Frustrated With Staff

dreamstime_7847493The root cause of any frustration tells a story. In a coaching session with Susie and her top managers, she vented her frustration with staff not doing what she needs them to do specifically tracking their billable time. Susie had done the billing for May and written off thousands of dollars of unbillable time! She continued to vent that rather than relying on their inaccurate practice management system, she and one of her staff spend hours manually billing clients each month. In resignation, Susie said wanted staff to, at the very least, look at a client’s budget. Susie also pointed out that the two managers were not recording their billable time.

From a coaching perspective, Susie is being a technician, creating a workaround rather than leading. As a coach, this is the perfect opportunity to help Susie grow as a leader of her company and uncover a root cause that most certainly shows up in all aspects of business. While the managers stared with uncertainty and Susie fumed, I seized the moment to direct their attention. I was curious, so I asked the managers why they were not recording their time, perhaps this would help us to understand others on the staff.

They said the practice management system was too complicated and time-consuming to use, that they were required to record their time also on a Google Doc, so it was duplication. Fair enough but that is not the cause of the problem. Focusing on the problem as it appears and finding a solution at this level never solves a problem, so we had to dig deeper. The practice management system is just a tool but for what purpose?

The frustration level increased, so I knew we had to get off the topic of recording time, so I asked, “Why do we record time?” The answer was to bill clients correctly. We already know it also has to do with the business getting paid for the work they do so I asked, “What does it mean to bill clients correctly?” To charge clients for the work they expect us to do and not do work beyond that (not billable). Understanding why we have a system, the result that it is meant to produce is key to its success. I saw their eyes start to get clearer, but we were not at the cause.

I asked what is the problem they are trying to solve? The staff is providing more hours than the client expects, so it is unbillable. When I asked what the company policy was to guide staff, I heard crickets. Dead silence. They stared at each other. They realized they did not have a policy. They realized they did not have policies at all. So how do staff know what is expected? Well, they just tell them and expect them to know. Root Cause!

A policy was needed, so we started one right then and there. It took some back and forth, room for exceptions, etc. but they came up with this draft policy “To bill the client fairly, for the company to be paid for the work performed by providing the services agreed upon by the customer and staying within the approved budget. Any additional service or hours required must be by agreement by a client in advance of any change in the service and budget.” They were thrilled with their ability to state this so clearly, but I had to ask. So where do staff find the agreement with the client specifying the services and budget? Crickets. They had meant to get written agreements in place, but the budgets are in the practice management system.

The reason staff is not doing what Susie wants is because they do not have a way to do so. There was no policy to direct them or the information to follow. Root Cause – no leadership (policy) and no system (processes to implement the policy).

We created a plan:

  • Write out the draft policy
  • Present policy to staff and what it is meant to accomplish (why it is needed).
  • Listen to their thoughts about implementing the policy
    • What do they need to do their job according to this policy?
    • How will this change what they do or how they do it?
    • What processes are necessary to implement the policy?
    • What resources, information, etc. are needed to perform the process?
  • Assign manager to draft, update and keep current the processes that implement a system of fair billing for the client and the company.
    • Identify where this and all documentation be stored for easy access.
  • Create a plan to train and mentor staff to be successful in implementing this process
  • Create a schedule for the assigned manager to measure the success of the policy and the procedures to implement it.
    • Determined the measurements to track.

By developing this first policy and the processes needed to create a system to implement the policy, this team has learned a new and important role of a leader (policy) and manager (process and staff mentoring). When we are frustrated with employees, it is always useful to step back and assess if they have the policy, processes, systems and tools to do their work. Do they have a clear understanding why it matters? Do you have a way to give them what they need to be successful?

The not so surprising root cause always begins with the leader. If we start there, we can solve a frustration in a sustainable way.

Business Without a Leader

Adobe_ID_164ASP19151002

Routines, responding and being busy never achieves real success.

Business owners can sabotage their success. The sabotage is not deliberate, it happens unconsciously and in subtle yet noticeable ways. As I outline some of the ways we can destroy our businesses, you are going to say; I heard that before. That is what amazes me. We know and yet we don’t change.

When our business started, there was enthusiasm, a clear vision and a plan to get there. Over time we get into a flow that works at first then it does not. We stay in the routine regardless, lose sight of our vision; our enthusiasm wanes and revenues go down.

We start to find blame. The staff is not doing their job. We don’t have enough leads. Expenses are going up. The list goes on, but the real reason is we lost our focus and the WHY behind what we are doing. Our days are spent going through a routine without much thought. We respond to whatever comes our way, opportunity or problem. We are busy, and nothing changes. We have lost our focus, our sense of purpose and our passion. Our aim does not go away. Our attention is simply not on it, so it fades. Businesses and business owners suffer when this happens.

Carol

Carol owns a successful law firm focused on estate planning. She has competent staff and associates though everything seems to be slowing down. Carol admits that she starts her day reading her email and responding to social media posts. Reading and responding to online content takes a lot of her time. So many people run their business by responding to emails and social media posts about their business. Carol cannot describe her strategic plan for her business. They are just busy doing the work for their clients. Carol is unclear how to lead, so she merely responds in the moment. Her responses solve the problem at hand but does not move the business forward.

Sam and Fred

Sam and Fred own a successful IT company. Their staff is competent, and the company is growing, but it is in danger of failing. Sam and Fred are still doing the daily work of the business side by side with their staff. Neither of them has the time to lead the business beyond making decisions as issues come up. They are busy just keeping up with the work. Their business is about to fail because they did not create time to address their capabilities long term and how they will continue to provide the level of service they promise.

Suzanne

Suzanne owns a successful home health agency. Revenues are dropping. She wants to close the business. Years ago Suzanne wanted to quit as well. At that time, Suzanne was providing direct care for their clients, something she no longer wanted to do. Rather than close her business I suggested she stop providing care and become a better manager. She did, and the company flourished again. Over time she has become tired, so she wants to close the company again. I suggested that she develop a manager and move into being the leader, visionary and strategic planner. Suzanne does well with change but cannot always see the change that is needed. The business has needed her leadership for some time and being a visionary leader is something that inspires her.

In these examples, the owners were not leading their companies. Whatever is happening in their business is the result of how they are day to day. They are busy. Every business owner needs time to review their vision and their strategy to move from where they are now toward that vision.

Routines

Their challenge is to get out of their routine, which can also mean being unconsciousness. When we are in a routine, we do not have to think. We are on automatic and lose sight of whether what we are doing is moving us toward our vision of success. Routines tend to limit our focus to an immediate result, which may not support the larger vision of the company.

Leading

Another challenge is learning to do less or none of the work of the business and spending more time leading the business. Leading is so much more than making decisions and responding to what comes up. Being a leader may not be comfortable for some. Stepping into this new or uncomfortable role gives us the opportunity to grow as a leader.

To lead a business requires stepping out of our routine. To stop doing the work of the business to spend time imagining the company we are creating and how to get there. When we take the time to reflect, meditate or imagine the bigger picture or vision, then we can make adjustments to the work in present time. Change breaks up routines that no longer serve the business.

Self Reflection

Notice for yourself. Are you in a routine, responding to what comes up and just being busy? Or do you see clearly the vision of the business you are creating? Are you implementing a specific plan to get there?

Take the time to be clear about your vision. Let go of where you are and determine a strategy for moving closer to your vision. Focusing on our vision will undoubtedly create change. Change might be just what is needed.

Is a Technician Running Your Business?

Everyone by now has heard the words of Michael Gerber, “. .work on your business…” The concept is well established in the world of small business owners but is it understood?

The context of this phrase is based on three personalities Michael recognized in a business owner, the technician, the manager and the entrepreneur. The concept to work on your business was meant to move the owner from being a technician, doing the work of the business, to the mind of an entrepreneur, the visionary.

Over time with the familiarity of the term, its essence has been lost. Business owners who lead as technicians proudly declare that everything they do that is not client facing is, from their perspective, working on the business. They are technicians, working on their business from the standpoint of a technician finding things to do. Technicians are most happy doing something. With this in mind, you can self-assess? Is this how you are most comfortable working on your business?

Entrepreneur

EMyth Revisited, the book that famously explains the concept of working on your business was not referring to a technician’s perspective. The concept relates to the entrepreneur, the visionary. The entrepreneur takes a higher-level view. The entrepreneur wants to see clearly in their mind’s eye, the business they are creating and what it will look like when their vision is achieved. Then they imagine what it will take to get there, seeing how each aspect of the business works to produce consistently reliable results to surprise their clients or customers.

It is not possible to know what to do, do, do without that vision guiding the work. The manager side of the business owner creates systems that produce the results the entrepreneur imagines.

Fred

Working with business owners who have been running their business as a technician with mixed results, has shown why this does not work. Fred is a technician; he knows all about locks. He is the expert. Fred has hired employees who in his mind do not understand about locks the way he does so it is easier for him to do the work himself. Fred has been trying to solve this problem for years. Asking Fred to look at his business from a higher-level perspective, to work on his business, to determine how his locksmith business could change, so that staff competently did the locksmith work, challenged Fred immensely. Fred is so used to just doing the work that stopping to think at a high level was difficult, Fred wanted to change his role in the business, so he worked with me to change his relationship to his business. He realized his attempts to lead his company like a technician was not working. He was hiring the wrong people, did not know how to make them good at doing the work of the business and more.

Change How You Relate to Your Business

So often the work on the business begins and ends from a technician perspective with random and inconsistent results. To work on your business requires the point of view of the entrepreneur. Fully knowing and understanding the vision and how the business can be developed to build that vision.

It is not easy to stop doing, doing and doing more especially when acting in this way is comfortable and familiar. To create real change in your business means to cease to be a technician leader and become familiar with the entrepreneur as a leader of the company.