Author: Paul Henriques in: Management
It was never a black and white world but it sure felt like it. Things were clear. Decisions were obvious. Slowly, however, business decisions are a progressive shade of gray with an increase in complexity and traffic. Between a glut of data that needs to be sifted through and a world in a state of flux, the decisions you make as a business leader are as important as ever while making those decisions has never been this complex. You spent a lot of time making decisions that are for the betterment of your company. Making those decisions often means reviewing reports, consulting with stakeholders, and attending meetings. With all the time spent on the process, making the right decision sooner is quickly becoming a financial problem that needs to be address.
There are three ways to decrease the time spent on decisions while improving the positive results from any decision you make:
Getting feedback from all interested parties in a collaborative setting is often a great step in the decision-making process. Even though the meeting has at times received a bad reputation from those that feel they are not productive or instructive, the truth is that a well-run meeting can be an excellent tool for any company.
But for meetings to be a benefit to a decision, sometimes your company culture has to evolve to allow for productive meetings to happen. A meeting should be a relatively safe space for ideas and disagreements where your leaders aren’t rewarded for what they do during the meeting but what results they can bring to what was discussed. An example of actions and behaviours to avoid in meetings include:
If you find that your meetings often suffer from one or more of these issues, you may have an issue with the corporate culture around meetings and accountability. Some of the tools that you can use to improve your meetings include:
Not all tools will work for all meetings. For example, a pricing decision meeting will require different tools that a meeting to decide on international expansion. However, keeping certain habits from the more common meetings will help improve decision making on the more important but more infrequent meetings.
When it comes to meetings, your goal should be to look at all the assumed ideas and biases, along with alternative actions, that help improve your information in a way that shows you the flaws in your original decision. To do this, you must promote a safe space for disagreements and doubts. Productive debate can help your teams build trust in one another by allowing discussions to take place regardless of the hierarchy.
Not all decisions have to be made at the top. Learning to delegate and build a delegation-friendly culture that consists of mentoring and monitoring can have great benefits to your decision-making by placing the power to choose at the hands of those that will be most affected. The added benefit here is that those most directly responsible are often the people that know the most about the subject matter, meaning that their idea on those small day-to-day decisions will likely carry more weight and be the best one at the time.
Creating this culture means that your senior leadership has to learn to let go and engage in constructive dialogues with their subordinates. The goal is to encourage their mentees to look for help and to make mistakes. With proper monitoring, the guiding hand of the mentor can be better felt and not seen, so as to ensure the self-confidence of the new decision-makers grows. As time progresses, the senior leaders can have an ever-decreasing input on these regular actions. To improve the delegated decisions, you can start by empowering your staff with:
One of the benefits to the glut of data from all the IT systems being put in place at the modern manufactory is that it exists. However, to use it you need to know how to use it. When it comes to data in a manufacturing shop, your best option on tools to make sense of the information available to you is a Manufacturing ERP, or MERP. A top-of-the-line MERP takes the muddled puzzle of data that you are currently collecting and provides it to you in an easy to read and easy to understand format when you need it. Your data is presented in multiple ways, such as:
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