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Insights
on Excellence | "Insights
on Excellence" Archive
In business, successful communications
are planned
ABOUT
THE AUTHOR
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Stephen
Hawley Martin is
a former principal of The Martin Agency
in Richmond and the author of more than
half a dozen books including his newest,
Lean Enterprise Leader: How to Get Things
Done Without Doing It All Yourself.
He is editor and
publisher of The
Oaklea Press, a book publishing business
dedicated primarily to helping business
executives increase productivity.
He can be reached at shmartin@oakleapress.com
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by Stephen
Hawley Martin
for Virginia Business
June 28, 2006
It's amazing how many otherwise intelligent business
men and women leave communications to chance. It seems
they sometimes forget communication is a two-way street.
In a successful organization, communication is not a
random event. It's a planned process, just like any other
business function.
More and more organizations are organized into interlocking
teams, the primary team includes the top executive and
the heads of each functional area of the business. Everyone
in the business should be on a team, and all teams should
link back to the one at the top. In this setup, everyone
will have a home team, and many will have a team they
chair. For example, the head of each functional area
will chair a team made up of his reports, and they in
turn will chair teams made up of individuals they lead.
For information to cascade in an organized way throughout
the organization requires a thorough communications strategy.
Here are some key elements to incorporate in order to
focus meetings on action -- rather than endless discussion
-- enable participation and provide a consistent flow
of information that will keep everyone informed.
Minimum
frequency. Since the primary
two-way communication vehicle is the home-team meeting,
the primary team establishes
the minimum frequency standard, based on business cycles
and needs. In most companies minimum frequency is once
a week, but some teams may meet briefly every day, and
sometimes twice a day, such as at the beginning and again
at the end of a shift.
Purpose
and outcomes. Define in advance
the business purpose and outcomes you desire from your
meetings. Specifying
the purpose and outcomes of meetings enables focused
preparation and clarity around topics and defines the
level of urgency for activities that result from the
meeting.
Agenda. Plan every meeting around
an agenda, which not only lists the topics to be discussed,
but also the
time frames in which to discuss them and the person who
will lead the discussion/presentation. A structured agenda
reinforces the business focus and sense of urgency for
communication and action relative to the business topics.
Processes
for effectiveness. Determine
how the communication should occur. What information
needs to be passed up/down
to all home teams and by when? What information needs
to be brought into the meeting from other home teams?
The agenda must include a status update of outstanding
actions from the previous meeting as well as a verification
of new actions that arise during the meeting so there
is complete clarity about who is doing what and when.
Roles and
responsibilities. Meetings
need a leader, a recorder and a time keeper. These roles
must be identified
and filled before the meeting so that individuals come
prepared to fulfill them. Filling these roles makes sure
that someone is ready to facilitate the agenda, document
actions, capture pass-up/pass-down information and document
decision and key discussion points.
For routine, standard meetings a rotation plan for filling
these roles among participants ensures that meetings
are governed by process and are not dependent on personality.
Behavioral
parameters. These are the
ground rules for that define acceptable and unacceptable
behavior
in meetings. Some examples: no interruptions, be on time,
respect one another, stay on the topic, everyone participates
and cell phones off.
Audit process. The audit process
applies a continuous-improvement mindset to the communication
strategy. A simple audit
is to ask, at the end of each meeting, "What went
well during this meeting?" and "What needs
to be done to improve the next meeting?"
Always keep in mind that communication
only occurs face-to-face. Any other "communication" is
advertising, which reinforces and supplements the face-to-face
process,
but should never be expected to replace it.
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Stephen Hawley Martin is a former principal of The Martin Agency in Richmond
and the author of more than half a dozen books including his newest, Lean Enterprise
Leader: How to Get Things Done Without Doing It All Yourself. He is editor and
publisher of The Oaklea Press, a book publishing business dedicated primarily
to helping business executives increase productivity.
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