Management
Development Training: The Late Show
It is 7:00 pm,
you are not only late for dinner, you haven’t even left the
office yet. Your day was a constant barrage of demands from field
reps, delayed deliveries, customer complaints, malfunctioning office
equipment, overdue correspondence … the list just keeps getting
longer and longer. How can you withstand the pressure to perform,
to respond, to solve problems and keep everyone happy? You might
start with our Management Development
Training Course. We focus on practical things like communication
skills, organization and time management, understanding the needs
of different personality types, and so much more. If you are looking
for management training skills that can help you survive and thrive,
your search is over.
Does it seem
like your employee's procrastination problem is in repeats? It's
time to find a solution or say your goodbyes.
What do you
do when an em-ployee always does tomorrow what could be done today?
Dan Gould learned the hard way with one early project manager: "He'd
take his laptop home, saying he'd work," says Gould, 34, "but
never get anything done."
Gould is founder and CEO of Synergy Investment, a Westborough, Massachusetts-based
company that retrofits energy-efficient lighting. He ran out of
energy dealing with the employee and eventually let him go. "It
was frustrating," he says.
One thing is
for sure, nagging isn't the answer. "Putting pressure on procrastinators
only backfires," says Neil Fiore, president of Self-Leadership
Seminars in Berkeley, California, and author of The Now Habit: A
Strategic Plan for Overcoming Procrastination While Enjoying Guilt-Free
Play (Putnam-Tarcher). "You need a strategic plan."
Just Do It
We all procrastinate
sometimes, and for different reasons. That procrastinator in the
corner cubicle may be a poor time manager. But
procrastination can also be a mind game some employees play
to literally psych themselves out until an assignment looks too
intimidating. Then there are employees who feel burned out or frustrated
and do busy work-cleaning their desks, surfing the Web and so on-for
immediate gratification and a feeling of competency.
No matter the
cause, procrastination is a big productivity drain that you have
to deal with. Habitual procrastinators "have a planning disability,"
says Saul E. Rosenberg, a psychotherapist and executive coach in
Corte Madera, California. "Entrepreneurs have to do a lot of
organizing, structuring and planning [for them], much more than
they would do with an ordinary employee."
So how do you
get a procrastinator moving? The first step is to focus on starting.
After all, a procrastinator can't finish what he or she hasn't started
yet.
"A lot
of type-A management types tend to focus
on the end point, and that tends to overwhelm people," says
Fiore, who has worked with hundreds of procrastinators, from graduate
students struggling to finish dissertations to people facing five
years in back taxes. "Ask, 'How can I help you get started?'
"
Fiore suggests
finding a start time based on the employee's schedule that offers
30 uninterrupted minutes to build momentum. Ask the employee to
send you an e-mail afterward, just to let you know he or she got
the ball rolling.
Prodding procrastinators,
however, doesn't stop with getting them started. Today, Synergy's
employees meet with managers in weekly one-on-one sessions where
they offer progress updates and list five things they want to achieve
in the coming week. "You can coach at this point," he
says. "Everyone can use a carrot or a stick, or just some advice."
In fact, coaching is critical to getting the procrastinator to the
finish line, because they desperately need a sense of direction,
a series of short, easily attainable deadlines and lots of feedback.
Don't underestimate
the power of input. "[Their] own way is going to give [them]
a lot more initiative," Fiore says. "Give them as many
choices as you can."
Dive Right
In
Help as much
as you can with the performance
issues, Rosenberg says, but don't play psychologist. If the
procrastinator's habits don't improve in a month or two, it's time
to see a work performance specialist or let the person go.
Gould says if
he finds himself in another procrastination situation, he'll deal
with it "lightning fast." "In retrospect I should
have set some firm goals and then gotten rid of him," he says.
"You can't motivate the unmotivated." That attitude has
energized Synergy's sales to more than $5 million in 2001.
Before you lower
the hatchet, however, take a look at your own management style.
What you see as an employee procrastination problem could be your
own failure to set realistic goals and deadlines. Are you overburdening
employees with too many "urgent priority" projects? Not
giving them enough time to finish, given everything else they have
to do? If so, cut some slack and figure out a new system for assigning
work.
Finally, it
never hurts to learn which tasks employees enjoy and which ones
make them procrastinate. You'll learn who your go-to people are
for
certain tasks, and this will help employees see assignments
as a reward rather than a punishment. With some strategic thinking,
you'll find that your
employees will be doing today what could have been put off until
tomorrow.
By Chris Penttila
Houston

Project Management - A Strategic Plan is Required
Management
Development Training Quote
"Even a mistake may turn out to be the one thing
necessary to a worthwhile achievement."
Henry Ford
Suggested
Reading:
Project
Management: The Managerial Process
by Clifford F. Gray, Erik W. Larson
5-Phase
Project Management: A Practical Planning & Implementation Guide
by Joseph W. Weiss, Robert K. Wysocki
Alpha
Teach Yourself Project
Management in 24 Hours
by Nancy Mingus, Nancy Mingus
Project
Management Tool Kit, The: 100 Tips and Techniques for Getting the
Job Done Right
by Tom Kendrick
Core
Concepts : Project Management in Practice (with CD)
by Samuel J. Mantel
The
Complete Idiot's Guide to Project Management with Microsoft Project
2003
by Ron Black
The
Art Of Project Management (Professional)
by Scott Berkun
Introduction
to Information Systems Project Management
by David L. Olson, David Olson
Project
Management:A Practical Guide for Success
by Marion E. Haynes
Project
Rescue: Avoiding a Project Management Disaster
by Sanjiv Purba, Joseph Zucchero
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