

This post picks up on Parts 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 and examines the fifth of Deming’s 14 Management Points, which urges:
Improve constantly and forever the system of production and service, to improve quality and productivity, and thus constantly decrease costs”
Deming’s fifth point was at the heart of his teachings – the whole idea of continuous improvement. Again, we see the idea of “constantly” (from his first point, Constancy of purpose), this time augmented for emphasis with the “and forever.” Note, he refers to the “system of production and service.” Ever the engineer at heart, Deming saw things through the lens of systems thinking, with its loops of causes and effects. “To improve quality and productivity”. Deming always presented these two sides of the coin – quality leads to productivity. And for emphasis, in case management missed the point, he calls out, “thus to constantly decrease costs.”
This continuous improvement concept was fully embraced by post-war Japan thanks to Deming’s lectures and teachings with remarkable results. In fact, the impact on Japanese manufacturing and business success was so great, that the US and Europe began to take notice in the 80’s and 90’s. In the US, the Malcolm Baldrige Award drove many companies to implement Total Quality Management programs to great effect as company names such as Corning, Motorola, Milliken became virtually synonymous with quality and business success.
In the 1990’s, the late Michael Hammer, with Jim Champy, published Reengineering The Corporation: A Manifesto for Business Revolution. The ideas in this book caught the American leadership imagination. It was more fun to tear down and start over, with the promise of quick, dramatic returns, than to go through the slower, more incremental improvement path. Just as TQM was really taking hold, the reengineering consultants moved in. Please don’t get me wrong – lots of great things came out of business process reengineering, but I regret that the disciplines associated with continuous improvement got brushed aside in the process. The good news is that continuous improvement is gradually finding its way back into the lexicon of management methods, often in the guise of 6 Sigma and related quality improvement methods.
Do you have a culture of continuous quality improvement in your IT organization? If not, why not? What can you do to make a difference?
Graphic courtesy of EveryJoe.com
This post picks up on Parts 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 and examines the fifth of Deming’s 14 Management Points, which urges:
Improve constantly and forever the system of production and service, to improve quality and productivity, and thus constantly decrease costs”
Deming’s fifth point was at the heart of his teachings – the whole idea of continuous improvement. Again, we see the idea of “constantly” (from his first point, Constancy of purpose), this time augmented for emphasis with the “and forever.” Note, he refers to the “system of production and service.” Ever the engineer at heart, Deming saw things through the lens of systems thinking, with its loops of causes and effects. “To improve quality and productivity”. Deming always presented these two sides of the coin – quality leads to productivity. And for emphasis, in case management missed the point, he calls out, “thus to constantly decrease costs.”
This continuous improvement concept was fully embraced by post-war Japan thanks to Deming’s lectures and teachings with remarkable results. In fact, the impact on Japanese manufacturing and business success was so great, that the US and Europe began to take notice in the 80’s and 90’s. In the US, the Malcolm Baldrige Award drove many companies to implement Total Quality Management programs to great effect as company names such as Corning, Motorola, Milliken became virtually synonymous with quality and business success.
In the 1990’s, the late Michael Hammer, with Jim Champy, published Reengineering The Corporation: A Manifesto for Business Revolution. The ideas in this book caught the American leadership imagination. It was more fun to tear down and start over, with the promise of quick, dramatic returns, than to go through the slower, more incremental improvement path. Just as TQM was really taking hold, the reengineering consultants moved in. Please don’t get me wrong – lots of great things came out of business process reengineering, but I regret that the disciplines associated with continuous improvement got brushed aside in the process. The good news is that continuous improvement is gradually finding its way back into the lexicon of management methods, often in the guise of 6 Sigma and related quality improvement methods.
Do you have a culture of continuous quality improvement in your IT organization? If not, why not? What can you do to make a difference?
Graphic courtesy of EveryJoe.com
This post picks up on Parts 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 and examines the fifth of Deming’s 14 Management Points, which urges:
Improve constantly and forever the system of production and service, to improve quality and productivity, and thus constantly decrease costs”
Deming’s fifth point was at the heart of his teachings – the whole idea of continuous improvement. Again, we see the idea of “constantly” (from his first point, Constancy of purpose), this time augmented for emphasis with the “and forever.” Note, he refers to the “system of production and service.” Ever the engineer at heart, Deming saw things through the lens of systems thinking, with its loops of causes and effects. “To improve quality and productivity”. Deming always presented these two sides of the coin – quality leads to productivity. And for emphasis, in case management missed the point, he calls out, “thus to constantly decrease costs.”
This continuous improvement concept was fully embraced by post-war Japan thanks to Deming’s lectures and teachings with remarkable results. In fact, the impact on Japanese manufacturing and business success was so great, that the US and Europe began to take notice in the 80’s and 90’s. In the US, the Malcolm Baldrige Award drove many companies to implement Total Quality Management programs to great effect as company names such as Corning, Motorola, Milliken became virtually synonymous with quality and business success.
In the 1990’s, the late Michael Hammer, with Jim Champy, published Reengineering The Corporation: A Manifesto for Business Revolution. The ideas in this book caught the American leadership imagination. It was more fun to tear down and start over, with the promise of quick, dramatic returns, than to go through the slower, more incremental improvement path. Just as TQM was really taking hold, the reengineering consultants moved in. Please don’t get me wrong – lots of great things came out of business process reengineering, but I regret that the disciplines associated with continuous improvement got brushed aside in the process. The good news is that continuous improvement is gradually finding its way back into the lexicon of management methods, often in the guise of 6 Sigma and related quality improvement methods.
Do you have a culture of continuous quality improvement in your IT organization? If not, why not? What can you do to make a difference?
Graphic courtesy of EveryJoe.com
This post picks up on Part 1 and examines the first of Deming’s 14 Management Points. As I said in the first post, I believe Deming’s 14 Points have great resonance in today’s economy, even if his original language seems a little stilted in today’s world of Tweets and sound bites.
Let’s take his first point:
Create constancy of purpose toward improvement of product and service, with the aim to become competitive and stay in business, and to provide jobs.”
Western Executives, especially in the US, are well known for jumping on management fads – quality circles, total quality management, business process reengineering, balanced scorecards, benchmarking, six sigma, and so on. I’ve consulted to organizations who were in the midst of both a TQM program and a new reengineering initiative and had a group of teams and initiatives to improve processes and another group trying to blow up and re-engineer the very same processes! Needless to say, mass confusion reined, lots of effort was wasted and no real improvement was achieved. I’ve seen many companies caught up in the Six Sigma fad, where “death by 1,000 Six Sigma projects” was a real issue, where keen would-be green-belters are firing up dozens of projects in the interests of belt certification, but with a combined effect that was actually detrimental to firm performance! I’m sure a dose of enterprise-wide collaboration towards continuous process improvement and innovation would have turned a net-negative to a highly net-positive contribution over time, with the power of compounding!
In his excellent book Good To Great, Jim Collins describes how successful transitions don’t happen overnight. He analogizes their success to that of a flywheel, where a sustained momentum accelerates the energy output. Any phenomenal change in its final state looks like a flywheel going very fast. The thing about a flywheel is it takes a great deal of energy to get it moving, but once it’s up to speed, takes little energy to keep it moving. The energy to get it up to speed typically has to come in a sustained series of small steps. In the TQM/Re-engineering example I cited above, you have one set of teams trying to turn the flywheel one way, and another set trying to move it another way. The flywheel stops and starts, changes direction, and never gets enough momentum to sustain change.
Thus, I see the flywheel analogy as a wonderful way of illuminating Deming’s “constancy of purpose,” and a valid dictum to counteract today’s tendency to jump on management fads, while never sustaining the focus and energy long enough to see positive results. It’s a form of “short-termism” in part fueled by Wall Street expectations, and “get rich quick” aspirations.
Also note that Deming refers to “product and service”. He recognizes that both need constant improvement, and that there is typically an important relationship between products and services. And yet the people responsible for products and those responsible for services are often not collaborating towards the bigger picture, so service opportunities are missed by the product folk, and product opportunities missed by the service folk.
Though not evident in Deming’s first point, he does elsewhere (in books and lectures) address the distinctions between improving and innovating, and between improving a product or service, versus improving (or innovating) the process that delivers the product or service.
Note that Deming links the three ideas of becoming competitive, staying in business, and providing jobs. I believe he was very deliberate in connecting these ideas. Many of our institutions today do not try to be competitive (think government or health care). The notion of “too big to fail” gives new meaning to the idea of “staying in business” as a management driver. And increasingly, people are treated as a commodity – ensuring jobs is no longer part of the management compact, with companies firing then rehiring workers according to monthly business cycles, and dot com start ups generating billions of dollars in share capital, without real products and only a handful of employees.
I further believe that the dreadful state of employee engagement – especially in the West and the US today is a sad reflection on leadership, and a leading indicator of more “trouble ahead” in the immortal words of Jerry Garcia! My esteemed colleague Tammy Erickson defines employee engagement as the degree to which employees are willing to give of their discretionary effort. According to a study by BlessingWhite:
Although North America has one of the highest proportions of engaged employees worldwide, fewer than 1 in 3 employees (29%) are fully engaged and 19% are actually disengaged.”
Gallup Organization cites:
Actively disengaged employees erode an organization’s bottom line while breaking the spirits of colleagues in the process. Within the U.S. workforce, Gallup estimates this cost to be more than $300 billion in lost productivity alone.”
So, what are you doing to achieve “constancy of purpose”? What about employee engagement? Is it an issue in your organization? Is the issue recognized? Talked about? Addressed? How can you apply Deming’s 1st point?
Image courtesy of INK08
This post picks up on Part 1 and examines the first of Deming’s 14 Management Points. As I said in the first post, I believe Deming’s 14 Points have great resonance in today’s economy, even if his original language seems a little stilted in today’s world of Tweets and sound bites.
Let’s take his first point:
Create constancy of purpose toward improvement of product and service, with the aim to become competitive and stay in business, and to provide jobs.”
Western Executives, especially in the US, are well known for jumping on management fads – quality circles, total quality management, business process reengineering, balanced scorecards, benchmarking, six sigma, and so on. I’ve consulted to organizations who were in the midst of both a TQM program and a new reengineering initiative and had a group of teams and initiatives to improve processes and another group trying to blow up and re-engineer the very same processes! Needless to say, mass confusion reined, lots of effort was wasted and no real improvement was achieved. I’ve seen many companies caught up in the Six Sigma fad, where “death by 1,000 Six Sigma projects” was a real issue, where keen would-be green-belters are firing up dozens of projects in the interests of belt certification, but with a combined effect that was actually detrimental to firm performance! I’m sure a dose of enterprise-wide collaboration towards continuous process improvement and innovation would have turned a net-negative to a highly net-positive contribution over time, with the power of compounding!
In his excellent book Good To Great, Jim Collins describes how successful transitions don’t happen overnight. He analogizes their success to that of a flywheel, where a sustained momentum accelerates the energy output. Any phenomenal change in its final state looks like a flywheel going very fast. The thing about a flywheel is it takes a great deal of energy to get it moving, but once it’s up to speed, takes little energy to keep it moving. The energy to get it up to speed typically has to come in a sustained series of small steps. In the TQM/Re-engineering example I cited above, you have one set of teams trying to turn the flywheel one way, and another set trying to move it another way. The flywheel stops and starts, changes direction, and never gets enough momentum to sustain change.
Thus, I see the flywheel analogy as a wonderful way of illuminating Deming’s “constancy of purpose,” and a valid dictum to counteract today’s tendency to jump on management fads, while never sustaining the focus and energy long enough to see positive results. It’s a form of “short-termism” in part fueled by Wall Street expectations, and “get rich quick” aspirations.
Also note that Deming refers to “product and service”. He recognizes that both need constant improvement, and that there is typically an important relationship between products and services. And yet the people responsible for products and those responsible for services are often not collaborating towards the bigger picture, so service opportunities are missed by the product folk, and product opportunities missed by the service folk.
Though not evident in Deming’s first point, he does elsewhere (in books and lectures) address the distinctions between improving and innovating, and between improving a product or service, versus improving (or innovating) the process that delivers the product or service.
Note that Deming links the three ideas of becoming competitive, staying in business, and providing jobs. I believe he was very deliberate in connecting these ideas. Many of our institutions today do not try to be competitive (think government or health care). The notion of “too big to fail” gives new meaning to the idea of “staying in business” as a management driver. And increasingly, people are treated as a commodity – ensuring jobs is no longer part of the management compact, with companies firing then rehiring workers according to monthly business cycles, and dot com start ups generating billions of dollars in share capital, without real products and only a handful of employees.
I further believe that the dreadful state of employee engagement – especially in the West and the US today is a sad reflection on leadership, and a leading indicator of more “trouble ahead” in the immortal words of Jerry Garcia! My esteemed colleague Tammy Erickson defines employee engagement as the degree to which employees are willing to give of their discretionary effort. According to a study by BlessingWhite:
Although North America has one of the highest proportions of engaged employees worldwide, fewer than 1 in 3 employees (29%) are fully engaged and 19% are actually disengaged.”
Gallup Organization cites:
Actively disengaged employees erode an organization’s bottom line while breaking the spirits of colleagues in the process. Within the U.S. workforce, Gallup estimates this cost to be more than $300 billion in lost productivity alone.”
So, what are you doing to achieve “constancy of purpose”? What about employee engagement? Is it an issue in your organization? Is the issue recognized? Talked about? Addressed? How can you apply Deming’s 1st point?
Image courtesy of INK08
This post picks up on Part 1 and examines the first of Deming’s 14 Management Points. As I said in the first post, I believe Deming’s 14 Points have great resonance in today’s economy, even if his original language seems a little stilted in today’s world of Tweets and sound bites.
Let’s take his first point:
Create constancy of purpose toward improvement of product and service, with the aim to become competitive and stay in business, and to provide jobs.”
Western Executives, especially in the US, are well known for jumping on management fads – quality circles, total quality management, business process reengineering, balanced scorecards, benchmarking, six sigma, and so on. I’ve consulted to organizations who were in the midst of both a TQM program and a new reengineering initiative and had a group of teams and initiatives to improve processes and another group trying to blow up and re-engineer the very same processes! Needless to say, mass confusion reined, lots of effort was wasted and no real improvement was achieved. I’ve seen many companies caught up in the Six Sigma fad, where “death by 1,000 Six Sigma projects” was a real issue, where keen would-be green-belters are firing up dozens of projects in the interests of belt certification, but with a combined effect that was actually detrimental to firm performance! I’m sure a dose of enterprise-wide collaboration towards continuous process improvement and innovation would have turned a net-negative to a highly net-positive contribution over time, with the power of compounding!
In his excellent book Good To Great, Jim Collins describes how successful transitions don’t happen overnight. He analogizes their success to that of a flywheel, where a sustained momentum accelerates the energy output. Any phenomenal change in its final state looks like a flywheel going very fast. The thing about a flywheel is it takes a great deal of energy to get it moving, but once it’s up to speed, takes little energy to keep it moving. The energy to get it up to speed typically has to come in a sustained series of small steps. In the TQM/Re-engineering example I cited above, you have one set of teams trying to turn the flywheel one way, and another set trying to move it another way. The flywheel stops and starts, changes direction, and never gets enough momentum to sustain change.
Thus, I see the flywheel analogy as a wonderful way of illuminating Deming’s “constancy of purpose,” and a valid dictum to counteract today’s tendency to jump on management fads, while never sustaining the focus and energy long enough to see positive results. It’s a form of “short-termism” in part fueled by Wall Street expectations, and “get rich quick” aspirations.
Also note that Deming refers to “product and service”. He recognizes that both need constant improvement, and that there is typically an important relationship between products and services. And yet the people responsible for products and those responsible for services are often not collaborating towards the bigger picture, so service opportunities are missed by the product folk, and product opportunities missed by the service folk.
Though not evident in Deming’s first point, he does elsewhere (in books and lectures) address the distinctions between improving and innovating, and between improving a product or service, versus improving (or innovating) the process that delivers the product or service.
Note that Deming links the three ideas of becoming competitive, staying in business, and providing jobs. I believe he was very deliberate in connecting these ideas. Many of our institutions today do not try to be competitive (think government or health care). The notion of “too big to fail” gives new meaning to the idea of “staying in business” as a management driver. And increasingly, people are treated as a commodity – ensuring jobs is no longer part of the management compact, with companies firing then rehiring workers according to monthly business cycles, and dot com start ups generating billions of dollars in share capital, without real products and only a handful of employees.
I further believe that the dreadful state of employee engagement – especially in the West and the US today is a sad reflection on leadership, and a leading indicator of more “trouble ahead” in the immortal words of Jerry Garcia! My esteemed colleague Tammy Erickson defines employee engagement as the degree to which employees are willing to give of their discretionary effort. According to a study by BlessingWhite:
Although North America has one of the highest proportions of engaged employees worldwide, fewer than 1 in 3 employees (29%) are fully engaged and 19% are actually disengaged.”
Gallup Organization cites:
Actively disengaged employees erode an organization’s bottom line while breaking the spirits of colleagues in the process. Within the U.S. workforce, Gallup estimates this cost to be more than $300 billion in lost productivity alone.”
So, what are you doing to achieve “constancy of purpose”? What about employee engagement? Is it an issue in your organization? Is the issue recognized? Talked about? Addressed? How can you apply Deming’s 1st point?
Image courtesy of INK08
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NEWS RELEASE: BSG Alliance Raises more than $50 Million to Accelerate Growth (Draft)
belongs to News ![]() by nGenera on 2008-03-25 12:45 PM read 1830 times |
AUSTIN, Texas - March 25, 2008 - BSG Alliance, an on-demand platform for business innovation that enables the Next Generation Enterprise, today announced that it has raised more than $50 million in private financing. This investment was led by Oak Investment Partners, with continued participation from previous investors, including Foundation Capital and Hummer Winblad Venture Partners.
"This is a very significant investment, and will provide the capital to further extend our unique platform to meet strong market demand," said Steve Papermaster, Chairman and CEO of BSG Alliance Corp. "Our Global 2000 customers are ready to make the transformation to Next Generation Enterprises - and our business innovation platform powered by Software-as-a-Service applications is helping accelerate this outcome for them."
With the pace of today's global business, companies must operate with great speed and agility in order to respond both to opportunities and threats, on demand. This is the hallmark of a Next Generation Enterprise, which calls for on demand leadership, talent management and customer experience - and these characteristics, enabled by Software-as-a-Service applications, make up the core of BSG Alliance's offerings. The opportunity in SaaS-based applications is significant - according to Goldman Sachs, the on-demand SaaS market will grow to $21 billion by 2011.
In connection with the financing, Ren Riley, General Partner with Oak Investment Partners, will join BSG Alliance's board of directors. Other BSG Alliance board members include Jim Cash, former James E. Robison Professor, Harvard Business School; Warren Weiss, General Partner at Foundation Capital; Mitchell Kertzman, Managing Director at Hummer Winblad Venture Partners; and Steve Papermaster.
About BSG Alliance Corporation
BSG Alliance is an on-demand platform for business innovation, providing a suite of subscription-based offerings that enable the Next Generation Enterprise. Powered by software and people, BSG's on-demand offerings give organizations sustainable, breakthrough capabilities in leadership performance, talent management and development, and customer experience. Customers that subscribe to the company's on-demand offerings include a marquee list of Global 2000 companies in a range of industries. For more information, please visit http://www.bsgalliance.com/.
Contact:
Jessie Brumfiel for BSG Alliance
JB Labs, Inc.
jb@jb-labs.com
805-686-2718 (office)
805-350-1674 (cell)
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