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Atricle Dump - Behaviours - The Blueprint For Change
Economical Printing tem X, people will use Y and behave consistently with how it works. But the reality is that many people continue to behave in the old way. Explanations will be given for this, most of them post hoc rationalizations of the ensuing fiasco. One example is: “people are not motivated enough”. But three months ago you gathered your sales force for a motivational weekend where motivational speakers and your COO infused the troops with excitement for the multi-million-pound investment. Another example: “people don’t see the value of it and don’t use it much”. But you installed the processes and the IT system via several project teams that included representatives of the now-disillusioned troops. They constructed the requirements for the new system. You also hear that the technology is too complex, or that it doesn’t deliver what it promised. But, again, lots of people were involved in its development.The conventional definition of printing mainly refers to the reproduction of texts and images, typically with ink on paper with the use of a printing press. The concept facilitates printing on various surfaces, ranging from paper and metal to plastics and fabric. Different techniques are employed for printing on the different substrates. The ink used may also differ from surface to surface.The ink that is used greatly influences the cost of printing. Water-based and oil-based inks were the first types of ink used in the traditional printing processes. However, today, hybrid inks have been developed, which offer a more cost-effective solution to all printing needs.The right printing technique should be chosen, as it not only affects the cost of printing, but also the final output. The main types of printing include flexography, gravure, screen-printing, lithography, and digital printing. Flexography is ideal for long printings, where as the gravure method proves very economical for newspaper printing. On the other hand, screen-printing proves very economical for printing on different fabrics, and for making banners. The lithography method is considered to be the most economical for commercial printing, whereas digital printing can be used for color jobs, though not suitable for mass production.Although printing can be done on a variety of surfaces, printing paper is You will hear many other explanations too, but once you scratch the surface, a common factor appears: old behaviors are still reinforced and have not been substituted by new ones. A fundamental law of psychology states that behavior is sustained or repeated if it’s reinforced or rewarded, regardless of the reason for its existence. Reinforcements come in all shapes: money, bonus targets, power gained, a A Few Business Generalizations ‘Managing change’. A business catchphrase, part of the consulting lexicon. A sub-industry on its own. A myriad of books. A myriad of misunderstandings. Here is one: people are resistant to change. This statement declares that you and I – who have moved jobs a few times, married, raised teenagers, dealt with a thousand life events, been a political activist or a local church helper – don’t know about change and adapting to it. The statement needs qualification, and this is the best I can offer: people are resistant to change when they lose - or feel they lose - control. In other words, the problem is imposed change, particularly in the workplace, when you haven’t been part of the process or don’t feel like the owner of that change.Everyone is a writer. Writing is the basis of all wealth, as my mentor says. You need to be writing (something) every single day. You can’t keep all that stuff bottled up inside. It’s not good for you. Write, write, write.Everyone is in marketing. Your words, actions, emails and conversations are either supporting or refuting your brand. Everyone in your company is responsible for marketing your company.Everyone is in sales. Because people buy people first. Because people aren’t loyal to companies, they’re loyal to people. Because it doesn’t matter what product or service you sell, customers buy YOU before anything.Everyone is the CEO (of You, Inc.). Tom Peters was the first to coin this phrase. It’s been around for a good 10 years now. There are books written about it, articles explaining it, even experts who can show you how to do it. It’s no longer a fad. It’s just the way it is.Everyone has a voice. God bless the Internet! With the advent of blogs, social networking and other virtual soapboxes, there’s no excuse for not having a forum to voice your opinion. If you want to say something, say it. Odds are, with the potential audience of billions of people, somebody’s gonna hear it.Everyone has customers. Sure, you can call ‘em whatever you want. Clients. Members. Congregants. Children. A second issue lies within the terms ‘change’ or ‘managing change’, which appear in organizations in so many ways they have become a commodity in management and leadership jargon. They are used in mergers and acquisitions to describe the process of integration, the implementation of a new initiative, such as customer relationship management (CRM) or enterprise resource planning (ERP), in organizational redesign programs – of R&D, for example – and in creating new structures or teams. Even communication plans are sometimes called change management programs. Stretched to the limit, managing change means management. A change management program creates or transforms processes and systems that take an organization from A to B. The experts, internal or external consultants, will help define the objectives of the change and the requirements for it. They will map the journey from A to B. There will be milestones and checkpoints, review processes and gates, success factors and budgets, motivational and information meetings. Change management programs are like cooking. You can have sophisticated or mundane ingredients, shop at the local grocer’s or the delicatessen, eat lots of courses or a quick sandwich. You may be (or may have paid for) an inexperienced cook, a microwave manager or one with a Michelin star. Change management consulting is the same. In this area, as in any other, budget holders should heed the old saying, ‘you pay peanuts: you get monkeys’. Managing methods So you have the plans in place, the maps, the communication tools and the meeting room in the country house hotel where you gather the troops to convince them change is good. You know how to get from A to B and you know who is going to be on the journey. And on this kind of journey, there will be successes and failures. Failure in this case should not just be defined by objectives not having been met – in many instances it is partial adoption or poor usage of new processes and systems that is at fault. Take CRM. Companies spend significant amounts of money installing IT systems that are supposed to link all aspects of a customer’s profile, what is often called a 360-degree view of the client. For instance, when a medical sales rep calls on a hospital specialist he should have at his disposal all the historical and strategic information about the physician, including his preferences, opinions and whether he has been seen by other company reps in another capacity – for example, if he is part of a clinical trial led by the R&D division. He is supposed to feed the outcome of the visit back into the system, log any interest in products he does not handle, ensuring the right rep gets in touch, and perhaps log any side-effects the physician has reported. If you multiply this effort by all sales and back office people, the result is a formidable database that is invaluable to the company. This is a wonderful theory. So why has CRM consistently failed to meet expectations? Usage by sales forces may be low, many reps hate it and corporate office can’t understand why. The reps blame the technology for not delivering, the IT departments blame the reps for not using it properly, management asks serious questions about undelivered ROI, part of the sales force uses old systems in parallel, the IT vendors are frustrated and, overall, many people are unhappy, including the CEO who a few months earlier had announced significant efficiencies following the adoption of the latest system for sales force automation and total customer care. In nine out of ten cases, the reason for this situation has nothing to do with the sexy IT or even process implementation – it’s behavior, stupid. And here is the missing ingredient. In most cases there is an unspoken assumption that once the new systems and processes are in place, people will adapt to them. It’s an assumption as fair and rational as it is wrong. Contradictory claims You will hear many other explanations too, but once you scratch the surface, a common factor appears: old behaviors are still reinforced and have not been substituted by new ones. A fundamental law of psychology states that behavior is sustained or repeated if it’s reinforced or rewarded, regardless of the reason for its existence. Reinforcements come in all shapes: money, bonus targets, power gained, a Managing Teams and Six Sigma managing change means management.Managing a Six Sigma team is a considerable responsibility. Six Sigma is a team process and requires cooperation at many levels. No one person can manage a Six Sigma project on their own. Just as it is the organization that benefits from Six Sigma, it is the organization that truly manages Six Sigma. Yet, that management must be led by specially trained individuals.Success in managing Six Sigma teams begins with the top of the organization. Company leadership must give the teams the resources and the authority to apply Six Sigma concepts to their daily activities. They must also ensure that organizational goals are aligned with Six Sigma projects and that any roadblocks to Six Sigma deployment are removed.The proper selection and training of Six Sigma team leaders is also critical as they have the most direct responsibility for managing the Six Sigma team. A Six Sigma Black Belt is the team leader and the key change agent for the Six Sigma process. The role of the Black Belt is to facilitate the Six Sigma adoption as part of the culture. They lead, and manage Six Sigma teams to sustain significant bottom-line results. Black Belts ideally are people previously experienced in leading cross-functional process improvement action teams who have been trained in the Six Sigma methodology. The Six Sigma Black Belt should demonstrate team leadership, understand team dynamics, and A change management program creates or transforms processes and systems that take an organization from A to B. The experts, internal or external consultants, will help define the objectives of the change and the requirements for it. They will map the journey from A to B. There will be milestones and checkpoints, review processes and gates, success factors and budgets, motivational and information meetings. Change management programs are like cooking. You can have sophisticated or mundane ingredients, shop at the local grocer’s or the delicatessen, eat lots of courses or a quick sandwich. You may be (or may have paid for) an inexperienced cook, a microwave manager or one with a Michelin star. Change management consulting is the same. In this area, as in any other, budget holders should heed the old saying, ‘you pay peanuts: you get monkeys’. Managing methods So you have the plans in place, the maps, the communication tools and the meeting room in the country house hotel where you gather the troops to convince them change is good. You know how to get from A to B and you know who is going to be on the journey. And on this kind of journey, there will be successes and failures. Failure in this case should not just be defined by objectives not having been met – in many instances it is partial adoption or poor usage of new processes and systems that is at fault. Take CRM. Companies spend significant amounts of money installing IT systems that are supposed to link all aspects of a customer’s profile, what is often called a 360-degree view of the client. For instance, when a medical sales rep calls on a hospital specialist he should have at his disposal all the historical and strategic information about the physician, including his preferences, opinions and whether he has been seen by other company reps in another capacity – for example, if he is part of a clinical trial led by the R&D division. He is supposed to feed the outcome of the visit back into the system, log any interest in products he does not handle, ensuring the right rep gets in touch, and perhaps log any side-effects the physician has reported. If you multiply this effort by all sales and back office people, the result is a formidable database that is invaluable to the company. This is a wonderful theory. So why has CRM consistently failed to meet expectations? Usage by sales forces may be low, many reps hate it and corporate office can’t understand why. The reps blame the technology for not delivering, the IT departments blame the reps for not using it properly, management asks serious questions about undelivered ROI, part of the sales force uses old systems in parallel, the IT vendors are frustrated and, overall, many people are unhappy, including the CEO who a few months earlier had announced significant efficiencies following the adoption of the latest system for sales force automation and total customer care. In nine out of ten cases, the reason for this situation has nothing to do with the sexy IT or even process implementation – it’s behavior, stupid. And here is the missing ingredient. In most cases there is an unspoken assumption that once the new systems and processes are in place, people will adapt to them. It’s an assumption as fair and rational as it is wrong. Contradictory claims You will hear many other explanations too, but once you scratch the surface, a common factor appears: old behaviors are still reinforced and have not been substituted by new ones. A fundamental law of psychology states that behavior is sustained or repeated if it’s reinforced or rewarded, regardless of the reason for its existence. Reinforcements come in all shapes: money, bonus targets, power gained, a Branding, Speed, and Sound - Three Important Items of Interaction Design for Electronic Kiosks ment cookbook, it’s difficult to get the plain vanilla variety wrong. But you may have forgotten an important ingredient.There are many things to consider when creating a software interface for an electronic kiosk. One of the areas that needs a particularly vested interest is the interaction design of the kiosk software. Three important aspects of kiosk software interaction design are branding, speed and sound.Branding is an important component of any kiosk user interface. If you are designing a kiosk for use in a retail location, you should take care to incorporate a brand image or logo into the interface. This can be beneficial to both the interaction experience of the user for your kiosk and also for the branding of your company.Logo branding is most effective on screens that are not part of a task process in your software. Because of this, the best screens to show off a logo are those that are displayed when the kiosk booth is idle, and also at the beginning and end of a task. For instance when the user first interacts with the kiosk, it should show a brand image along with a list of tasks. Another opportunity comes when the user has finished a task with the kiosk, a completion screen accompanied by the brand can have a great impact.The speed of software for a kiosk is something that should be taken into account when considering the interaction experience of a kiosk user. You want to make sure that they do not get held up between screens of a particular task or you may ri So you have the plans in place, the maps, the communication tools and the meeting room in the country house hotel where you gather the troops to convince them change is good. You know how to get from A to B and you know who is going to be on the journey. And on this kind of journey, there will be successes and failures. Failure in this case should not just be defined by objectives not having been met – in many instances it is partial adoption or poor usage of new processes and systems that is at fault. Take CRM. Companies spend significant amounts of money installing IT systems that are supposed to link all aspects of a customer’s profile, what is often called a 360-degree view of the client. For instance, when a medical sales rep calls on a hospital specialist he should have at his disposal all the historical and strategic information about the physician, including his preferences, opinions and whether he has been seen by other company reps in another capacity – for example, if he is part of a clinical trial led by the R&D division. He is supposed to feed the outcome of the visit back into the system, log any interest in products he does not handle, ensuring the right rep gets in touch, and perhaps log any side-effects the physician has reported. If you multiply this effort by all sales and back office people, the result is a formidable database that is invaluable to the company. This is a wonderful theory. So why has CRM consistently failed to meet expectations? Usage by sales forces may be low, many reps hate it and corporate office can’t understand why. The reps blame the technology for not delivering, the IT departments blame the reps for not using it properly, management asks serious questions about undelivered ROI, part of the sales force uses old systems in parallel, the IT vendors are frustrated and, overall, many people are unhappy, including the CEO who a few months earlier had announced significant efficiencies following the adoption of the latest system for sales force automation and total customer care. In nine out of ten cases, the reason for this situation has nothing to do with the sexy IT or even process implementation – it’s behavior, stupid. And here is the missing ingredient. In most cases there is an unspoken assumption that once the new systems and processes are in place, people will adapt to them. It’s an assumption as fair and rational as it is wrong. Contradictory claims You will hear many other explanations too, but once you scratch the surface, a common factor appears: old behaviors are still reinforced and have not been substituted by new ones. A fundamental law of psychology states that behavior is sustained or repeated if it’s reinforced or rewarded, regardless of the reason for its existence. Reinforcements come in all shapes: money, bonus targets, power gained, a Creative, Inexpensive, and BIG Value Marketing Gift Ideas touch, and perhaps log any side-effects the physician has reported. If you multiply this effort by all sales and back office people, the result is a formidable database that is invaluable to the company."Tis the season to be jolly!" A great attitude is easy to have when you design your gifts with a lot of thought and don't allow the experience take you to the cleaners. One of the traditions I like at this time of year is remembering all the people that were there for me this past year. Especially those that didn't receive anything in return for it -- in the smallest or largest way. Meaningful gift giving does not have to be expensive. In fact, some of the most precious gifts are the ones that cost very little, but mean a great deal because of the time and effort it took to select, or create, and mail. Here are eight ideas I have used over the last few years. You can use these as Christmas gifts; add them to your "leave-behind" marketing package, a referral thank you, or "thanks for helping me" gift. It does make a difference if your logo or advertising information is on the gift. It does affect the perceived value on their part and can make a difference in your relationship. Make the choice to add your information or leave it off with their perception in mind. Remember, marketing is all perception and not product or service. 1. Purchase discontinued note card sets from Hallmark and other card shops during the year. If you call and ask your nearest store as to the time of year when they discount "previous season" items, they will gladly tel This is a wonderful theory. So why has CRM consistently failed to meet expectations? Usage by sales forces may be low, many reps hate it and corporate office can’t understand why. The reps blame the technology for not delivering, the IT departments blame the reps for not using it properly, management asks serious questions about undelivered ROI, part of the sales force uses old systems in parallel, the IT vendors are frustrated and, overall, many people are unhappy, including the CEO who a few months earlier had announced significant efficiencies following the adoption of the latest system for sales force automation and total customer care. In nine out of ten cases, the reason for this situation has nothing to do with the sexy IT or even process implementation – it’s behavior, stupid. And here is the missing ingredient. In most cases there is an unspoken assumption that once the new systems and processes are in place, people will adapt to them. It’s an assumption as fair and rational as it is wrong. Contradictory claims You will hear many other explanations too, but once you scratch the surface, a common factor appears: old behaviors are still reinforced and have not been substituted by new ones. A fundamental law of psychology states that behavior is sustained or repeated if it’s reinforced or rewarded, regardless of the reason for its existence. Reinforcements come in all shapes: money, bonus targets, power gained, a Can A Website Help Grow Your Brand? - Part 2 tem X, people will use Y and behave consistently with how it works. But the reality is that many people continue to behave in the old way. Explanations will be given for this, most of them post hoc rationalizations of the ensuing fiasco. One example is: “people are not motivated enough”. But three months ago you gathered your sales force for a motivational weekend where motivational speakers and your COO infused the troops with excitement for the multi-million-pound investment. Another example: “people don’t see the value of it and don’t use it much”. But you installed the processes and the IT system via several project teams that included representatives of the now-disillusioned troops. They constructed the requirements for the new system. You also hear that the technology is too complex, or that it doesn’t deliver what it promised. But, again, lots of people were involved in its development.In our last issue, we gave you a persuasive argument why you need a website to grow your brand. Today we’ll share some key things to consider before designing a site.The very first step in creating a website is to identify the overall purpose of the site. This is important because it will impact the overall structure and mechanics of your site. For example, will the site be predominantly an information sharing vehicle or an e-commerce site? (E-Commerce is a fancy way to say “selling stuff on the internet.”). You may want to start out with an information site that will grow into an e-commerce site, but that should be thought about before the site’s created.Once you’ve decided on the overall purpose for your site, you and the design team (yes, it really takes a team to build a site) work together to determine the top 1 or 2 goals of the site. This step is important because the goals drive the design as well as the copy that’s written.One of the goals should be to capture visitors’ email addresses. This is important to build “your list” for future marketing purposes and is critical in permission-based or opt-in marketing.Permission-based / opt-in marketing is really the professional and preferred way to market on the web because it keeps you from being perceived as a spammer. People who have given you permission allow you to send them periodic emails with the u You will hear many other explanations too, but once you scratch the surface, a common factor appears: old behaviors are still reinforced and have not been substituted by new ones. A fundamental law of psychology states that behavior is sustained or repeated if it’s reinforced or rewarded, regardless of the reason for its existence. Reinforcements come in all shapes: money, bonus targets, power gained, a pat on the back, promotion, pleasing the boss and so on. Change management programs tend to forget that for the new system to be used, new behaviors need to be instilled and reinforced because new systems and processes, whether IT-induced or not, do not necessarily generate new behavior. On the contrary, new behavior needs to be instilled to support the new processes and systems. By behaviors we mean both management behavior – like the culture that defines how things are accepted or discouraged – and end-users’ behavior. Another fundamental cause of failures, particularly in implementing CRM in hi-tech companies, is the potential coexistence of contradictory aims: the customer-centric goal of a CRM and the very common product-centric machinery of the company. R&D-led companies speak a product portfolio language – pipeline richness or gaps, breakthrough innovations, blockbusters – and create machinery for marketing, sales and training consistent with that. Nothing wrong there. But true customer-centric approaches focus on solving customer problems and speak a customer language. You can’t have an exclusively product approach and sell via a customer solution. There are choices to be made, and on many occasions management either does not see them or doesn’t want to make them. Reinforcements are applied in the wrong place. If the desired behavior for the reps is diligent use of the CRM system – feeding it by filling in boxes on the computer – but they continue to be rewarded for the number of calls they make or the sales figures, their inclination to feed the system will fade progressively. And if the same management that brought in the CRM system continues to ask only for call figures and market share, without declaring much interest in customer data, don’t be surprised if the CRM system is used at 25% capacity and hated by everybody. The reps could have continued to provide those data under the old territory management system which, incidentally, took a fraction of the time to use. The sales force has effectively been given a Rolls Royce to work with, but they are rewarded according to the number of grocery bags they carry in the trunk. No wonder shopping has become so expensive. Rewarded or reinforced behaviors repeat themselves and become the norm, no matter how much the strategic aims and statements contradict them. A good change management program must explore which behavioral components should be reinforced, and which shouldn’t (a layman would be forgiven for calling it ‘punished’, but this is very different and far less effective than a lack of reinforcement). It’s all well beyond process, systems or IT architectures. The lack of psychological technology applied to new systems’ implementation is extraordinary. One pharmaceutical client using our behavioral change management (BCM) program told me recently: “We got it all wrong with our CRM”. She was too hard on herself, because most of what they were doing was right. They just forgot about behavior. Any behavioral program that deals with implementing a new process must follow psychological laws. Motivational exercises can be used to engage the sales force or user group – appealing to their loyalty, commitment and perhaps the buzz they get from success. In general, these motivational exercises (or ‘behavioral triggers’) are good for launching initiatives and supporting the early stages of adoption, but they are not good as sustained reinforcement. Even if new positive behaviors are adopted, they will fade if they are not reinforced. Reinforcing the message CRM will be far cheaper and less painful if companies create a powerful combination of both a true CRM (i.e. real customer focus instead of product selling) and behavioral focus to support new processes and systems, instead of hoping that the new, expensive IT will create sustainable behavior by itself.
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