By Kevin Meyer
One of the issues that I've been dealing with which created my recent interest in unnecessary complexity is the boatload of projects being juggled by our various value streams. While trying to get a handle on the situation we learned that resources were being spent on projects with very little return - for a variety of reasons that I won't go into here.
Coincidentally I received the latest HPM Consortium newsletter which had an article by Dan Jones, chairman of the Lean Enterprise Academy, titled The Waste of Management. Go figure.
Visiting many head offices I am struck by the armies of bright young people rushing from meeting to meeting making PowerPoint presentations to each other and by the time and effort senior managers spend in long meetings reviewing their plans and gaming many not very clearly defined objectives. These bright young things also effectively insulate top management from what is really going on in the organization.
The fraction of management time that actually results in improvements in the way these organizations create value must be pretty small, dwarfed by the amount of time they spend fighting fires. But, as on the shop floor, they are all good well-intentioned people trapped in broken and dysfunctional management processes that drive them to do the wrong things.
All this leads me to conclude that the most damaging form of waste is not on the shop floor but the waste of management.
He's probably right. The more you juggle, the more that falls, the more firefighting. Firefighting is a waste and usually the result of a poor process, or an ineffective root cause and action on previous problems. What you need is some clear focus on the key priorities... which is the vision he presents.
Just imagine that instead of pursuing several hundred projects your organization was able to focus everyone’s’ efforts on the vital three to five strategic objectives that would make the biggest difference to its performance and that keep the top team awake at night.
Imagine that the top team had identified the size of the performance gaps that need to be closed to meet these objectives.
Imagine that they had all walked the processes or value streams responsible for these gaps to begin to see the root causes and the opportunities for eliminating wasted time and effort, particularly between departments.
Imagine that everyone used the same evidence-based, scientific method to create their own A3 plans and an overall A3 plan of action to improve each value stream to close each performance gap.
It is not hard to imagine the acceleration in performance that would result from this much more effective use of management time.
That's a lot of imagination, and I actually removed most of his imaginings. Sounds pretty powerful, doesn't it? Especially after a glass or two of some fine wine. But... it doesn't necessarily eliminate the "several hundred projects." Projects are different than strategic objectives. Prioritizing the top four or five projects does add focus, and most likely you can remove a bunch of projects by analyzing their value add potential, but most projects won't go away.
What is needed is a clear realization, and rationalization, of what can be successfully accomplished with the resources available. That's where the rubber meets the road - when someone has the guts to say "no" to a project that is probably important to someone else but where the organization is kidding themselves that it can be added to the existing project pile and still be accomplished on time. Most importantly, projects need to align with core strategic objectives.
So perhaps I need to warp Dan Jones' dreamland into something a bit more real:
Imagine that the organization has developed a set of core strategic objectives to drive a long-term improvement in customer value.
Imagine that the organization has reviewed all projects and reduced them to the set that directly supports the core strategic objectives.
Imagine that those remaining projects are prioritized, given adequate resources, and have defined milestones and criteria for success.
Imagine that the progress of those projects is reviewed at a daily accountability meeting, and immediate action is taken to address gaps.
Now that would be a powerful lean organization.