ArticlesBase.com - Free Articles Directory
Free Online Articles Directory
21.08.2008 Sign In Register Hello Guest
Email:
Password:
Remember Me 
forgot your password?


Problem-solving Success Tip: Everyone Necessary, Nobody Extraneous

Author: Jeanne Sawyer Author Ranking Blue | Posted: 17-07-2008 | Comments: 0 | Views: 9 | Rating:  (221) Article Popularity - Blue (?) Got a Question? Ask.
Sign Up Now!
Jeanne Sawyer

Everyone Necessary, Nobody Extraneous

The goal is to make sure everybody who can contribute to the problem-solving effort is appropriately involved. The key word here is appropriately. There are many different ways of involving people in the effort, making best use of their skills and time available and satisfying management's need to know what is happening. The more political and visible the problem, the more important it is to manage everyone's participation.

Start by developing a list of key players: all the people who should participate in the problem-solving effort in some way. Then define the most effective role for each. Typically, there will be a small group of people who have specific skills that you need intensively, and who can and will actively participate in the whole problem-solving effort. These should be the members of your core team.

In addition, you will have stakeholders who need to be informed of progress but won't directly contribute to solving the problem. You may also need technical experts who can contribute to understanding the problem causes or to identifying solutions, but don't need to participate in the entire problem-solving effort.

For stakeholders who need to be informed of progress, develop and publish a communication plan. Tell them when and how they will be kept up-to-date with regular progress reports as well as if anything goes wrong. These stakeholders do not like surprises, so give them what they need to be confident that you and your team are on track and that they'll know with plenty of warning if you're not. If they have this confidence, they'll tend to leave you alone to do your work.

The more political the problem, the more likely it is that some of these stakeholders will try to attend team meetings. Generally, this is a very bad idea: their presence tends to disrupt rather than contribute to progress. If you have this situation, the best way to keep them out is to develop a strong communication plan and follow it, thus demonstrating that their attendance is unnecessary as a way of finding out what's going on.

Technical experts tend to be in high demand, making it hard to get their time. Use these people only where you really need them, which generally means they don’t belong on your core team. Invite them only to specific meetings where you really need their expertise, such as to a session where possible root causes are identified or where you are analyzing the merits of possible solutions.

Only have the people on your core team who will contribute actively to solving the problem and who are truly needed for the entire problem-solving effort.

Copyright 2008. Jeanne Sawyer. All Rights Reserved.

Rate this Article: Current: 0 / 5 stars - 0 vote(s).

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/management-articles/problemsolving-success-tip-everyone-necessary-nobody-extraneous-488210.html

Print this Article Print article   Email to a Friend Send to friend   Publish this Article on your Website Publish this Article   Send Author Feedback Author feedback  
About the Author:

Jeanne Sawyer helps her clients solve expensive, chronic problems, such as those that cause operational disruptions and cause customers to take their business elsewhere. Find out about her book, When Stuff Happens: A Practical Guide to Solving Problems Permanently, and get more free information on problem solving at her web site: http://www.sawyerpartnership.com/.

Submitting articles has become one of the most popular means of generating quality backlinks and targeted traffic to your website. Join us today - It's Free!

Article Comments

Comment on this article Comment on this article
Your Name
Your Email:
Comment Body
Enter Validation Code: Captcha


Related Articles

Problem-solving Success Tip: Plan for Things to Go Wrong
By: Jeanne Sawyer | 19/08/2008 | Management
We've heard it before, and it's still true: if something can go wrong, it will. This tip tells you how to keep that something from derailing your problem-solving effort.

Five More Problem-solving Success Tips
By: Jeanne Sawyer | 08/02/2008 | Management
The ability to solve complicated problems quickly is more important than ever in today's competitive economy. This article is one of a series: tips and reminders that will help you solve messy problems quickly and easily.

Problem-solving Success Tip: Choose Solutions That Work and Implement Them Completely
By: Jeanne Sawyer | 21/06/2007 | Management
Sounds obvious, but many problem-solving projects fall apart at what should be the easy part. Choose a solution strategy that works, i.e., fixes the right problem and is practical for your situation. Then implement the strategy--completely. The problem won't go away if you get distracted by other projects and never finish. This article includes ideas to help make sure you get to really do solve that problem.

Problem-Solving Success Tip: Define the Problem First
By: Jeanne Sawyer | 11/04/2006 | Management
It seems obvious, but how many times have we gone to a problem-solving meeting and the discussion started with either whose fault was it or an assertion about the proper solution? Find out how to avoid this trap.

Problem-Solving Success Tip: Use Your Time for Problems that are Truly Important
By: Jeanne Sawyer | 16/05/2006 | Organizational
Hard as it may be to walk away once you're aware of it, just because a problem is there doesn't mean you have to solve it. Find out ways to decide if the problem you face is worth the effort and expense to solve.

Problem-solving Success Tip: Communicate! Don't Leave your Key Stakeholders Guessing
By: Jeanne Sawyer | 20/02/2007 | Management
We are generally not very good about keeping others informed about the progress we're making, especially if there isn't much. You're more likely to get support and understanding if you get the word out honestly about what is and isn't happening.

Problem-Solving Success Tip: Test Your Assumptions About Everything
By: Jeanne Sawyer | 15/06/2006 | Management
Assumptions have a way of creeping into all parts of a problem-solving project. They're often wrong, which can lead to a lot of wasted effort and even cause a problem-solving project to fail entirely. It's very easy to take a strongly stated assertion as true, especially if it's the boss who makes it.

Problem-solving Success Tip: Look for Sponsors and Solution Owners
By: Jeanne Sawyer | 18/01/2007 | Management
Look for sponsors and solution owners rather than problem owners. Find out why the common practice of assigning problem owners gets in the way of problem-solving and how to avoid two common problem-solving traps.

Got a Question? Ask.

Ask the community a question about this article:

Frequently Asked Questions

Investing with no money.
By: supermania | 20-11-2007
I'm 30 with no assets. I want to start investing in real estae but have no money.How can I start?

My question is about Windows Live how many users ...
By: teddy444 | 20-11-2007
My question is about Windows Live how many users can i add to my windows?

What  the best stock to invent this days?
By: ZIZI | 19-11-2007
What  the best stock to invent this days?

Am calling a company on phone for the first time ...
By: robkatch | 19-11-2007
Am calling a company on phone for the first time,how do i talk to the secretary and ask her to forward me to the main person am looking forsay maybe the procurement guy?

Stock exchange
By: ofzer | 19-11-2007
which stock will bring me the most profit

Whein upgrades are available for Microsoft , thet ...
By: charlie768 | 18-11-2007
whein upgrades are available for Microsoft , thet download but will not install I have ie6 on windows XP

Q&A Powered by:
Powered by Yedda 

Latest Management Articles

The Quickest Way to Generate Targeted Traffic Through Affiliate Marketing
By: Ravii Kumarr | 21/08/2008
The quickest way to generate targeted traffic and start earning commissions with an affiliate marketing business is to use Google adwords. One doesn't even need a website of their own to make money online using adwords. Traffic can be sent directly to an affiliate link.

The Audit's Results and Report - the True Story, According to the Iso 9001 Standard Requirements
By: Itay Abuhav | 21/08/2008
The internal audit chapter is included under chapter 8.2 - Monitoring and measurement (it's been said before on our web site already). When performing an audit you are monitoring processes. You sample a process and validate that it is done according to prior requirements. Once you stumble upon nonconformity, a process that was performed not according to a requirement, you must mention it in the audit report. But this is not the end of your story.

Internal Audit - the Iso 9001 Standard Requirements for Internal Audits and the Audits Program
By: Itay Abuhav | 21/08/2008
Internal Audit. "What a headache" - that's surely what every employee think to himself when they receives the massage of an internal audit approaching. There is a reason why. They know that someone is coming to poke their deeds...

How Scheduled Overtime Can be Better Managed
By: SteveHyans | 21/08/2008
HourDoc offers superior solutions for scheduled overtime. HourDoc’s scheduled overtime solution takes into account PTO, electronic timesheets and other valuable time and attendance hardware features. Many clients using the HourDoc scheduled overtime solution comment that better managing scheduled overtime helps them save time and money.

Why Managing Scheduled Overtime is Critical
By: SteveHyans | 21/08/2008
HourDoc offers a superior scheduled overtime solution. HourDoc’s scheduled overtime solution takes into account PTO, OT, electronic timesheets and other valuable scheduled overtime features. Many clients using the HourDoc scheduled overtime solution comment that these options help them solve scheduled overtime issues.

Top Ten Success Factors Of Lean Six Sigma - Identifying Success Factors Critical To Deployment, And Evaluating Which Tools Have The Most Impact On Pro
By: Jonathan Aston | 21/08/2008
Identifying success factors critical to deployment, and evaluating which tools have the most impact on projects New research has identified the success factors critical to the success of a lean six sigma deployment, and the ones that make a difference etween partial and complete success. The research also examined tool use in...

How to Have More Fun Running Your Painting Business
By: Patrick E Cavanaugh | 20/08/2008
Everything comes with instructions, why not a painting company? Call it automating your business, any time you can automate a procedure you free up your time. An automated business can run without a manager, you. Can your company run for any length of time without you? Can you take a vacation?

Secrets of Marketing Your Painting Business
By: Patrick E Cavanaugh | 20/08/2008
Where do the jobs come from? How do we get new customers? How do we expand into a new area. How do we market? Do we just throw dollars at everything that is screaming to us, "buy from me, I will send you all the customers you want. Do we take one big burst of advertising to everyone?

More from Jeanne Sawyer

Problem-solving Success Tip: Plan for Things to Go Wrong
By: Jeanne Sawyer | 19/08/2008 | Management
We've heard it before, and it's still true: if something can go wrong, it will. This tip tells you how to keep that something from derailing your problem-solving effort.

Problem-solving Success Tip: Everything Necessary, Nothing Extraneous
By: Jeanne Sawyer | 26/03/2008 | Management
Make sure you solve the problem completely, but don't get sidetracked into doing other things that, while useful, won't make this problem go away. Put those extras aside to evaluate later as other projects. This problem-solving tip is about avoiding "while you're at it" syndrome.

Five More Problem-solving Success Tips
By: Jeanne Sawyer | 08/02/2008 | Management
The ability to solve complicated problems quickly is more important than ever in today's competitive economy. This article is one of a series: tips and reminders that will help you solve messy problems quickly and easily.

Problem-solving Success Tip: Keep your Promises
By: Jeanne Sawyer | 29/11/2007 | Management
Successful problem-solving means you must do what you promise and don’t promise what you can’t deliver. It seems obvious, but many people don’t manage to do this. This tip will help you avoid the problem.

Still More Problem-solving Success Tips
By: Jeanne Sawyer | 25/10/2007 | Management
The ability to solve complicated problems quickly is more important than ever in today's competitive economy. This article is one of a series- tips and reminders that will help you solve messy problems quickly and easily.

Problem-solving Success Tip: Have the Courage to Say No
By: Jeanne Sawyer | 21/09/2007 | Management
When companies are faced with a major problem, such as something that makes a strategic customer start making angry phone calls, there is a lot of pressure to "do something" and do it quickly. If you're being pushed into a no-win situation or asked to work miracles, this is a good time to "just say no."

Problem-solving Success Tip- Reward Prevention
By: Jeanne Sawyer | 19/07/2007 | Management
Although it's generally understood that it costs more to deal with crises than to prevent them, many companies do not recognize and reward those who push past the symptoms to the root causes, preventing future occurrences. Unfortunately, it's not so easy to tell when a crisis is avoided. This problem-solving tip includes some ideas that may help.

Problem-solving Success Tip: Choose Solutions That Work and Implement Them Completely
By: Jeanne Sawyer | 21/06/2007 | Management
Sounds obvious, but many problem-solving projects fall apart at what should be the easy part. Choose a solution strategy that works, i.e., fixes the right problem and is practical for your situation. Then implement the strategy--completely. The problem won't go away if you get distracted by other projects and never finish. This article includes ideas to help make sure you get to really do solve that problem.

Article Categories






Give Feedback

Sign up for our email newsletter

Receive updates, enter your email below