Posts Tagged ‘Resources’

6 Sigma Projects Management Support

Friday, May 15th, 2009

This is a feature that we are implementing with each post. It is here because we provide Six Sigma training coaching and support across Arizona, including the Tucson, Phoenix, Scottsdale, and Glendale areas. At this time we would like to thank our friends and clients for their support. If you have landed here looking for our Six Sigma training, coaching or support services in Tucson, then please follow this Six Sigma Training link.

The most critical item to the success of a Six Sigma project is management support. We always check and ask for it. But is what we ask for what we really want?

SUPPORT YOU DON’T WANT

There are four types of management support that you really do not want to have. They are support by command, decreed rules, authorized overrides, and redirection of resources. With these employees tend, luckily, to use their best judgment to “adjust” the dictates to make things work. But doing that adds to the confusion and never really solves the problem. Many times it make matters worse. Plus if YOU are the one these are suppose to help, these support type have just done the opposite. Think about it when a manager commands you to do something, changes the rules, gives someone the authority to NOT follow the standard procedure, or pull resources from you for a “Pet Project”; how do you feel? Frustrated, confused, and angry NOT a good way to start a project.

SUPPORT YOU DO WANT

Lucky for us there are four OTHER ways for management to support our projects. They are cultural change, mentoring, ID informal leaders, legitimate ways around roadblocks. Of these four by far the best one is cultural change.

Support through cultural change happens when the managers uses their persuasive power to create a company culture that embraces change instead of fighting it. Where they show employees the benefits of being evolved in solving the companies issues and problems. This is empowerment to help make the change NOT “My way or the Highway”

Support through mentoring – Today’s companies are complex and sometimes confusing as to who or where to go for help in solutions to roadblocks. A mentor is a wise and trusted counselor or teacher. This should be Management ( your project sponsor). Management has the top level birdseye view of the company that allows them to guide you through that company maze identifying who can help you solve your roadblocks.

Support through Informal Leaders – Many times it is not a manager that is the expert but some individual engineer, supervisor, or lead technician that has the answers to a problem. BUT I can assure you management knows who these “informal leaders” are and can guide you to them.

Support through Legitimate ways around a roadblock – There maybe way to get issues solved through resource not known to you as the project leader. Here again management with their birds eye view of the company may know just where to find that resource. For example you may need a mechanical engineer for your project but engineering can not part with one due to work loads. Management may know a place, like a temp organization that they could hire one to do the job for this project.

So as you can see when you ask for management support think about what you will need and let them know what that is. Both you and management will be much happier with the results.

If your business is located anywhere in the World including the US, Tucson, Oro Valley , Oracle, Phoenix, Glendale, and Scottsdale, Arizona or beyond and you would like to learn more about our Six Sigma training, coaching and support services please call Bersbach Consulting at 1-520-721-2077 or SKYPE me  Now!

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6 Sigma Five Key Elements to Project Success

Thursday, May 14th, 2009

This is a feature that we are implementing with each post. It is here because we provide Six Sigma training coaching and support across Arizona, including the Tucson, Phoenix, Scottsdale, and Marana areas. At this time we would like to thank our friends and clients for their support. If you have landed here looking for our Six Sigma training, coaching or support services in Marana then please follow this Six Sigma Training link.

In the Six Sigma Handbook, by Thomas Pyzdek, he defines nine criterion's on which to score a project. All nine of these criteria fall into one of the following 5 Key elements for success without which failure will most likely occur. These five element are not only important to have at the beginning of a project but you will have to continually clarify them all the way through your project to keep them up-front, supported and visible to all until completion. As such I will give you the “signs” that will show you if you are loosing the focus on any one of the five.

 

1. A Common Vision and aligned goals: Having a vision for a company, personal, or Six Sigma project goal or objective is one thing, making it common and everyone aligned and focused on it is another. What I mean by a vision is what will things look like when we are done? You maybe able to visualize it yourself but does everyone else “see” the same thing. Unusually not and when that happens [sign] you will see and feel confusion. The best way to solve this is to insure everyone involved takes part in creating the vision (brainstorm it) and word smith it until all can live with the end result. Then when the team is slipping bring, it back and review it.

2. A Real Need to Improve. This need can NOT be something nice to do. It has to be something we HAVE TO do to succeed. Usually if it is tied to a top level company objective that the company is having a hard time meeting it IS a “have to do” objective. If it is not at this level what [sign] you will see is very slow progress and eventually the project canceled. Why? Because team members and managers had other priorities and this project was not a high one to them. This causes those delays to happen. As I like to say this need, needs to be something that will impact the company and all see that to make this improvement, this project needs to succeed. If things slip you need to work with your sponsor and insure that priorities have not changed.

3. An Established Method to improve. Many time people are told to go fix something and sometimes that works, but when the solution is not obvious you need a method to develop and implement a workable solution. In our case Six Sigma IS that method. A five step method (process) based on facts and data focused on your customer’s value to solve the need and grow your business. What happens if you don’t have a method? [sign] you will have false starts. Put another way, have you ever been in a meeting where once again an issue comes up that was suppose to be solved last week, last month or last year? Those are fixes that were done with no method to the solution. When you see this during your project step back and look at your six sigma methodology and see if you have to refocus the team. An Example of this is trying to fix the problem from what was learned during or at the end of the Measure step. This leads to skipping analysis were we do a “Deep Dive” for the real root cause of what we see.

4. Committed Resources to do the task. The key word here is COMMITTED! Think about who has committed resources to a bacon and eggs breakfast, the chicken or the pig? It is the PIG! The chicken has given you eggs but the pig has given you his life. That is commitment! On your project a manger or supervisor may say they will support the project with their people but they have not committed the resources until they have directed (schedule) them to be on the team and have worked out how to cover for them when they are gone. Covering does not mean they have to catch up on their own time, covering means someone else picks up tasks that they were assigned. How do you know you are loosing resources? [sign] you are feeling frustrated. An occasional loss of resources is one thing but having it happen all the time means frustration and lack of commitment of resource to be successful. Like “need”, this is an issue you should work with your project sponsor and it is an issue of priorities with other functional areas or the sponsor’s area.

5. Leadership Commitment to the project. Just like ‘resources,” the key word here is commitment. If the leadership is not committed to the project you will fail to get the support to make it happen. Committed like the “Pig”. If you do not have this you and your team will feel [sign] disappointment. This one element really leads back to the other four. With out your leadership’s commitment to the project, you will not get committed resources and you need to re-evaluate the projects Vision and need. Obviously Leadership does not see the need to do this and it must not be aligned to their goals and objectives or they do not see the same results (vision) coming from the project. Work with your sponsor to clear up these before you set forward.

 

If you have a good common vision that is aligned to strategic company goals and a real need by the company to meet those goals, then you can apply the six sigma methodology with committed resources and leadership to have a very successful project that will impact the company’s bottom line.

If your business is located anywhere in the World including the US, Tucson, Oro Valley , Oracle, Phoenix, Marana, and Scottsdale, Arizona or beyond and you would like to learn more about our Six Sigma training, coaching and support services please call Bersbach Consulting at 1-520-721-2077 or SKYPE me  Now!