can’t Buy You Love!

The Beatles sang:

“Cause I don’t care too much for money, money can’t buy me love”…

Well, it appears as though the American worker is singing:

Cause I don’t care too much for money, money can’t buy my love!”

While the study reveals that those who earn more income are correspondingly more satisfied with their jobs, the trend data suggests otherwise.  In comparison with data from 1987, those who are most satisfied (i.e., those who earn more income) have become increasingly less satisfied with their jobs.  They’ve experienced a decrease of 20% versus those 1987 figures.

How About the Utes?

In the movie “My Cousin Vinny”, Joe Pesce (Vinny) and Fred Gwynne (the Judge) have a classic exchange as follows:

Vinny: Is it possible, the two utes…

Judge: Eh, the two what? Uh, uh, what was that word?

Vinny: Uh, what word?

Judge: Two what?

Vinny: What?

Judge: Uh, did you say ‘Utes’?

Vinny: Yeah, two utes.

Judge: What is a ute?

Vinny: Oh, excuse me, your honor. Two YOUTHS.

So perhaps job satisfaction lies in the four generation workforce, specifically at the ute, or make that youth level?  Unfortunately, the study shows that this is not the case either, in fact, it reflects that those entering the workforce are amongst the most dissatisfied.  Nearly 36% of the youths weigh in that they are dissatisfied!

What a Long, Strange Trip It’s Been

So as you analyze the generation at the other end of the spectrum, the oldest generation, would they appear to be the most content/satisfied?  After all, they have the prospect of experiencing “the light at the end of the employment tunnel” approaching?  Unfortunately, they also are amongst the least content when compared to their equivalent peers in 1987.  When this comparison is made, a staggering 30% drop is experienced in the data!

Now What?

So what to do if you’re an employer looking to stave off the lack of job satisfaction?  Here are seven options to implement to eliminate job dissatisfaction:

  1. Recruiting – Review your hiring programs to ensure that you are establishing the proper hire/no hire criteria.
  2. Assess – Utilize assessments to identify organizational strengths and weaknesses.  Develop action plans based on them
  3. Training & Development – Stop Training & Development that does not support the company vision or deliver on its success metrics.
  4. Compensation Review – While we saw in the study that compensation has little correlation to job satisfaction, compensation should be reviewed to ensure that people are paid based on what they have direct control over.  Furthermore, compensation plans should be simple for the average worker to calculate/keep tabs on during the time period.
  5. Coaching – Consider the opportunity to work with an external executive coach for the leadership team, and a business coach for your associates (Group coaching can work effectively in small/large organizations).
  6. Employee Reviews – Perform employee reviews that establish individual development plans, and then bring in executive coaches to ensure that they are executed.
  7. Fire – As a last resort, you may have the wrong people in the wrong jobs.  Furthermore, regardless of how many moves you’d attempt to make, you still wouldn’t be able to place them in positions where success is achieved.  When you exhaust all of your opportunities, it’s time to allow them to go and be successful somewhere else.

Summary

If you’d like more information on Pathos Leadership Group and how our Executive Coaching and Organization Development can serve you and your organization, email info@pathosleadershipgroup.com or contact us at 877.455.3133.

Independent Contractor vs. Employee: Top 12 Reasons Why You Should Choose Pathos!

Why should you and your organization work with Pathos Leadership Group on a contract basis versus hiring a full-time employee?

Here are the “Top 12” reasons why:

  1. Reduced Overhead: We’ve been able to save our clients hundreds of thousands of dollars in the following types of overhead: Expenses, Payroll, Benefits, and Other overhead.   
  2. No Health Benefits:  You could call this one of the largest benefits of working with us!  The average total cost of health benefits for U.S. employees was $8,317 in 2008, according to the Mercer 2008 National Survey of Employer Sponsored Health Plans.
  3. Work on Demand: You hire us when you need us.  When you determine this, we begin the process to provide you with A+ training and coaching.  You will also receive detailed reporting of what we did with whom in your organization so that we can determine if we’re meeting your expectations through our predetermined measurements/metrics.  Why hire a staff that don’t know what they are training on and don’t know what it does for your business afterwards (Return on Investment – ROI).  Worse yet, you don’t know what they are doing when they are not performing training sessions for your organization! You’ll have the ability to take added opportunities as they arise, and during slow periods, have greater cost control. Your contract workforce often comes fully trained and highly specialized.
  4. Strategic Partner: Whether it’s Training & Development, Coaching, Motivational Presentations at Company Functions… we only know that our success comes from your success.  We’re looking for long-term strategic partnerships that will last for years to come.  You are a direct reflection of us and our work, so we are highly selective with whom we chose to do business with. 
  5. Perspective: One of our clients said that working with us provided them with the best practices from current trends in business.  The variety of our experience shines through our perspective sharing.  Instead of receiving the same experience over and over again from your employees who might not be stretching to provide you with your best solutions, our fresh set of eyes often reveal insights not received prior to!
  6. Process Oriented:  Our backgrounds are in Process Change Consulting.  As such, we look to identify “opportunities” or “problems” in your operation, both at our assigned location as well as upstream/downstream from there.  You will save money, gain efficiencies and more while working with us.
  7. Cooperative/Consultative Nature: We look to strategically partner with our clients for the long-term.  We do so in a cooperative/consultative nature.  In other words, we both win when we work together.
  8. Fixed Rates:  We “lock in” our rates at the start of our working relationship.  Regardless of inflation, cost of living adjustments, costs of doing business (air/hotel/transportation/etc.) over the years you are guaranteed to pay the same rate in the future that you pay today.
  9. Insured:  We’re a legitimate business that is fully insured to protect us, as well as you in the event of the unforeseen.
  10. Certified:  Each of our Trainers and Coaches has achieved excellence and has been recognized by professional associations by their highest certifications (American Society of Training and Development – ASTD / International Coach Federation – ICF).
  11. Proven:  You can take our word for the results that we drive through our coaching and training.  However, our testimonials speak for themselves!
  12. The IRS:  We abide by all IRS rules and regulations when it comes to contracts and our independent contract status.

If these “Top 12” reasons why working with us makes sense to you, as it did for the clients we currently serve, why not “Test Drive” us?  Send us an email at info@pathosleadershipgroup.com to schedule an appointment to discover how Pathos Leadership Group can serve you and your organization with the Influential Edge!

Executive Coach: Should You Fire Your Training Department?

Should You Fire Your Training Department?

6 Criteria to Evaluate the Effectiveness of Your Learning Department

 

Nothing contributes more to your organization’s profits or losses than your employees.  Having the right employee in the right position at the right time executing the right processes is a recipe for success.  However, few managers are fortunate to have this recipe, consistently, in their organizations, so they rely upon the learning department to train employees for success.  Unfortunately, the guidance these employees receive from the learning department often causes them to fail because the training doesn’t provide tangible or measurable results. 

The American Society of Training and Development’s “Certified Professional in Learning and Performance” (CPLP) recommends taking a proactive stance when it comes to developing, delivering and following up on training. And this proactive stance should be taken by learning departments, where organizational training needs are anticipated and identified, then delivered accordingly.  If you question your learning department’s training contribution to your profit picture, use the following six proactive criteria to evaluate their effectiveness.

1. Strategic –Training initiatives should be developed with the organization’s strategies and objectives in mind.  Too often, training departments prepare and present material that is a “current” or “hot” topic instead of what is imperative to achieving the organization’s business goals.  Your learning professionals should take an active role to assist leadership by showing the positive impact training will have on the organization as a whole. Training will continually improve the organization’s ability to compete in its market and it’s the most effective means of leveraging the organization’s knowledge and talent.  A shift in learning department employees from “trainers” to “consultants” or “trusted advisors” is needed.

2. Professionalism – The training professionals of the future will be able to perform with a high level of preparation and personalization.  Customization is king when it comes to preparing training for the organizational audience.  “Canned” training – presentations pulled off of the shelf or those not updated for the current organizational goals – will not suffice in the current “change in a minute” or “around every corner” business climate of the modern workplace.  With this in mind, personalization and customization will set your learning department’s training apart and deliver higher value to your organization.

3. Implementation/Sustained Process – Training is just presentation for the sake of presenting if the material is never implemented.  Worse yet, if training is implemented with a “when times are good” mentality or without a schedule, it will never be sustained. When times become “not good,” the natural tendency will be to revert back to the original process of how things were done in the past.  The goal of training is to be able to execute in good times as well as tough times.  Therefore, establish continuous training goals for the greater good of the organization, regardless of economic swings.  Implementation works best when the top of the organization supports the learning department’s continuous training, and support from the top substantially increases the likelihood that the process will be sustained.  Training objectives should be measured periodically to ensure satisfactory progress or regress.  If progress slows, identifying modifications in the original process will provide further areas of improvement.

4. Responsibility – The “R” word – responsibility is rarely considered in learning departments when it comes to training efforts. Instead, learning departments often cast blame on less-than- successful training initiatives in the other departments within the organization.  Inevitably, the other departments similarly shed this blame by identifying one another as the reason success wasn’t achieved.  Regardless of who’s to blame, if the organization’s results were less-than anticipated, the training department must take responsibility for the initiatives they present.  A key part of this responsibility is properly developing effective and accurate metrics and measurement tools to track and report the value to the organization.  Once value has been presented, the responsibility is still upon the learning department’s shoulders to execute accordingly.

5. Learning – Learning isn’t a one-time event!  Instead, consider it a process in need of continuous improvement.  Instilling this learning process in every part of the organization is key to longevity and success.  No two departments learn the same way, and no two leaders will request the same methods.  The training team must work in sync with the leadership team to ensure the proper learning methodologies are identified and delivered for maximum return.

6. Proactive – Obviously it pays to be as proactive as possible, but even more, it’s a competitive advantage!  Learning departments must work hand-in-hand with organization leadership so they know exactly where their training destinations should be.  Again, the more proactive learning departments can be when assessing and identifying what training will have the greatest economic value for the organization, the better.  In order to do so, leaders within the learning department must take a proactive stance when it comes to the development and delivering of the training.  Training does not end when the sessions conclude either.  Learning departments should review the training goals, which were established at the outset, and measure whether or not they are being met.  If they are, consider it “Mission Accomplished” and if they are not, learning departments should analyze where specifically the training fell short of accomplishing the desired goals.  Then a new training message should be delivered and implemented.  Thereafter, and periodically after installation, the learning department should continue to measure and compare for desired results.

Properly anticipating the best training methodologies and delivering them in sync with the organization’s goals is paramount for success.  This success can be measured by how well your training department performs the six steps identified above.