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Transcript of ASQ Orange Empire November 1, 2013 Dr. Phillip R Rosenkrantz Professor Emeritus, Cal Poly Pomona A...
ASQ Orange EmpireNovember 1, 2013Dr. Phillip R RosenkrantzProfessor Emeritus, Cal Poly Pomona
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A Strategic Look at
Deming’s System of Profound
Knowledge
Quality Contributions to Strategic Planning Leadership aspects (Deming SPK & Baldrige Award)Systems thinking (Not ingrained in strategic planning)Tools for analyzing SWOT and including VOC
Outline
Part 1 - Overview of Dr. Deming’s Teachings and Impact
Part 2 – Primer on Traditional Strategic Planning
Part 3 – Integration of Quality Tools with Examples Ex. 1 - Affinity Process – SWOT Analysis Ex. 2 - Affinity Process – Plan Implementation Ex. 3 - Affinity Process – Trend Analysis Ex. 4 - Kaizen for Management – Marketing
Campaign Ex. 5 - QFD – Stakeholder Review of Strategic
Plan
Objective – Show how systems and stakeholder driven quality tools can be used in strategic planning
Part 1 - History of Quality and Overview of Dr. Deming’s Teachings and Impact - Dr. W. Edwards Deming Is known as the Father of the Japanese Post-war Industrial revival and was regarded by many as the leading quality guru in the United States.
Dr. W. Edwards Deming
In addition to his other education, Dr. Deming studied under Walter Shewhart who introduced SPC.
Dr. Deming worked with census data for the U.S. Government.
During WWII he was asked to implement SPC and Acceptance Sampling for the defense industry.
After WWII American management went back to their former inspection-based methods.
Reviving JapanDeming was invited to Japan around 1950 by Japanese industrial leaders and engineers.
He guided them on how to implement quality control.
Awarded Second Order of the Sacred Treasure
Japanese scientists and engineers named the famed Deming Prize after him.
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Out of the Crisis
Due to popular demand Deming conducted an intensive four-day seminar for managers and educators across the country
Deming published an explanation of his philosophies and concepts for managers in 1986 in his book: Out of the Crisis
Deming’s first book expounded on some of these concepts as well titled: The New Economics (1984, 2000)
Deming’s 14 points for Management
The 14 points are the basis for transformation of American industry.
Not simply a matter of solving problems
Management is responsible for creating the culture and improving the systems they operate with.
The 14 points apply to all organizations.
Deming’s 14 Points for Management
1. Create constancy of purpose
2. Adopt philosophy of prevention
3. Cease mass inspection
4. Select a few suppliers based on quality
5. Constantly improve system and workers
6. Institute worker training
7. Instill leadership among supervisors
8. Eliminate fear among employees
9. Eliminate barriers between departments
10. Eliminate slogans
11. Remove numerical quotas
12. Enhance worker pride
13. Institute vigorous training
14. Take action
Deming’s Seven Deadly Diseases of Management
Lack of constancy of purpose
Emphasis on short-term profits
Evaluation by performance, merit rating, or annual review of performance
Mobility of management
Running a company on visible figures alone
Excessive medical costs
Excessive costs of warranty, fueled by lawyers who work for contingency fees
Deming’s System of Profound Knowledge
Deming advocated that all managers need to have what he called a System of Profound Knowledge, consisting of four parts: Appreciation of a system: understanding the overall
processes involving suppliers, producers, and customers (or recipients) of goods and services.
Knowledge of variation: the range and causes of variation in quality, and use of statistical sampling in measurements.
Theory of knowledge: the concepts explaining knowledge and the limits of what can be known.
Knowledge of psychology: concepts of human nature.
Essential Deming
Management is responsible for the system and for managing processes with continuous improvement. Manage change, not results.
Management needs to understand the difference between common cause variation and assignable cause variation and manage accordingly
Best efforts are not good enough. Need continuous improvement based on theory and knowledge.
Cooperation—not competition. Management needs to understand people and how to lead them.
It’s About Leadership & Transformation
What Does Strategic Planning Mean to You?
Articulated Plan: Mission, Vision, SWOT (Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, Threats), Goals, Plans
Strategic Differentiation - Market data, Customer feedback, Environmental Scan (Internal & External)
Three levels: Strategic, Tactical, Operational
Organizational Engagement - Goals cascaded to operator level
Organizational Transformation - Quarterly reviews and appropriate training
Environmental Scan
Complete prior to vision and mission objectives
External Scan Threats and Opportunities
Internal Scan Strengths and Weaknesses
Modifications and Improvements to SP Using Quality Tools Baldrige Criteria
Leadership, planning, process control, and customer satisfaction and feedback are evaluated and rated.
The Learning Organization (Senge) Shared vision is crucial for long run success
Affinity Diagram/Interrelationship Diagraph Use for problems, trends, SWOT analysis for root cause
analysis, driving trends, strategic goals
Modifications and Improvements (cont’d)
Quality Function Deployment Ultimate approach for identifying the “voice of the
customer” and designing an efficient system around their requirements. Many variations.
Lean/Six Sigma/Total Quality Management a.k.a. Continuous Quality Improvement.- Useful tools if
leadership is supportive and understands what is going on.
CEO Attitudes and Motivations: Are they Different for High-Performing Organizations?ASQ Journal of Quality Management, 2012Milan D. Larson, John R. Latham, Charles A. Appleby, Carl L. Harshman
Introduction
Findings of an exploratory study that compared the motivations and attitudes of CEOs from MBNQA winning companies to: Successful CEO’s of non-MBNQA winners Average employees
Is there a difference between Baldrige recipient leaders and non-Baldrige recipient leaders?
What are the most effective method to institutionalize leadership development?
Introduction (cont’d)
Other than anecdotal stories, not much is known about leading through a transformational process
Employees become cynical and lose motivation because of inconsistencies with the top leaders’ behavior
To sustain positive direction leaders must demonstrate consistent behaviors that will lead a successful transformation
Study was aimed at understanding the attitudes and behaviors of successful transformation leaders
Research Questions
Do top leaders that achieve Baldrige Award Recognition somehow differ in motivation and attitudes than non-Baldrige transition leaders? (Early research on leadership was focused on traits and personality characteristics)
Which factors are different compared to other effective leaders?
How do these motivational and attitude factors effect leading the journey to performance excellence?
Findings and Results
Identified 35 key variables from over 200 variables studied
The 35 key variables were organized into five categories Leader behavior Leader approaches Forces of change Culture The individual leader
Findings and Results
Evolution – more likely to drive continuous improvement
Focus on Systems – strongly motivated to work on systems and processes
Sole Responsibility – Less likely to think sole responsibility is important
Focus on the Past – Studied the past to make better decisions in the future
Focus on Information – strongly motivated to work with facts and knowledge
Tolerance – More intolerant of people who are not on board with the transformation
Six areas where there was significant difference between Baldrige CEOs and non-Baldridge CEOs
Conclusions and Potential Applications
Strategic thinking permeates all the major differences
Strong alignment and confirmation of Deming and the System of Profound Knowledge as well as other systems thinkers like Peter Senge
Quality tools can be used to enhance the strategic planning process
Affinity Diagram and Interrelationship Diagraph (Cross Impact Matrix) Very useful quality tool for root cause analysis
during problem solving.
While not often taught, this process is very effective to use during strategic planning SWOT Analysis Underlying problems for implementing SP Underlying trends (from external scan?) that
affect SP
Affinity/Interrelationship Process
Through stakeholders or research, identify problems and put on post-it notes.
Organize notes into major categories and sub categories. Try to get the under 20 sub-categories. Under 15 is better.
With participation from stake holders, evaluate each pair of problems in the sub category to see how much one problem impacts or contributes to the other. Score impact using a rubric.
Affinity/Interrelationship Process (cont’d)
Row totals indicate degree to which a problem drives other problems
Column totals indicate the degree to which a problem is influenced by other problems
Row minus Column Totals are ranked from highest to lowest. Highest ranks suggest that the problem is a root cause problem. Lower rank indicates a resulting problem.
Root cause problems are probably what should be addressed with the highest priority.
Sample Problem related to Team Projects:Major Category - External Factors
Physical IssuesOther pressing issuesOther class needsRestricted access to resourcesInadequate/Non-working softwareNo way for multiple people to inputMeeting place
InstructorToo pickyNot enough instructionsGuidelines unclearImpractical expectations
Problems with Team Projects:Major Category - People
Personal issuesLack of knowledge/ understandingAbsenteeismSurface learningNot working on weaknessesMental problemsPhysical problems/illnessLifestyle issuesProcrastination
MotivationLack of respect for each otherMembers failing to performBlame gameUnequal motivation/dedicationPeople not “on-board”Apathy/lack of interest
CompatibilityDiffering opinionsPersonality conflictsClosed-minded membersPersonal relationships interfering with professionalismMisunderstanding of team rolesKnowledge not uniformToo many team members CommunicationsFailure to communicateTeam doesn’t prioritizeNot rehearsing as a whole teamWork not checkedWhat did professor want?Final product that is legitimateTime not used constructivelySchedule conflicts for meeting togetherLack of concentration during meetingsForgetting meeting infoPeople who don’t speak up
Problems with Team Projects:Major Category - Organizing
LeadershipLack of a good team leaderNo leader to control the quality of workPeople just following one personSomeone takes over and does too muchMissing/bad leadership Final ProjectInadequate research Not enough dataWorking too fast and making errorsNot enough collaborationLast minute work going uncheckedSlides have too much informationNot enough information/examplesMaterial does not relate to projectToo many details in presentationSpelling errorsNot practicingNot reviewing work prior to submission
Completing WorkDisorganizedWrong objectiveEqual distribution of workRecord keeping is minimal/missingNot enough timeNot schedulingNot following the schedulePoor time managementBad trainingIndividuals not preparedDistractions/downtimeBeing stuck on one partBad data collectionTampering with dataUnderutilizing strengthsNot following procedures
Spring 10 1. Phys
2. Instr
3. Pers
4. Motiv-ation
5. Compati-bility
6. Comm
7. Leader- ship
8. Compl Work
9. FinalProd
Row
R-C Tot
Rank
1. Physical Issues
x 0 2 1 1 2 1 2 2 11 8 1
2. Instructor 1 x 2 2 0 1 0 1 0 7 4 23. Personal Issues
1 0 x 2* 2* 2 2 2 2 13 0 5
4. Motivation 0 0 2 x 2 2 2 2 2 12 -1 65. Compatibility 0 1 2 1 x 2 2 2 2 12 2 36. Communications
0 1 2 1 2 x 2 2 2 12 0 5
7. Leadership 1 0 1 2 2 2 x 2 2 12 1 48. Completing Work
0 0 1 2 1 1 1 x 2* 8 -7 7
9. Final Project 0 1 1 2 0 0 1 2 x 7 -7 7Col Tot 3 3 13 13 10 12 11 15 14
Example of problems inhibiting success of student projects
Example 1
Developed lists of: Strengths Weaknesses Opportunities Threats
Took top 5 or so of each and developed cross-impact matrix for affinity process
Assessed impact of each SWOT item on all others
Ranked Row-Column Totals to illuminate critical Threats and Weaknesses or Highest Potential Strengths & Opportunities
Private School Strategic Planning
Example 1 – Cross Impact Matric used for SWOT Analysis
no Item 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 R Rk C R-C Rk
18 New facilites 2 2 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 2 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 30 1 13 17 1
13 Leased facilities 2 2 1 2 2 1 2 1 1 2 2 1 2 21 4 9 12 2
20 Staff Devel. 2 1 2 2 1 2 2 1 1 2 1 1 1 19 8 10 9 3
7 Facilities 1 1 1 1 2 1 2 2 2 1 1 2 2 2 21 3 14 7 4
9 Cash 2 2 1 2 1 1 2 2 1 1 2 2 19 6 12 7 5
17 Fin Aid 1 1 2 2 1 1 1 2 11 18 5 6 6
22 World View 1 1 1 2 1 1 2 1 1 11 20 5 6 7
6 Technology 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 1 2 12 15 8 4 8
4 Safe Environ. 1 1 2 1 1 2 1 9 21 6 3 9
21 Build Board 2 1 2 1 1 2 2 11 19 8 3 10
8 Academics 1 1 1 2 1 1 2 1 2 1 2 2 1 18 9 16 2 11
12 Transition 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 15 10 14 1 12
16 Comm Outreach 1 2 1 2 1 7 22 6 1 13
3 Teachers 1 2 1 2 1 2 2 2 2 1 2 1 19 5 19 0 14
14 Competiton 1 1 1 2 1 1 2 2 11 17 11 0 15
1 Staff 2 2 2 2 2 2 1 2 2 1 1 2 1 22 2 23 -1 16
19 Advancement 1 1 1 2 2 2 1 2 2 2 2 1 19 7 21 -2 17
2 Atmosphere 2 2 1 2 1 1 2 1 1 1 14 11 17 -3 18
11 Tuition Cost 1 1 2 1 2 1 1 1 2 1 13 14 21 -8 19
5 Accred/Reputation 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 14 12 25 -11 20
15 PR & Comm 1 2 2 2 2 2 1 2 14 13 27 -13 21
10 9-12 Enroll 1 1 1 2 2 1 1 2 11 16 29 -18 22
21 17 19 7 25 9 12 17 10 28 20 14 7 9 27 5 5 13 20 12 8 6
Use Results to Develop Strategic Goals
Top four driving SWOT items New facilities (Opportunity) Leased facilities (Threat of loss) Staff development (Opportunity) Facilities (Weakness)
Strategic Goal #1 - Facilities
Short-term goals: Plan for separate sites for K-6 and 7-12 grades. Develop system for maintenance and repair of the facilities
Long-term goals: Provide grass fields for the students. Create an on-site gymnasium for both K-6 and 7-12 sites
Recommendations: Develop a Facilities committee. This committee will address maintenance, repairs, and expansion issues under the direction of the Superintendent.
Strategic Goal #5 – Faculty & Staff Development
Short-term goals: Develop strong relationships with local college teacher programs. Continue to nurture the supportive relationship between the Administration and the staff.
Intermediate goal: Mentoring/coaching for newly hired teachers
Long-term goal: Endowment finance faculty/staff development
Recommendations: Institute on-site, biannual, faculty development training and annual, staff training. Invite faculty to apply for additional off-site training opportunities through applying for Faculty Development Grant funds.
Example 2 – Strategic Plan Implementation
Small produce company had just completed a week-long off-site retreat with executive team to update their strategic plan
I was asked to help them determine what problems they might have in implementing their plan
Used the affinity process and identified 14 problem areas (sub-categories)
Used a matrix to determine the top-two problems that could prevent them from implementing their SP
Example 2 – Strategic Plan Implementation Affinity Results
Ranked Item #1 – Language barrier between workers and management (would inhibit the ability of management and workers to communicate, work on problem solving teams, etc.)
Ranked Item #2 – Lack of mathematical skills of workforce (inhibit use of SPC and other tools for process improvement)
Executive team agreed the results were valid and confirmed what many had suspected all along.
Example 2 – Strategic Plan Implementation Action Plans
Language barrier – Immediately started Berlitz classes two
mornings per week for management. Planned to offer English classes for operators.
Math skills – Tested workers who believed they had good
math skills. Promoted three to in-process-monitors in the quality department to develop them.
Planned to hire a community college instructor to teach math to employees.
Example 3 – Trend Analysis for Strategic Planning in Higher Ed
Trend Analysis Top 20 Trends in Higher Education
Cross Impact Matrix Driving Trends Resulting Trends Root Cause Trends
Cross Impact Matrix Development
Research produced trends common to higher education.
Cross impact matrix would produce information that could be used by each institution depending on vision, mission, and institutional external and internal scan data.
Cross Impact Matrix of Trends
A cross impact matrix was constructed using the top twenty trends from six major areas.
Some trends are positive and some trends are negative
Each trend was paired with every other trend to assess whether or not that trend had positive or negative impact, as viewed by the participaing group.
A 20x20 matrix was created.
Matrix Scoring
Scoring was based on the following (row trend impact on column trend):
+2 Major Positive impact
+1 Positive impact
0 Negligible impact
-1 Negative impact
-2 Major Negative impact
Matrix Summary
Row totals and column totals were computed from the matrix and rankings determined.
The interpretations are very helpful in assessing the impact of trends for SWOT analysis, needs analysis, and other aspects of strategic planning.
Top 20 Trends in Higher Education
Increasingly unprepared students Increase adult learners / professional programs Expanded learning environment / partnerships Increase in computer technology Increase distance learning Increase demand for computer literacy Outcomes assessment Decreasing funding Affirmative action Increase competition from private sector
Top 20 Trends in Higher Education (cont’d)
Increase in immigration/demand Increase of language diversity Increase of ethnic diversity Increasing demand for higher education Increase in class disparity Increasing demands on curriculum Increasing criticism of tenure Increase in attack on shared governance Aging faculty/ increasing retirement age Decrease in liberal studies
Row Totals – Trend drivers
Strong Positive - Trend has a strong positive multiplying effect on other trends. Consideration should be given to proactive strategies and support: Outcomes Assessment (18) Expanded Learning Environment / Partnerships (17) Increased use of Distance Learning (8)
Row Totals – Trend drivers
Strong Negative: Strong negative multiplying effect. Consider strategies to protect against or eliminate effects. Decrease in funding (-23) Increase in unprepared students (-20) Increased immigration/demand (-13) Increase in ethnic diversity (-12) Aging faculty/Incr. retirement age (-10)
Summary of Trend Driver Analysis
Decreased funding and more students with special needs will tax higher education.
An aging faculty will continue to tie up funds that could be used for younger faculty.
Outcomes assessment will help streamline delivery of education, improve quality, and address the needs of a more diverse clientele.
Small gains will be made with strategic partners.
Row minus Column Totals – Root Cause Trends
A measure of the root cause or underlying effect of the trend.
Be proactive in planning for negative trends.
Taking advantage of positive trends to the extent possible.
Root Cause Trends (Row – Column)
High Negative Increasing immigration/demand (-13) Increase in unprepared students (-11) Increasing ethnic diversity (-10) Aging Faculty/Increasing retirement age (-9)
Root Cause Trends (Row – Column)
High Positive Outcomes assessment (15) Increasing demand for computer literacy (14) Expanded learning environment / partnerships (11)
Summary of Root Cause Analysis
Demographic trends will tax resources.
Major expense - high seniority faculty.
Outcomes assessment - positive impact.
Increasing computer literacy and expanding the learning environment will be favored strategies.
Sizable gains would result from more prepared incoming students.
Overall Summary #1
Demographic changes and an aging faculty will have major impacts on the cost of higher education and tax resources — resources that could otherwise be spent on technology and improved curriculum to meet the needs increasing numbers of students, adult learners, and those seeking professional education.
New ways of efficiently and effectively dealing with unprepared and non-English proficient students must be devised.
Overall Summary #2
Consideration should be given to offering faculty golden-handshake packages and other incentives to retire.
Surprisingly, faculty related trends (other than aging) did not measure up in impact to the demographic trends. Not that faculty issues are not relevant, just not as significant in the total scheme.
Unfortunately, most trends are on the “negative” side of the slate. Higher education is in for a rough ride.
Overall Summary #3
Institutions that plan carefully for these trends may survive as the rest struggle to maintain some measure of quality.
Opportunities will emerge for alternate providers who take advantage.
California Assessment
Community Colleges - Having difficulty redefining their mission. Faculty are on record stating trends will not affect them.
CSU – Some system-wide initiatives are addressing these trends with faculty participation
UC - Growth plans insufficient to meet states demands for grad programs and research. (UC Merced - 2005). Budget low.
Privates - Inroads in graduate degree programs.
Example 4 – Kaizen for Management – Marketing Campaign
We know what a Kaizen event is at the operational level. Is there something that can be used to develop a strategic action plan at the system level?
“Kaizen for Management” uses Deming and Juran concepts to produce a system level action plan in one or two days
Learned from consultant from the Professional Coaches and Mentors Association
Example is for a strategic problem
Kaizen for Management
For middle and executive level managers familiar with the day-to-day operations of the organization
CEO not involved
Focus is on identifying systems that are broken and coming up with an action plan
Can be completed in two days
1. Gather people in one room
Private school needed to increase enrollment to stay above breakeven and increase resources
Economy was affecting recruitment
Attrition was higher than historical rate
Efforts in this are were not working
Gathered all management personnel together plus a few stakeholders
For industrial setting the CEO should be excluded
Example – Private school enrollment was not growing.
2. Brainstorm goalsBrainstorm goals of the process. Purpose is to get juices flowing and have something to compare to
3. Identify major tasks by function
Management team identified the following functional areas:
Advertising
Marketing
Publicity
Recruiting
Retention
Advancement
Using chart pad, make a list of responsibilities by functional area. These are usually cross functional.
4. Identify functional tasks and evaluate
Participants identified up to 22 tasks per functional group. Then evaluate each task using colored dots
Green – task is important and working well
Yellow – Task is important but not working well
Red – Task is not working and/or not important
AdvertisingAdvertising appears to be one of the least effective functions
MarketingCan clearly see how stakeholders view the success and importance of functions. Website and business relations are broken.
PublicityColor and quantity of dots give some indication of the value and status of the function
Recruiting – Page 1Lots of yellow dots indicate a broken system that needs fixing
Recruiting – Page 2Lots of green dots indicate highly successful functions
Retention 1Notice attitudinal item #8. Willingness for staff to improve is questioned.
Retention 2
Retention 3Process identified a lot of weaknesses in the retention area
5. Use visual data to identify system-wide problem themesSeven potential underlying system-wide problem themes were identified. Each participant was given 3 dots and asked to prioritize. The Top four were selected for action:
1. Communications with parents/community2. Facilities3. Marketing Strategy4. Support Staff
6. Form Self Selected Teams to Develop Action Plans for Each System-wide themeSelf-selected teams enthusiastically formed and presented action plans. One team started implementing their plan before reporting back.
Kaizan for Management Summary
Can be applied to the entire organization.
Day 1 – Steps 1, 2, 3 & 4. Facilitator forms the system-wide themes from the first day results
Day 2 – Finalize and select themes for action items. Teams prepare action plans and present to CEO for final approval
If approved, action plans can be implemented without a lot of consensus building
Example 5 - QFD – Stakeholder Review of Strategic Plan
QFD emphasizes stakeholder involvement in development of user requirements for product or service development
Use stakeholders to help assess a strategic plan. Get stakeholder feedback on whether or not the strategic plan will provide the products and/or services they desire.
College of Engineering Strategic Plan
1. BS and MS degree programs that meet societal and workforce needs
2. Successful students
3. Outstanding faculty and staff dedicated to student success
4. State-of-the-art facilities
5. Sustainable financial resources
6. Strong ties with external constituencies and the community
Six major areas. Several dozen objectives in each area
Invited 20+ CEOs a retreatCEOs were asked to help critique the strategic planGreen, Yellow, and Red dots were used on charts around the roomDot patterns were used to generate discussion
2. Successful Students – Graduate Programs
Strong bias among stakeholders against MS programs. Want to put resources toward our great BS programs.
They consider other schools for MS programs.
2. Successful Students – Diversity
Strong aversion to using “programs” to teach diversity (too passive).
Participants felt very strongly they learned by working on engineering projects with diverse teams and my visiting, working, and living in other countries/cultures.
3. Faculty & Staff
Not as supportive of tenured faculty as expected.
Strong support for use of lecturers who were professionals with current work experience.
4. State-of-the-art Facilities
Probably the most surprising findings: Lack-luster support of this goal
Strong belief that you don’t need state-of-the-art for most teaching.
Emphasis should be on getting good faculty who will know what facilities are needed for the program.
Six Levels of Quality System Implementation (Hayes, ASTD Handbook)
1 No quality system
2 Realization of the need to change
3 In the process of developing a top down policy/strategy
4 Quality system in place to react to customer needs
5 Proactive quality system in place to prevent quality problems
6 Fully integrated customer-focused quality system
(c) 2008, Dr. Phillip R. Rosenkrantz
81
Transactional vs. Transformational Leadership
1 None
Transactional Leadership (Frederick Taylor) – Hierarchical management with focus on individual performance, how work is done, and problem solving. Incremental improvements in work methods and productivity. Non-threatening.
2 Realization
3 Strategy
4 Customer Transformational Leadership (Deming, Senge, and others)– Emphasis on empowerment and how people think about work. System thinking, team learning, and major culture change. Policy Deployment.
5 Proactive
6 Integrated
(c) 2008, Dr. Phillip R. Rosenkrantz
82
Leadership Roadmap
1 None Realization Phase – Leadership transformation. Training on values, communications. Basic tools. “Low hanging fruit”. Build Trust. Shift emphasis away from targets.2 Realizatio
n
3 Strategy Transition Phase – Strategic planning & systems thinking. Department level teams. Quality tools. Int/Ext customer focus.
4 Customer
5 Proactive Performance Phase – Alignment. Empowerment. Process improvement. High performance teams. Variation reduction tools. Redesign.
6 Integrated
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