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On the train #1

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On the train.

A loud voice.

“You haven’t got enough on him.

He is crap.

Double his targets.

Make him get another job.

Gradually get him out.

You have been too nice for too long.

I will phone her to try and sort this out.

I won’t charge you.

I want something else.

I want your HR work.

I WANT YOUR HR WORK”

 

Laughter of disbelief throughout carriage.

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What’s your emblem?

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Recognise the brands?

Logos

 

Which ones?

Nike and….?

And….?

 

 

Yup, Speedo.

What are the emblems for your organisation that capture what you do – and declare your promise?

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To target or not to target?

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What do you think of targets? Do you have some that you’ve been set or have given to others?

There is a broad school of thought which has grown up recently to criticise the use of targets.

The line of argument goes something like this: Any sort of arbitrary measure like a target results in people focusing only on ’meeting the target’. This then limits the methods they’ll use to improve the organisation (as they’ll only try ones that seem to contribute to the target) and they’ll ignore signals from other places (eg feedback from customers) which may actually be more important than achieving the target.  

Based on this, the anti-target school claims that ALL targets will make the system you work in worse as they direct attention and effort to the wrong things and result in unintended bad consequences.

On the other hand, it’s hard to know what you’re trying to achieve (and especially hard to have a team share this view) without some sort of articulation of the goal, objective, etc and a way of measuring progress towards it. What will success look like?

Moreover, clearly athletes benefit from having a target to aim for – “I want to knock 10 seconds off my personal best”.

And the anti-target school seems happy with actions being steered by what customers define as success: things along the line of ”customers want their products to work first time or their appointments to be kept”. Is that some sort of target?

Maybe, as Wittgenstein explored, it’s a matter of language. Perhaps targets have a role but only if we understand what they mean and what the intention behind them is?

A top city? And your personal brand…

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A World Class City has at least 10 sights that pretty much everyone in the world (from the Nairobi slum dweller with their shack-TV to the LA mogul with their glossy magazines) would recognise.

The ones that spring to mind?  New York, Paris, London.  Which others do you reckon? 

And what are the 10 things that all who you meet know you for?  What is your recognisable brand?  What is your promise? 

 

PS a photo from St Pancras Station – not one of the top 10 sights, but attractive anyhow.

St Pancras flowers