Installing a proper
Management Structure |
Has your business grown to the point where it is
difficult to manage?
Once your business reaches a certain size it
must have an appropriate structure, capable of handling the demands of your business
activity and flexible enough to react to rapid changes in market fashions or economic
environment. The broad rules for business structure are:
- you must have a
realistic business plan covering the next five years. Where do you want your
business to go?
- your pyramid must be as
flat as possible. The more layers you have in your business, the more you
complicate communication and bind the line staff with bureaucracy.
- you must make a clear
distinction between supervision
and management. Supervisors run the day to day
affairs of a business, i.e. they control the teams who do the work that the business
derives it's income from; a supervisor is concerned with today, tomorrow, next week and a
few weeks into the future. A manager is responsible for the long term growth and
development of the business, and is concerned with the time period from one month to five
years ahead.
These responsibilities are separate. Commonly, when a business is structured badly,
managers and supervisors trip over each other trying to do the same job, while nobody is
looking after the big picture and thinking ahead.
- everyone must only dance
to one master. Reporting lines must be clear and everyone should have only one
boss. For example, it is not acceptable for a manager to bypass a supervisor
and direct the line staff; this creates divisiveness and confusion. The standard test to
see if this has been achieved is to ask any member of staff: Who do you work
for?. If the answer is unclear or the staff member nominates multiple
bosses, you have a situation where productivity will be lost and staff
turnover will be higher than necessary.
(Note: This is a simplistic rendering of what can be a complicated issue. The finer
points of reporting and structuring are outside the scope of this document).
- everyone must know
exactly what their job is, and how they are judged. This issue is simple: How
can you kick a goal if the goal posts are not stationary and visible? In a well structured
business you should be able to walk up to any member of staff and ask: What exactly
is your job, and how does your superior judge if you are doing your job well or
not?, and get an accurate, consistent answer. In the absence of staff having this
information, productivity will be lost, conflict will arise and performance assessment
will have to be based on a subjective rather than an objective basis.
- Job Descriptions should
be based on responsibilities, not tasks. An effective Job Description is not a
task list or a duty statement rather, it defines responsibilities and forces an
employee to take control of their own performance.
- in order to make a
manager or supervisor accountable, you must allow them to choose who comes into their team
and who leaves their team. The responsibility for staff recruitment (and
training) must go hand in hand with team leadership, otherwise team leaders have the
perfect excuse for the non performance of staff: I didnt hire them, or
I didnt train them.
- the 10 to 1 rule must be
adhered to. Each manager or supervisor should have no more than 10 people
reporting to them. With any more, control and personal development becomes difficult to
accomplish.
- regular, objective
performance appraisal must be carried out on all personnel. Monthly informal
performance appraisal should be the primary tool for the direction of a medium sized, or
large business. Performance Appraisal should constantly refer back to the responsibilities
defined in the person's Job Description and should set clear, challenging goals for the
future.
We can help you to structure your business in
the most professional and appropriate manner if you get your structure right, your
staff will run your business.
Further
reading from our library:
Going from a small business to a company
Stepping
away from your business
On
putting your business under management
The
confusion of job titles
Spelling
out what you want
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to Management Services

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