In office work the queue doesn’t snake out the door. Its piles up emotionally in the form of the ever-expanding Inbox, and the increasing rates of friendly-but-scary “where’s my thing?” It feels like there’s no way out….but it turns out just a spoonful of capacity goes a long way.
You don’t want to waste your money and your people’s time by not working on the highest leverage point of the system. Here’s how to make sure you get this right.
If a process must go through A, B and C to get to the customer and the number in each box represents how many they can do per period, then the system can’t go any faster than B. And rather than using the term ‘constraint’ or ‘bottleneck’, I use ‘Pacesetter’ because it’s, well, nicer.
And conveniently B is the first letter of ‘Barista’, which will always be the Pacesetter in a café. Therefore, Don’t Bother the Barista!
All of this comes from Eli Goldratt in his book The Goal, where he even lays out five steps for improvement, the first of which is of course (in my words)
If you’ve been with me for a while, chances are I’ve run through this with you. The purpose of this is to put it all in the one spot.
This is about understanding the focussing point required to get any system (any system) to work better. And by ‘better’, I mean better for customers, better for those working in it, and better for the bank balance and purpose of the organisation too.
You can increase the throughput of your show hugely with one simple change.
For real life.
But don’t take my word for it, let’s turn to one of the total gurus – Eli Goldratt.
As part of the brilliant Goldratt Satellite Program, which you can still buy and watch the legend himself (I’m not associated with it BTW), he tells the story about the maintenance area of the Israeli Air Force.
Less cost, happier customers, happier staff, happier you.
There’s something hidden in plain sight which is inhibiting these from happening – John Seddon’s Failure Demand.
It’s not a new concept, but John’s naming of, and describing of the concept is brilliant, which leads to understanding and action. His book Freedom from Command and Control is a must-read for anyone involved in service centres, along with the more recent Beyond Command and Control.
It’s very standard to set some targets when performance is in need. Often smoke-screened by calling them KPIs (forgetting what the ‘I’ stands for). Maybe even ‘aggressive targets’.
Yet…they don’t always get the hoped-for result, for a simple reason – targets aren’t how things work in the real world!
The Conventional Way
Here’s how we’d typically do it. Take this graph, with Performance on the vertical and Time on the horizontal, with the horizontatal dotted target line. And let’s assume higher is better.
If you’d like to watch me go through this on video, just click here. 6 mins with captions.
Senior Management is not just more management. It’s a new kettle of fish. I’ll go through:
The change in the nature of the work
What the job actually is
Action To Take
Senior Management
First – what are we talking about here? The key thing is manager of managers. Or, managers of multiple teams, who each have their own leadership. These roles can be called various things, some of the ones from my clients are:
Posted by Adam Thompson on the 08th September 2020
If you’d prefer to watch on video than read, click here!
A state of overload and chaos has become sadly normal in organisations. Here’s the thing – it comes from a very natural condition – an obsession with utilisation. I’ll explain…
These ideas originated from one of the all-time gurus – Eli Goldratt.
Way Basic Work System
To demonstrate, I’ll draw my favourite diagram that my long-time clients will recognise (with one change):
In the first two articles in this series, I went through the first two of the Three Cs that need to be in place so you can get out of the detail and start doing your real job. The three Cs are:
(Click the links above to go the articles or click here to watch them all on video).
This article is about Capacity, which answers “How can I create more time for myself and my people which means I can do the important work that I’m actually paid for”.