Predictable Success: Getting Your Organization Back On the Growth Track - and Keeping it There

Les McKeown's Predictable Success® Blog

hr
Is your business model efficiently ineffective? < Blog Main Page > The Leadership Flaws of Don Rumsfeld
hr
Predictable Success: Getting Your Organization On the Growth Track - and Keeping It There
Get the Wall Street Journal & USA Today Bestseller'Predictable Success: Getting Your Organization
On the Growth Track - and Keeping It There'

Get Updates By Email Tell A Friend Follow using RSS Follow using RSS Tweet this

Most Popular

hr

Archives

hr

Is Your Organization in Precovery?

Those of the organizations that I work with which are ahead of the economic curve - those that you might say are in 'precovery' - share a number of common characteristics. Although each organization uses different vocabulary, these are the top five:

1. They have a source of trusted metrics that provides the information they need on how their organization, their industry, and the economy in general is performing (rolling 12 months) and likely to perform over the short term (3 to 6 months).

2. They accept the data for what it is. Rather than second-guessing, massaging, re-interpreting, filtering, disguising, best-case-ing, optimizing, projecting, top-slicing, averaging or blurring the numbers, organizations in precovery accept that the data is what the data is. Period.

3. They understand and respond to the changes in the trading landscape. Most organizations have seen two or three radical, material changes in their trading landscape in the past 18 months in either the demand or supply side of their business - sometimes in both. Whether it's the need for new pricing strategies, distribution methods, sourcing techniques or workforce configuration, organizations in precovery have identified them and responded accordingly.

4. They plan in a range, not on a line - in other words, their forecasts are not a single line of numbers, but a range of likely outcomes over the medium-term.

5. They are learning, instilling and rewarding predictive agility. A much repeated (if sloppy) analogy is that while management is like playing checkers, leadership is like playing chess. Any truth in that old canard has being sunk in the last 18 months: you no longer get to play a chess move then stop the clock while waiting for your competitor's response.

Leadership now requires the ability to predict events and make changes accordingly in real time. For those organizations in precovery, leadership is more like gaming (think World of Warcraft or Eve Online), with multiple options being played out simultaneously and in real time.

Your bottom line:
If you haven't changed how you source, analyze and project metrics; how you generate demand and fulfill supply; and how you define and teach leadership, you're probably not yet in precovery.

Enjoy this? Use the links below to bookmark and share with others:
del.icio.us Favicon Digg Favicon Facebook Favicon Google Favicon LinkedIn Favicon Reddit Favicon Squidoo Favicon StumbleUpon Favicon TwitThis Favicon

Leave a comment

*Your email address will not be published or used in any way.


hr
hr

Predictable Success isn't a textbook - it's a sensible and strategic playbook for any leader seeking to take their organization to the next level, and provides the conceptual framework to ensure a successful outcome.

David A. Brandon, Chairman and CEO, Domino's Pizza

This is real-world expertise, with simple but subtle and sophisticated prescriptions for all of us involved in getting things done with other people. Predictable Success should be required reading for every management team.

David Allen, International Best-Selling Author, Getting Things Done and Making It All Work