Wednesday, April 15, 2015

Who’s In Charge? The Case For A Job Description

A job description can be the tipping point to having a successful small business. Too often, the self-employed business owner becomes immersed in performing the business and doesn’t really know what his employees are doing and how they are doing it.

This is a recipe for disaster or a near disaster as one of my personal business coaching clients discovered. He had a small company of four employees and was ready to add a fifth. When I first started collaborating with him I asked him for a job description for each employee as well as himself.

As with most business owners he balked at having to create them. His response was, “We’re doing great. Everyone knows what they are doing.” I replied that “Yes, everyone knows what they are doing. But do you know what they are doing and are they doing it right?”

Job Description—What Are You Doing?

For those of you who have taken online training, business training or business courses you understand the importance of a job description. A job description not only defines a job but how the job is being done. A job description brings accountability to measure performance.

This last part, measuring performance is critical. Without accurate measurements, most businesses will ultimately drift into failure. Running a small business is part art or feel and part logic, the thinking.

When my client said his people knew what they were doing he was correct in one sense. They did know what they were doing. The first question was whether or not what they were doing was positioning the company to grow. Were they doing things the right way?

It turned out much to his surprise and disgust, they certainly did know what they were doing. The problem was that much of it was related to making their positions as easy as possible and they were actually detracting from the performance of the company.

Job Description—Know What You And Your Employees Are Doing

Without a job description it is hard to have any meaningful accountability. Why? The job becomes whatever and however the employee chooses to define it. And, that definition can change to suit the circumstances.

The scattered self-employed business owner is focused on everything at once which means that much gets overlooked. And, when it comes to trusting employees without a job description you are writing the formula for failure. Failure and ignorance go hand in hand.

Job Description To The Rescue

After discovering a multitude of problems because each employee had no job description this self-employed business owner embraced the process. Within two weeks each employee and himself had a job description. Yes, there was some resentment with some of the employees and ultimately two of them were let go.

But, the result was everyone knew their responsibilities, a chain of command was established freeing up the self-employed business owner’s time. Each job description brought accountability and improved performance. Also, a definitive work flow was established. Things calmed down.

And, where this business had been stuck for two years it was able to grow significantly with a solid foundation in place. The key as this owner found out is not to hire the best people. The key is to have the best process. When you have the best process you will increase the odds of having people do their best.

And, the center of the best process is to have a written job description for each employee. It created standards. Without a job description in place for each team member it is not possible to have a vibrant and long-term team.

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Monday, April 6, 2015

Business Keys To Success: Self-Discipline

The road to success and ultimately more happiness is paved with self-discipline. Author H. Jackson Brown Jr. said, “Talent without discipline is like an octopus on roller skates. There’s plenty of movement, but you never know if it’s going to be forward, backwards, or sideways.” If you know you have talent, and you’ve seen a lot of motion—but little concrete results—you may lack self-discipline. The road to small business success, or any success for that matter and happiness is paved with self-discipline.

Self-discipline-Sort Out Your Priorities

What two or three areas of your life are vital to your success? Write them down, along with the disciplines that you must develop to keep growing and improving in those areas. Develop the disciplines and more importantly develop an action plan with concrete steps that you must apply whether it is daily or weekly. Plan how they are going to become part of your life.

Self-discipline-List the Reasons

What are the benefits of practicing the disciplines you just listed? Starting something new is not easy. Without a positive vision of the benefits it is more challenging to follow through. Post these benefits somewhere where you will see them daily. In my personal business coaching practice I have observed the importance of constant visualization of what we want to accomplish and how it gives impetus to making it a reality.

Self-discipline—Get Rid of Excuses

Whether you are a self-employed business owner, entrepreneur, solo professional or corporate manager or executive all of us come up with excuses as to why we are not getting things done. To eliminate the roadblocks to developing your new disciplines write down the reasons as to why you may not be able to follow through with them. Read through them. And then dismiss them as the excuses they are.

Here’s the hard part. Even if a reason seems legitimate, find a solution to overcome it. Don’t leave yourself any reasons to quit. Remember that a discipline is the bridge between a thought and an action. Only when you have the discipline to act do you have the power to achieve your dreams.
There is a nursery in Canada that displays this sign on their wall: “The best time to plant a tree is twenty-five years ago…..The second best time is today.” Plant the tree of self-discipline in your life today.

About Author :

First things first, I like to have fun with people and what I do. I am a personal business coach.Yes, I have received training and been coaching since 1983. I have gone through and continue to happily go through more personal development.

Personal development and its quest for personal growth, more often than not, are the missing links in the chain of business and personal success.As Warren Buffett once said, “Success is getting what you want. Happiness is wanting what you get.”

For more information please visit : http://www.businesskeystosuccess.com