Personal Strategies for Adding Value

The Great Recession has expedited the transition to a virtual labor market, where each individual is an independent contractor constantly in the market, selling their services.  To succeed in this world, individuals need to define their product, sharpen their sales skills, actively manage their time and add greater incremental value.

The 12 million unemployed Americans are bombarded with advice on defining their personal brand.  Setting aside the gloss and polish offered by career counselors, the remaining content is the need to be easily defined in a 15 second elevator speech.  Simple and specialized products sell.  Complex and generic products die.  Specialized professional functions and industry experience are marketable.  Generalists need to become repositioned with specialist labels: as entrepreneurs, six sigma black belts, project management professionals, etc.  Certifications are highly valued.  The “signaling” theory of the labor market is winning, with HR, hiring managers and recruiters all relying upon external signals such as certifications, national/Big 4 consulting experience, top 25 university/MBA degrees and Fortune 500 experience.  Personal communications and sales skills command a premium within the universe of certified professionals.

At work or as a consultant, the most important driver of added value is the allocation of time.  Individuals divide their time among the functions of doing, managing, investing, planning and reporting.  Stephen Covey’s path breaking “Seven Habits of Highly Successful People” enlightened a whole generation on this topic.  There is a critical trade-off between doing and other functions, which senior staff and managers must exploit.  There is a trade-off between urgent and important tasks at the heart of personal time management.  There is value in “sharpening the saw” by investing in activities with long-run benefits. 

The marginal product theory of labor value applies at work.  Individuals who devote their time to the highest incremental value activities at work are rewarded.  Those who do their “fair share” of low value activities are left behind.  Managing people, suppliers, customers, assets, risks and processes offers opportunities to leverage value.  Individuals with the greatest scope of authority deliver the greatest value and are rewarded.  Investing in people, products, processes and assets provides another opportunity to add greater value.  Strategic, functional, project and individual planning offers opportunities to leverage time in a more abstract dimension.  Developing, operating and enhancing reporting and feedback systems allow key staff to identify enhanced improvement and risk management options. 

Individuals who have managed to define and sell their personal branded product and secured significant opportunities to deliver value must also know how to deliver incremental value.  There are seven generic strategies for adding maximum value.

Buy low and sell high.  All activities must be delivered by the lowest cost resource.  If there is any individual, machine or supplier that can deliver a service more cheaply, eventually they will.  Identify the lowest cost resource and employ it.  Delegate.  Divide jobs.  Outsource.  Automate.  Simplify.  As Andy Grove once said, “only the paranoid survive”.  Get this done before others.

Match skills and talents to assignments.  Functional skills, industry experience, soft skills, courage, flexibility, creativity and other talents vary greatly across available resources.  Identify the 3-5 key talents required and employ those with natural talents.  Employ personality profiles, test results and Gallup Strengths to find matches.  Create an internal labor market that encourages staff to know and apply their talents as often as possible.

Leverage the cumulative positive impact of process engineering.  Call it TQM, ISO 9000, six sigma or lean manufacturing.  Employ incremental continuous process improvement, tactical Kaizen blitzes, re-engineering projects, management systems and cultural changes to obtain the maximum value from the quality revolution.  World-class firms continue to improve and leave others behind.

Leverage the benefits of learning curves in all activities.  Individuals with one year of experience may be twice as productive as trainees.  Those with three years of experience may be another 50% more productive.  Reach mastery level in critical activities. 

Create synergy through cross-functional project teams.  There is a limit to the returns on the first four strategies.  Eventually, a senior financial analyst, research chemist or national accounts manager will find incremental improvements more difficult to achieve.  For some projects, processes and functions there is a need to combine the highest talents of complementary functions. 

Leverage the unique assets of the organization.  Firms have core competencies, intellectual property, cultural assets, brand assets, relationships, best practices and most productive assets.  Sales or product growth in adjacent space has a high success probability.

Leverage the organization’s goodwill with stakeholders.  Suppliers, customers, regulators, investors, staff and communities have a vested interest in the organization’s ongoing success.  Provide them with opportunities to reinvest in the organization’s future.

Most of us will add the greatest possible value by following the path of least resistance.  We will leverage relative market values, talents, process improvement techniques, learning curves, teamwork, core competencies and common interests.  A self-aware, proactive strategy will pay the greatest personal dividends, while delivering value to firms and society.

Screening for Leadership Experience

As firms return to a normal economy where success is determined by the ability to set and implement a distinctive strategy, develop new products, processes and customers, and align functional resources in a project based matrix structure, it is time one again to screen for leadership in the hiring process. For the last 2 years, with an abundance of candidates and a preference for risk aversion, hiring managers, human resources and recruiters have laser focused on finding the very best match between a candidate’s industry, functional and positional experience for an open position, without regard to long-term considerations. Hiring managers should insert more behavioral interview questions about leadership into the process and they should screen for evidence of leadership success in the resume review and screening interview process.

Ask ten experts to define “leadership” and you’ll get ten different answers and lists of competencies, but they’ll cluster into a few areas such as building teams, being self-aware, growing personally and professionally, displaying trust and integrity, communicating effectively, motivating/influencing/persuading, helping others to succeed, setting and sharing a strategic vision, taking risks, innovating, being responsible, making tough decisions, showing tenacity and taking a long-run view of what is best for the organization as a whole. A simple leadership checklist can be used to identify candidates who have the leadership experience needed to succeed.

Leadership Screening Checklist

1. Positional responsibility, staff count, manager count, functional variety.

2. Cross-team member, positional leadership, selection by others, larger projects.

3. Non-work leadership roles, professional and civic groups.

4. Progressively responsible roles and promotions across career.

5. Professional mastery/certification and CPE in one or more areas.

6. Five year tenure at most employers.

7. Variety of recommendations available/given in 360 degree fashion.

8. Internal or external teaching, training and documentation experience.

9. Projects/assignments in new, challenging or unpopular business areas.

10. Projects/assignments in high value, visibility or risk business areas.

11. Matrix experience in product development, IT, M&A, national account management.

12. Formal mentoring, association or accountability partner experience.

13. Strategic, product, marketing, financial or operational planning leadership role.

14. Top-level responsibility for a function or business unit of any size.

15. Variety of headquarters/field, line/staff and domestic/international experience.

16. Variety of industry, function and organization size experience.

17. Change management experience through start-ups, rapid growth, turnarounds, recessions, acquisitions or reorganization.

18. Implementation of new professional methods and technologies.

19. Human resources recruiting, retention, promotions, transfers and morale.

20. Responsibility for new products, sales, suppliers and negotiations.

Organizational success today requires leaders who are experienced and confident in challenging and ambiguous environments. Screening for this broader experience and capacity may be more important than hiring someone who has done exactly the required role at the closest competitor for the last five years.

Effective Leaders

 Everyone has their own theory or theories of leadership.In my experience, effective leaders …Are authentic expressions of their unique talents and experiences. They are  
 independent and non-conformist. 
 
 Are shaped by their personality profiles.  They leverage their strengths and minimize their non-talents.  They flex styles for short periods, with effort.
 
 
 Are true to themselves, applying constructive approaches to work, home and community.   This natural style leverages their assets.
 
 
 Are internally driven and project a clear commitment to making progress, overcoming 
 challenges, reaching goals and making a difference. 
 
 Are human with strengths and non-talents.  They are effected by biases and paradigms.  
 Self-awareness and self-control are partial. 
 
 Recognize the strength of organizational and cultural inertia in preventing change, 
 alignment and pursuit of lofty objectives. 
 
 Accept the political nature of organizations and the role of self-interest as part of the natural arena for leadership practice.
 
 
 Understand the value creating role of key leaders in organizations, but do not minimize the value of managers and staff.
 
 
 Appreciate the social psychology of organizations and teams.  They demonstrate their 
 passion, commitment and belonging in real and symbolic ways. 
 
 Use an interactive decision-making process to engage contributors, frame 
 decisions, generate options, evaluate solutions and build commitment. 
 
 Are patient, unstructured decision-makers.  Organization level issues, plans and policies 
 require time to define, analyze, choose and embrace. They change perspectives, urge 
 creativity, challenge traditional answers and encourage contrasting paths to answers. 
 
 Value the contributions of professional specialists, but employ a generalist perspective and 
 healthy skepticism. They employ various facilitation tools to work through ambiguous 
 situations. 
 
 Employ a broad array of skills and experiences, as decisions are increasingly complex, 
 including political, ethical, global and environmental dimensions. 
 
 Embrace a modern approach to diversity, deeply understanding the value of diverse 
 perspectives in contributing their piece of the truth to decisions.