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Why Hope Is Hurting Your Business

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You are 100% accountable for your current situation and the results you’re achieving. They are a direct reflection of your leadership. As a leader, you have defined the results your company produces, including the performance, procedures, project types, financial systems and the employees being held accountable to deliver results. The bad news is you have manufactured the current situation at your company. But, if you aren’t happy with the status quo, the good news is you can take action to change it.

Hope Is Not a Strategy

Still hoping your situation will magically improve? Stop. The betterment of your company can only be realized through decision, action and innovation – all of which require an investment of time, energy and money. Positive change requires time and dedication to create and implement new systems and strategies. Improvement also requires the owner or president to reshape their role and stop trying to handle it all alone. To accomplish their vision, the head of the company must change their focus to leading, building new customer relationships, winning high margin sales, seeking projects and niches with low competition, developing key talent, creating and enforcing systems, achieving best-in-class results and implementing improvements.

This new focus will cost money, as the company leader will need to hire new talent, implement software, improve the accounting department, develop field production and job-cost scorecards, build an accurate estimating and cost history system, hold weekly manager meetings with direct reports, implement a customer marketing strategy and focus on moving the company to the next level of success.

What You Need to Improve

Consider the following tasks and what might help to improve their chance of success or completion. Note the items that need improvement. As you work through the list, consider how many of these are just hopeful ideas, how many are actions still in progress, and how many you can personally take responsibility for.

What to Improve First

It can be difficult to know which direction to take to start improving your business. Your check marks from this list indicate your critical areas for improvement. There might also be other areas that need some help, standardization, change or innovation.

So, how do you get started on the right path to improvement?

First, identify areas in your business and roles that need to be standardized, documented, enforced, clarified or improved.

Second, prioritize the areas needing improvement based on which will generate the highest return or improved results. Examples:

Third, select the improvement item you’ll commit to start working on first. Start slowly as it takes dedicated time and money to create strategies, systems, processes and standards.

The key is to not only hope it happens but to actually do it. Dedicate time to improving your business as a priority, and do the work required. Improvement generally requires people to change. But remember: People don’t like to change unless they see what’s in it for them. Be sure to communicate the reasons for improvement, and then include your team in developing the overall strategy to build a better business that will allow your company to grow, profit and generate opportunities for employees.

Take one step at a time. Don’t get frustrated and let the pressure of changing your old ways of doing business slow you down or stop your improvement program. Be sure to assign some of the next improvement items to key managers or supervisors to get their involvement and earn buy-in. As each improvement system is created, have the person in charge of developing it present the new way of doing business to the entire team to gather their input and win their buy-in as well.

Change Is Your Choice

Remember: Improvement is hard work, and it’s slow and painful getting people to do things differently. It’s not easy to hire the right person and then let go and delegate to them. It’s hard to implement a new software program that will improve inventory management. It takes a time commitment you don’t have to seek new customers. It’s hard to replace poor performers who have been with you a long time but haven’t committed themselves to learning the new technologies required. It’s difficult to let go of good workers who have bad attitudes, are not team players and are resistant to change.

It’s also uncomfortable to invest money and dedicate regular time to making improvements and doing the difficult things you know you need to do.

As the leader of your company, you must take full responsibility for the results you’re currently achieving – good or bad. You can choose to do nothing differently and continue to accept subpar results. Or, you can stop hoping for better and decide to commit and invest in your future success, continuously improve, do business differently, and ultimately raise your business performance to a higher level.

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