Business coaching tips

Sunday, December 31, 2006

Give it away - Delegate!

Give it away - Delegate by Paul Lemberg

The harder you hold on to things, the faster they can get away from you.

If you want to extend your reach beyond your ability to do everything at once, you must delegate some things to other people.

Delegation is frightening for many people. First of all, you might enjoy doing the thing you have to delegate. You may think you do it better than anyone else. You imagine it won’t get done properly. And you know it won’t get done your way. You might even believe if you don’t do that thing, you won’t have enough to do.

Know this: whatever you keep to yourself instead of delegating will get shorter shrift than it deserves. Usually that thing becomes a bottleneck in the continued success of your venture.

There are four keys to effective delegating.

1 Give the job to someone who can get it done – someone who either has, or has access to, the skills, knowledge and resources needed. Also, give the job to someone who has time for it. Don’t dump your projects onto someone who has neither the wherewithal nor the availability.

If you do that you are simply setting them up to fail and setting yourself up for disappointment. Don’t just hand your task to the next warm body. Get buy-in from the delegate. Are they okay with this thing? Are they enrolled, or is this just more work for someone who is already overburdened?

2 Communicate your conditions of satisfaction. Have you ever asked someone to do something, and when they came back you said, “Oh. That’s not what I wanted at all”? Be sure you have mutual agreement on the critical requirements that define how this job must be handled, and what the outcome will look like.

3 Use SMART goals to clarify the desired outcome along with a timeline for its realization. Also, if necessary, set up a measurement system that will help you and your delegate know whether things are on or off track.

Work out a plan. Depending on the complexity of the delegated task, you may ask that the first step be a plan for how to get the rest done. In other cases, the request may be simple and a plan not necessary. But think this through.

If you are uncertain as to how something needs to get done, but want to make sure it will occur according to some guidelines – get a plan.

4 Finally, you need a communications protocol – how are you going to get updates and give feedback or advice? When are you going to speak or meet? How frequently? Will they send you an email, or a formal progress report? Create some pre-defined mechanism to keep you informed, and to give them an opportunity to seek guidance if appropriate.
There is a big difference between delegating and abdicating. When you abdicate you are saying – I’m neither responsible nor accountable for the results. When you delegate, you are still accountable. You are asking your delegate to do the work, and therefore be accountable to you.

“Never tell people how to do things. Tell them what to do and they will surprise you with their ingenuity.” General George S. Patton

by Paul Lemberg.

Copyright Paul Lemberg and reprinted wth his express permission,

Any questions give me a call,
Michael
PPI Business NLP
01908 506563

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Sunday, December 03, 2006

Runaway success by Paul Lemberg

Runaway success by Paul Lemberg.

To move faster than the speed of change requires a commitment to extraordinary things.

Most people, when asked for the particulars of runaway, blockbuster, or breakthrough success can’t say what that means to them with enough clarity to do anything about it.

Can you?

One way to increase the pace is to consider your venture from the perspective of “runaway success,” and only take actions consistent with achieving just that. Before you can do that, you have to define your terms.

Take a few moments to specify , what you would consider “runaway success” in your current venture. (As always, there’s the question of scope or context. You could say – “Well, my current venture is my life.” OK – use that. If you asked me, I would suggest you narrow your scope – but it’s your choice.)

Write out your definition. You must write it out – type it – whatever. You can’t simply “think” this and expect the same result. Get it out of your head and onto the page. It must reflect back to you so you can evaluate it “in the cold light of day.”

Write it, in all its glory. Make sure this is a statement of “runaway success,” not plain, old ordinary success.

Keep your definition in a notebook. Print it large and post it on your bulletin board. Tape it to the dashboard of your car.

Slip it under your desk mat. Scatter it about your environment. Put it in your wallet where you can refer to it easily.

by Paul Lemberg.

Copyright Paul Lemberg and reprinted wth his express permission,


Any questions give me a call,
Michael
PPI Business NLP
01908 506563


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