Sunday, August 27, 2017

Book Summary | The Checklist Manifesto by Atul Gawande

Book Title: The Checklist Manifesto : How to get things right 
Author: Atul Gawande 



Today we live in a complex world with many systems and process interacting with each other. We knowingly or unknowingly use checklist as an integral part of our daily activities, from birth at hospital to graveyard. Check list is one of the widely used and basic Quality Control Tool. The author has shared examples of application of checklists in wide industry from airline, construction, investments, hospitality, hotels and into health care. This book will not help anyone to develop a checklist, but provides great insights on checklist and disciplined process for following will help to achieve or gets things right. 

Today we use checklist for many activities, just to ensure that we have completed the activity. Fifteen years ago, Israeli scientists published a report about patient care in ICU. It was observed that in a day, on an average 178 individual actions are required ranging from administering a drug to suctioning the lung. Every activity posed risks. On an average 2 errors per patient per day was recorded. With many diseases can health care accept 2 errors per day ?  Can this be reduced? Can checklist become useful …?

Before the world war II, Boeing developed a plane that could carry five times as many bombs as the army requested. It could fly faster than previous bomber using four engines.  During the trial it crashed. The crash of the airplane made Boeing into bankruptcy. An investigation revealed that nothing mechanical had gone wrong. The crash had been due to pilot error due to pilot has to attend to the four engines, each with its own oil fuel mix, the retractable landing gear, the wing flaps, electric trim tabs and regulated hydraulic controls. It was too much airplane for one man to fly. 
The US army purchased few Boeing and tried to  overcome this, they came up with an ingeniously simple approach; they created a pilot’s checklist. Using a checklist for take-off to safe landing. With checklist in hand the pilots went to fly the model 299 without any accident. Because flying the behemoth, the army gained decisive air advantage in the world war, enabling its devastating bombing camping across Germany. Checklist seem to provide protection against such failures. They remind us of the minimum necessary steps and make them explicit.

In 2001, critical care specialist Peter Pronovost decided to give a doctors checklist in Johns Hopkins Hospital.  Following the checklist resulted in line infection rate to zero from eleven percent within ten days.

There are good checklists and bad Checklists.

Bad checklists are vague and imprecise. They are too long; they are hard to use; they are impractical. They are made by desk jockeys with no awareness of the situations in which they are to be deployed. They treat the people using the tools as dumb and try to spell out every single step. They turn people’s brains off rather than turn them on.

Good checklists, on the other hand are precise. They are efficient, to the point, and easy to use even in the most difficult situations. They do not try to spell out everything--a checklist cannot fly a plane. Instead, they provide reminders of only the most critical and important steps--the ones that even the highly skilled professional using them could miss. Good checklists are, above all, practical.” 

You must decide whether you want a DO-CONFIRM checklist or a READ-DO checklist. With a DO-CONFIRM checklist, he said, team members perform their jobs from memory and experience, often separately. But then they stop. They pause to run the checklist and confirm that everything that was supposed to be done was done. With a READ-DO checklist, on the other hand, people carry out the tasks as they check them off—it’s more like a recipe. So for any new checklist created from scratch, you have to pick the type that makes the most sense for the situation.” 

The best example of application of checklist is crash landing of the airplane in the icy Hudson riven 2009. They followed the protocols for such situations.


Ticking the boxes is not the ultimate goal of the checklist. Embracing a culture of team work and discipline is. What is needed, however, isn't just that people working together be nice to each other. It is discipline. Discipline is hard--harder than trustworthiness and skill and perhaps even than selflessness. We are by nature flawed and inconstant creatures. We can't even keep from snacking between meals. We are not built for discipline. We are built for novelty and excitement, not for careful attention to detail. Discipline is something we have to work at.

Sunday, August 13, 2017

Book Summary | The VUCA Company - Suhayl Abidi, Manoj Joshi


Book Title: The VUCA Company
Authors : Suhayl Abidi, Manoj Joshi
Publication: Jaico


Don't read success stories, you will get only message. Read failures stories, you will get some ideas for success - A P J Abdul Kalam.

Aristotle famously said, that the gods first send 40 years of prosperity to whoever they intended to destroy. It is well proven from the history of men that success leads to complacency which leads to decline. That is why one must be most alert and watchful at the peak of success. The successful organizations sows its own seeds of destruction. The VUCA ( Volatility, Uncertainty, Complex and Ambiguity) are the jargon's that is widely used in the Management when business is in stress due to many factors.  The authors of this book have considered Indian companies which experienced failures post liberalization due to VUCA. The best part of the book, is the author has provided key insight on how companies can learn from these organizations failures to over come complacency. 

Although the word VUCA was defined by the Americans during the war and much conceptualized by the management professionals, The author has used Indian companies which underwent downside in the business and analyzed why these companies need to face turbulent times as well as closeout. Today the average life of S&P index companies has drastically reduced over the years.  Leaders  must be absolutely clear that the reasons that helped to succeed in the past will not guaranty the future success as the business context has changed.  In a vuca world, the faster the world changes, the more firmly the organization should be anchored to its vision. 

#Resilience and agility cannot be taught but can be learnt. Behavioral changes, rather than just acquiring new companies and skills must be emphasized. 

# Failure ! The fear of failure is a world wide phenomenon, experiencing it is inevitable and running away from it is only human. It is said that if you want to learn about success, talk to a successful person, but if you want to learn about failures, talk to a very successful person.

# Leadership involves the readiness to make decisions, the courage to take risks the willingness to collaborate and to support others to support creativity and the ability to speak ones mind. 

# In the VUCA world, resilience and adaptability are the two attributes that distinguish leaders from mere mangers. 

# When you stop learning, we stop developing and we stop growing. Thats the end of a leader.

# If you do only what you know and do it very, very well, chances are that you wont fail. You'll just stagnate and thats failure by erosion. 

# Ignorance and arrogance unforgivable to anyone or any organization.

# The path of success lies in the understanding the relevant trends, figuring out how your strengths and resources can capitalize on them and staking our a leadership position. 

# 3 C's are most important - Culture | Code of conduct |Control. 
culture is critical. it is important to remain committed to your organisations mission, to define core values and to act with integrity in accordance with those values. 
Arrogance leads to over confidence. Not only leaders become arrogant, but organization culture too starts taking the same he as dissentters are slowly eased out and debates disappear. overconfidence isn't a personality trait or a moral failing, but a natural consequence of success that affects almost every one . As we grow older and more experienced, we overrate the accuracy of our judgments. 

# Success can be achieved in two ways. One is like climbing a ladder. It is fast, but a ladder can be unstable and you can fall from where you started from. The other is climbing a mountain, where you experience descent as well as plateau on your way to the peak. 

# The causes of failure can be classified into 1. Human or behavioral 2. Systemic or organisational. 
The behavioral causes - Arrogance or Hubris :- Most failures are self inflicted wounds that are allowed to fester and ultimately poison the leader and his organisation. Hubris, the sin of overweening pride or arrogance is invariably the basic condition that undermines societies and individuals. 
According to Tim Irwin, in his book derailed, he charter the highs and lows of Six CEO's there are 4 qualities that are tied to failures - Authenticity | Self Management | Humility |Courage 

Derailed leaders progress through 5 stages - A failure of self / other awareness | Hubris : Pride before the fall | Missed early warning signals | Rationalizing | Derailment 

# Assumptions, beliefs, mindsets and blind-spots. 
- Successful people are more prone to assumptions as they start believing that they have somehow discovered the formula for success. 
- poor leaders are hired due to poor competency framework 

Failure is not a catastrophe, but failure to learn certainly can be, some of the case studies shared in the book is from the organisation such as Kodak, Motorala, Lehman Brothers, Jain Irrigation, Venky's chicken, Suzlon, King Fisher Airlines, Nokia etc. 

KODAK - The success had blinded the company into denial that digital photography would replace the film roll. Kodak fits the classic profile of a twentieth century corporate dinosaur. 

# Motorola - The arrogance of technological superiority is deeply ingrained in culture and iridium went forward single mindedly concentrating on satellite design and launch, brushing aside the challenges in marketing and sales. 


Lehman Brothers - Single minded goal to be no.1, he had little time and consideration for his clients and stakeholders

# Jain irrigation core lesson - Early success had blinded us and we thought we could do no wrong. Diversifying into unknown areas without required management bandwidth and eyeing disproportionate growth using debt is not sustainable. 

Friday, July 7, 2017

Book Review | The Amazon Way: 14 Leadership Principles Behind the World's Most Disruptive Company



Book Title: The Amazon Way: 14 Leadership Principles Behind the World's Most Disruptive Company

Author: John Rossman

 
Amazon.com was in the business of internet bookseller to a global company revolutionizing and disrupting multiple industries, including retail, publishing, logistics, devices, apparel, and cloud computing. The Amazon Way, introduces the unique corporate culture of the world’s largest Internet retailer, with a focus on the fourteen leadership principles that have guided and shaped its decisions and its distinctive leadership culture. I found this book interesting with easy flow on each of the principles with some examples. . Amazon is one of the globally admired companies. The book just reflects on the 14 principles of leadership that build a great organisation. The crux of these 14 principles 

1.    Obsess over the Customer
·         Customer don't actually like to talk to customer service reps, they'd rather resolve the problem themselves
·         Amazon is focused on Free Cash Flow - cash the company is able to generate after maintaining its base assets
·         Price, Selection and Availability - the holy trinity (The three pillars of Amazon)
·         If you are competitor focused, you have to wait until there is an competitor doing something, Being customer focused allows you to be more pioneering.

2.     Take Ownership of Results
·         Successful companies have very low turnover rate at the top.
·         Maintain an atmosphere of urgency is crucial
·         Breakdown of dependency is a leadership failure.
·         The highest level of customer service is impossible to achieve without a high degree of accountability and honesty and a willingness to be direct, open, and honest - especially when things are not going well.

3.    Invent & Simplify         
·         Simple is the key to easy, fast, intuitive and low cost.
·         Good process eliminates bureaucracy and exposes under performers.

4.    Leaders are right - a lot          
·         Clarity is vital for culture of learning, growth and accountability
·         Plans are nothing, Planning is everything  
·         Writing down ideas in complete sentences and complete paragraph will force a deeper clarity of thinking

5.    Hire & Develop the Best        
·         Leaders develop leaders and take seriously their role in coaching others

6.    Insist on highest standard    
·         Service level Agreements

7.    Think Big           
·         Thinking small is a self-fulfilling prophecy  
·         Free Cash Flow - The secret of thinking Big


8.    Have a bias for action
·         Value calculated risk taking

9.    Practice Frugality        
·         Frugality breeds resourcefulness, self-sufficiency and innovation

10. Be Vocal, Self – Critical         
·         "Hubris"- The excessive pride that destroys the hero        

11. Earn the Trust  
·         True collaboration is only possible in a atmosphere of Trust  
·         Two-Pizza Team is about trusting a small fraction within an organization to operate independently and with agility

12. Dive Deep          
·         Leadership is responsible for the entire life cycle of a project and its outcome.
·         Five Whys is an iterative question-asking technique used to explore the cause-and-effect relationships

13. Have backbone - Disagree & Commit       
·         once decision is made, commit to it whole heartedly

14. Deliver Results  

Thursday, June 29, 2017

Book Review | The enemies of excellence by Greg Salciccioli


Book Title: The enemies of excellence
Author: Greg Salciccioli 


Blindness is widespread today as disgraced leaders sit in the wreckage of their own actions, stunned at their own capacity for deviance. Leadership Excellence is a journey and in the journey there will be hurdles. Some of the failures are due to unforeseen conditions and few due to personal conditions.  The world is beautiful when you are successful and the world is more meaningful when there is a purpose attached to living. Everyone is susceptible to self-sabotage—especially in the presence of success. This book is on about being a morally strong a leader,  has to overcome seven core risks which one needs checked and worked on in order to excel.  By identifying and learning to recognize each risk, leaders can stop creating misery for themselves and the people who rely on them emotionally and financially. The Enemies of Excellence can affect anyone—from the corner office to the conference room, and from the classroom to the living room.

Managing personal life is a struggle for every leader. We all have flaws that blind us. If left unattended and unexamined, they will eventually destroy us. One of my own tragic flaws was anger, which affected everything in my life. The book narrates the seven core enemies classified into common and disastrous for excellence. The first three Egotism, Life Mismanagement, Bad Habits are commonly found in most of the leaders. Timely feedback, due-diligence and awareness on these can be controlled through willpower. Indulgence, Broken relationships, Isolation and Self-sabotage are the lethal for excellence. All these seven core risks occurs when being successful or enjoying success is at top of the mind resulting in mismanagement.  Therefore it is needed to be grounded and do a self-check to ensure that success is not captured in mind and body.

The first three Enemies of Excellence. As egotism is allowed to exist, it breeds arrogance, and arrogance in turn builds ignorance. People become ignorant of the other Enemies that are active in their life and leadership. The second Enemy ensures that the balance between work and life is ignored and allowed to break down. As work-life balance breaks down, bad habits accumulate. This third Enemy opens the door to the dark side of Indulgence.
Egotists make people feel expendable. Ego-driven leaders not only harm themselves and others—they destabilize and potentially destroy organizations. To avoid the enemy of an egocentric focus, we need to not only determine to avoid egotism but to understand the benefits of altruism. Altruism has great advantages over egotism.

Life Mismanagement: situation due to egotism is disorganized or controlled badly. This may be in the personal life or corporate life, may be due to habits or addicts. Due to external environment or internal pressure. Enemy of Life Mismanagement can’t stand against a person who establishes their priorities and drives towards them each day. Life mismanagement is basically due to centrally decision making and controls. Decentralization and Delegation of controls is advantages over Life Mismanagement.

Bad Habits: Patterned behaviour regarded as detrimental to one’s physical or mental health, which is often linked to lack of self-control. Everyone has a bad habit. Some are more obvious than others. The primary reason that we are overrun by the Enemy of Bad Habits has to do with intentional versus reactionary living. The first step in choosing intentional leadership lies in a simple but powerful best practice.

Indulgence: Indulgence means yielding to your desires, resulting in excess that undermines your success. Indulgence dismantles the conscience piece by piece until the alarms of moderation or morality are silenced. With the alarm system disabled, all kinds of destructive behaviour can be explored.

Isolation: An ideal mind is a devils workshop, Isolation will lead to power for destruction. The enemy of Isolation will plan of attack is to divide and conquer. He wants us to leave the presence of others and go it alone, to be the maverick who ends up masterminding his own demise.

Self-Sabotage: Self-sabotage is any behaviour, thought, emotion or action that holds you back from getting what you consciously want. Moreover, it’s the conflict that exists between conscious desires and unconscious wants that manifest in self-sabotage patterns.  Self-sabotage patterns because we are unable to manage our emotions effectively.

Wednesday, April 19, 2017

Book Review | Look: A Practical Guide for Improving Your Observational Skills

One word that we frequently hear from our parents, teachers and boss is “ Observe” correctly.  Attentive observation will help to grasp the topic in case of studies, provides clarity in case of work. Therefore the way we look and observe needs a varied approach based on the requirements. The book ““Look – A practice Guide for Improving your observation skills” provides narratives on application on the relevance of anything we do.  Six Thinking Hat methods are widely used for driving creativity and solving problems in the organisations.  However when a student writes answers in the examination describing in his own words, he never gets the top score. This is because the teacher needs answers as she has thought at the school. Without imbibing creative thinking and appreciating creativity at the schools, organisations have to invest to teach lean and unlearn.

Observation is key for any improvement and investigation. Observations influence on how we act and opt. Moreover observations in everyday lead us to the thoughts that possibly modify, reshape, reform and transform our behavior or overthrow aspects of the world. Creative thinking has four steps – Focus, Provocation, Movement and Harvesting. Focus involves identifying what one wants ideas about. Provocation requires setting up of mental stimuli on the chosen focus area. Movement responds to provocations and challenges by deliberation. Harvesting captures the value of creative output by recognizing the newness of thoughts.

The Six Looking Glasses method guide to become more skilled observer by enriching the time spent looking. The six different type of looking are

1.  Binoculars Look
2.  Bifocals Look
3.  Magnifying glasses Look 
4.  Microscope Look 
5. Rose coloured Glasses
6. Blindfolds.
7.       

These six methods of looking is critical and applicable across the life cycle of human and organisation. In today’s world, every day we use these six looking glass method. We scroll on the messages in our what sup application for a Binocular look. For certain messages we use Bifocals look to interpret two alternate views of any given situation. We use Magnifying glasses look  to spot one thing to look closely to respond. We use Microscope looking for greater details involving scrutinizing and studying scene. We use Rose coloured glasses look to uncover the hidden opportunity. We use Blindfolds look to reflect and recall what was seen and how was scene. 


Wednesday, April 5, 2017

Book Review | Why We Work - Barry Schwartz


What if the human beings had an option to choose, energy without consuming any food then will there be the need to work and earn? Today we are in the smart technology world and motivating the Gen - Z workforce is really a challenge.  We are deep into a destructive foray regarding our conception of workforce motivation. We created an idea two centuries ago that people hate work and do it only for money and other extrinsic rewards. This human invention (which is what an idea is) is not a widespread food ingredient but a ubiquitous workplace element. It does cause heartache, disgruntlement, disengagement and low productivity. The science is in: It’s not human nature to hate work and treating workers as if they do causes damage to them and to business.
The industrial revolution had workers to do their job where in they lived in it, even if they hated their jobs. Understanding individual psychology and the attitude the person brings to a job is important, but so too is understanding how to create an environment in which people motivate themselves
Organisations have layers and segments. One of the interesting scrutiny on the engagement level, we find the bottom of the pyramid highly engaged. The reason behind this is they are able to empathises and relate their work to the cause.  You don't need to be working for an organization that saves lives to find meaning and purpose in what you do. You just need to be doing work that makes peoples' lives better.
The author narrates that we are in the legacy of FALSE RATIONALE on the job and work of “carrot and stick” approach that dominated the efforts in the work place. As long as the people were paid for what they did, it didn’t matter very much what their job entailed. Many believe that only certain kind of jobs permit people to find a meaning, engagement, discretion and autonomy and opportunity to learn and grow WHEN WORK IS GOOD. Job crafting needs to aimed of how the job could be linked to a meaningful purpose that meets the challenge demanding empathy, good listening and accomplishing the goals. People who see their work as “job” enjoy little discretion and experience minimal engagement or meaning. People with job see work as necessity of life, they work for pay, and they would switch jobs to earn more money.  People who see their work as a “career” generally enjoy more discretion and more engaged.  When we loose confidence that people have the will to do the right thing and we turn to incentives, we find that we get what we pay for. Therefore a decision has to be taken on HOW GOOD Work GOES BAD: Rules and Incentives over Integrity. It’s because of human nature.  Human nature as a battle between metaphors and THE TECHNOLOGY of IDEAS to drive behaviours. No matter what ideas people appeal to when they explain their lack of food, their bellies remain empty. The idea technology that dominates our age is a fiction; it is ideology. THE FUTURE OF WORK: DESIGNING HUMAN NATURE.

The book narrates, that it is not incentive that trigger the work. It is finding out a meaningful purpose on how our work is linked to the purpose. If we can craft our purpose to the job, the work becomes meaningful and joy. The book is very narrative of examples on being meaningful

Tuesday, February 28, 2017

Book Review | The First 90 Days - Michael D Watkins

The people judge the first 100 days performance of the newly formed government. The first 90 days of any Government becomes critical parameter to gain confidence. Similarly when a lateral entrant on boards an organisation at a leadership position, all the eyes will be on his first 90 days. The initial 90 days of on-board becomes critical for the leader and the company.  The transaction is critical to reach a breakeven point and one needs to avoid few transaction traps  such as Sticking with what you know, Falling prey to the action imperative, setting unrealistic expectations, Attempting to do too much, coming in with the answer, engaging in the wrong type of learning, neglecting horizontal relationships. The transition failures happen because new leader either misunderstand the essential demands of the situation or lack the skill and flexibility to adapt to them.    Leadership ultimately is about influence and leverage and needs a right steps to follow for deliver with right energy. Any changes from one profile to other has risk. Identification of the key risk and mitigation plan will accelerate to be successful initially. The initial success will also build confidence and acceptance in any new organization. To better on boarding and deliver excellently, the author suggests the steps converted into 10 chapters for a smooth transaction.
1.       Prepare Yourself
2.       Accelerate Your learning
3.       Match your strategy to the situation
4.       Secure early wins
5.       Negotiate Success
6.       Achieve Alignment
7.       Build Your Team
8.       Create Coalitions
9.       Keep your balance
10.   Accelerate everyone.

Chapter – 1 : Prepare Yourself
The key of effective delegation remains necessary. Build a team of competent people whom you trust, you establish goals and metrics to monitor their progress, you translate higher level goals into specific responsibilities for your direct reports, and you enforce them through process.  While preparing yourself one has to find ways to overcome the following challenges with Balancing Breadth and Depth | Rethinking what you Delegate | Influence differently |Communicate more formally | Exhibit the right presence
To overcome these barriers and succeed in a joining a new company, one should focus on Four pillars of effective on boarding
Business Orientation | Stakeholder connection | Alignment of expectations | Cultural Adaptation.

Reflection checks
·         What are the implications for your need to balance breadth and depth, delegate, influence, communicate and exhibit leadership presence?
·         How will you orient yourself to business, identify and connect with key stakeholders, clarify expectations and adapt to the new culture? what is the right balance between adapting to the new situation and trying to alter it
·         What has made you successful so far in your career? Can you succeed in your new position by relying solely on those strengths? If not, what are the critical skills you need to develop
·         Are there aspects of your new job that are critical to success but that you prefer not to focus on? Why? How will you compensate for your potential blind spots?
·         How can you ensure that you make the mental leap into the new position? From whom might you seek advice and counsel on this? What other activities might help you do this?

Chapter -2 : Accelerate your learning
Leaders who are on boarding into new organisation must focus on learning and adapting to the new culture | Managing learning as an investment process – Define your learning agenda - Identify the best sources of insight - Adopting structured learning methods

Reflection – Checklist
·         How effectively are you at learning about new organizations? Do you sometimes fall prey to the action imperative? To coming in “the “answer? If so, how will you avoid doing this?
·         What is your learning agenda? Based on what you know now, compose a list of questions to guide your early inquiries. If you have begun to form hypotheses about what is going on, what are they, and how will you test them?
·         Given the questions you want to answer, who is likely to provide you with the most useful insight?
·         How might you increase the efficiency of your learning process? What are some structured ways you might extract more insight for your investment of time and energy?
·         What support is available to accelerate your learning and how might you best leverage?
·         Given your answers to the previous questions, start to create your learning plan

Chapter -3 : Match Strategy to Situation
Use STARS Model – Start-Up | Turnaround | Accelerated Growth | Realignment | Sustaining success to match strategy to situation.

Reflection – Checklist
·         What portfolio of STARS situations have you inherited? Which portion of your responsibilities are in start-up, turnaround, accelerated-growth, realignment, and sustaining success modes?
·         What are the implications for the challenges and opportunities you are likely to confront and for the way you should approach accelerating your transition?
·         What are the implications for your learning agenda? Do you need to understand only the technical side of the business or is it critical that you understand culture and politics well?
·         What is the prevailing climate in your organisation? What psychological transformation do you need to make and how will you bring them about?
·         How can you best lead change given the situations you face?
·         Which of your skills and strengths are likely to be most valuable in your new situation, and which have the potential to get you into trouble
·         What are the implications for the team you need to build?

Chapter -4 : Negotiate Success
Negotiate success means proactively engaging with your new boss to shape the game so that you have a fighting chance of achieving desired goals.
Don’t with boss for  building positive relationships  - Don’t stay away | Don’t surprise your boss |Don’t approach your boss only with problems | Don’t run down your checklist | Don’t expect your boss to change
Do’s for building positive relationships – Clarify expectations early and often | Take 100 percent responsibility for making relationship work | Negotiate timelines for diagnosis and action planning | Aim for early wins in areas important to boss | Pursue good marks from those who opinions your boss respects
Conversations framework – Situational diagnosis conversation | the expectations conversations | the resource conversation | The style conversation | The personal development conversation

Reflection – Checklist
·         How effectively have your built relationships with new bosses in the past? What have you done well? Where do you need improvement?
·         Create a plan for the situational conversation based on what you know now, what issues will you raise with your boss in this conversation? What do you want ot say up front?  what order do you want to raise issues?
·         Create a plan for the expectations conversation. How will you figure out what your new boss expects you to do?
·         Create a plan for the style conversation. How will you figure out how best to work with your boss? What mode of communication does he prefer? How often should you interact? How much detail should you provide? What types of issues should you consult with him about before deciding?
·         Create a plan for the resource conversation. Give what you need to do, what resources are absolutely needed? With fever resources, what would you have to forgo? If you had more resources what would the benefits? Be sure to build the building case?
·         Create a plan for the personal development conversation. What are your strengths and where do you need improvement t? What kinds of assignments or projects might help you develop skills you need?
·         How might you use the five conversations framework to accelerate the development of your team? Where are you in terms of having the key conversations with each of your direct reports?

Chapter – 6: Secure Early Wins
Plan your waves – Starting with Goal | Focus on Business Priorities | Identify and support behavioural Changes
Problematic behaviour pattern – Focus | Discipline |Innovation | Teamwork | Sence of Urgency
Overcoming Basic Principles – Focus on a few promising Opportunities | Gen wins that matter to your bosses |Get wins in the right ways | Take your STARS portfolio into account | Adjust for the culture | identifying your early wins
FOGLAMP checklist – Focus | oversight | Goals | Leadership | Abilities | Means | Process
Leading change – Planning versus learning – Awareness – Diagnosis – vision – Plan – Support

Reflection checklist
·         Given you agreed to business goals, what do you need to do during your transition to create momentum for achieving them?
·         How do people need to behave differently to achieve these goals? Describe as vividly as you can the behaviours you need to encourage and those you need to discourage
·         How do you plan to connect yourself to your new organisation? Who are the key audiences and what message would you like to convey to them? What are the best modes of engagement?
·         What are the most promising focal points to get some early improvements in performance and start the process of behaviour change?
·         What projects do you need to launch and who will lead them
·         What predictable surprises could take you off track?

Chapter – 6: Achieve Alignment

Common Traps to avoid – Making change for change’s sake | Not adjusting for the STARS situation |Trying to restructure your way out of deeper problems | Creating structures that are too complex | Overestimating your organizations capacity to absorb change
Designing organizational Architecture - Strategic Direction | Structure | Core Processes | Skill base
Diagnosing Misalignments – Misalignments between strategic direction and skill base | Misalignment between strategic direction and core processes | Misalignment between structure and processes | Misalignment between structure and skills
Getting started – Begin with strategic direction | Look at supporting structure, processes and skills |Decide how and when you will introduce the new strategic direction | Think through the correct sequencing | Choose the loop

Reflection checklist
·         What are your observations about misalignments among strategic directions, structure, process and skills? How will you dig deeper to confirm or refine your impression?
·         What decisions about customers, capital, capabilities and commitments do you need to make? How and when will you make these decisions?
·         What is your current assessment of the coherence of the organisations strategic directions? Of its adequacy? What are your current thoughts about changing directions?
·         What are the strengths and weakness of the organisation structure? What potential structure are you thinking about?
·         What are the core processes in your organisation? How well they are performing? What are your priorities for process improvement?
·         What skill gaps and underutilized resources have you identified? What are your priorities for strengthening key skills bases?


Chapter -7 – Build your team

Reflections:
·         What are your criteria for assessing the performance of members of your team? How are relative weightings affected by function, the extent of required teamwork, the stars portfolio and the criticality of the positions?
·         How will you go about assessing your team?
·         What personnel changes do you need to make? Which changes are urgent and which can wait? how ill you create backups and options?
·         How will you might high priority changes? What can you do to preserve the dignity of the people affected? What help will you need with the team in the restructuring process, and where are you going to find?

Chapter -8 – Create Alliances
Defining your influence Objectives – Understand the influence landscape | win and block alliances | Map influence networks | Draw influence diagrams

Reflections:
·         What are the critical alliances you need to build –both within your organisations and externally to advance your agenda?
·         What agendas are other key players pursuing? Where might they align with yours and where might they come in to conflict?
·         Are there opportunities to build long term broad based alliances with others? Where might you be able to leverage shorter term agreements to pursue specific objectives?
·         How does influence work in the organisation? Who defers to whom on key issues or concern?
·         Who is likely to support your agenda? Who is likely to oppose you? Who is persuadable?
·         What are the motivations of pivotal people, the situational pressure acting on them, and their perceptions of their choices?
·         What are the elements of an effective influence strategy? How should you frame your arguments? Might influence tools such as incrementalism, sequencing and action forcing events help?

Chapter – 9: Mange Yourself
·         What are your greatest vulnerabilities in your new role? How do you plan to compensate for them?
·         What personal disciples do you most need to develop or enhance? How will you do this? What will success look like?
·         What can you gain more control over your local environment?
·         What can you do to ease your family transition? What support relationships will you have to build? What are your highest priorities?
·         What are your priorities for strengthening your advice and counsel network? to what extent do you need to focus on your internal network ? Your external network >?  In which domain do you most need additional support – technical, cultural, political or personal?

Chapter 10 – accelerate everyone

·         What are the most important transitions in your organisation and how often do they occur
·         Is the organisation able to identify where and when transitions are occurring?
·         Is there a common core transition, acceleration, framework, language and toolkit?
·         Do leaders have the support they need, when they need it and throughout their transitions? What could be done to provide focused resources for on boarding and promotion transitions?
·         Are the company’s systems for recruiting and accelerating transitions linked in appropriate way
·         Should transitions acceleration be part of your organisation curriculum for developing high potential leaders?
·         How might the 90 day framework be used to accelerate organisational change – for example restructuring or post acquisition integration?