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Business Strategy

Chapter 7 of Building A High Performing Team on Purpose – Your Employee Value Proposition



“So…what is your culture like?”

“Well, we like to go for drinks on Friday nights once a month. Um, we also went bowling last quarter, that was great fun. In the office we like to have a bit of banter, but we all get the job done in the end.”

“Awesome!”

 Yes.  All those things are great fun and who doesn’t like going for drinks, bowling and banter? The trouble with this answer is that:

  1. It is not really an accurate answer about the company culture and doesn’t give much information.
  2. Given this is a similar response to a lot of other companies, it doesn’t differentiate you and therefore is not a source of competitive advantage where it comes to attracting and retaining talent.
  3.  It doesn’t cover the important components of what actually attracts and retains people.

There are a few reasons why most businesses have a similarly vague, non-distinctive and surface-level response to this question.  The reason for this is that most businesses:

  • Don’t properly think through their Employee Value Proposition (EVP)
  • Are not hearing what other managers are saying, because they are not sitting in on their interviews
  • Are not looking objectively at their company in the context of their target market for talent

To this last point, it is sometimes the case that business owners and leaders overstate the attractiveness of their company.  They are viewing it subjectively having grown it with their own blood, sweat and tears.  It’s like their baby and so how could they not think others should love it?  

Conversely, some business leaders don’t think they can compete for top talent, believing that only the big players who pay the large salaries and bonuses can attract the best. 

If you’re going to build a high performing team on purpose, you need to have an approach to attracting and retaining talent.  This requires you to have a clear and compelling Employee Value Proposition (EVP).


What is an EVP?

An Employee Value Proposition is the communication and delivery of the total rewards for employees in return for joining, staying and performing at an organisation.  This is the value that the employee gets from the company.  A good employee value proposition cuts through the rhetoric and clichés and instead, provides a clear message to a distinct group of people. 


Be clear on your target audience

It’s important to be clear on your target market of who you want to attract and what they value.  What is perhaps even more important is who you don’t want to attract.  Does this sound familiar?  If you said “yes”, then you might be thinking about your Customer Value Proposition (CVP) that has similar aspects to it.  

Knowing who you best serve and who you don’t from a customer perspective helps you to deliver differentiated value to your target market.  The same goes for employees.


Think through the below questions:


Is your company more attractive to people who:

  1. Like parties and social functions or to those who love learning?                                                                                                                           
  2. Like earning big bonuses or achieving work/life balance?                                                                                                                   
  3. Prefer a formalised environment or a casual informal environment?                                                                                                                   
  4. Value diversity or are more homogenous in the type of people in the business?                                                                                                                   
  5. Live in and around the city or prefer the suburbs?                                                                                                                   
  6. Love your products and services, or are your products and services agnostic to the enjoyment of people’s jobs (e.g. Widgets R US)?                                                                                                                   
  7. Values speed and fast delivery, versus those who prefer premium and more involved?                                                                                                                   
  8. Embraces technology versus old school approaches?


These contrasts are not always diametrically opposed (e.g. even if you have great social functions, you will of course need people to value learning) and some may not be relevant (e.g. you may have both branches in the city and in the outer suburbs). The point of this list is not to be exhaustive, but a thought starter.  The important factor here is that, much like with your strategic position with your customers, if you try and please everyone, you will please no one. 

It’s important to note that this doesn’t mean you have a one-size-fits-all approach on everything, as having a diverse population of employees with different interests and perspectives is valuable to avoid groupthink.  

Those of you who know me and have discussed the topic may have had the discussion about how paying for gym memberships is usually a big waste of money.  People who want to go to the gym are happy to pay for it and have their preferred club that they choose to go to.  Those who take a free membership tend to be people who think they want to go to the gym, but don’t really. 

What I’m talking about is at the core of your business.  What is the inimitable offering you give your employees that they simply cannot find anywhere else and who are the people who will value this above any other offering or reward?


Place yourself in their shoes

The ability to properly empathise, by placing ourselves in the shoes of others is one of the most important life skills we need.  Business owners and founders in particular often feel misunderstood.  

In fact, the very nature of why they got into business in the first place is often because when they worked in a job, their manager was not forward-thinking enough to take onboard their ideas – so they started their own company. 

The biggest misconceptions about an overall offer to employees are that:

  • It’s mostly about the money;
  • It’s better to have a lower base salary and higher bonus component (because that is what business owners have for their remuneration);
  • People will leave you if they get a “better” offer elsewhere;
  • Millennials have no loyalty; and,
  • You can pay someone lower to begin with, then if they prove themselves, you can give them a pay increase.

I have had people argue until they are blue in the face that paying bonuses drives results.  It’s not that they are lying, they are actually seeing results – but what results are we talking about? 

I won’t cover the correct design of incentive programs here, as it is a detailed topic however, bonuses are used a lot more than they should.  The people implementing them only focus on the outcomes they believe they achieved, rather than what they didn’t achieve and what they adversely affected.  


Turn up what’s important, turn down what isn’t

Are you a learning organisation?   Is that core to your strategy to beat the competition and provide innovation?  Is everything about delivering a premium tailored service?  Knowing who you are as a business and who you are not helps to attract people who value the same thing.  

If you then work hard to offer an employment experience that is better than others in a smaller number of areas and at least ok in all the other important areas, then for those who value what you are best at it’s harder for people to leave and go elsewhere.   More so, they will stay not because they feel they have to, but because they are having a fulfilling experience. 

People often use the example of Steve Jobs, who by many accounts was not a good people leader.  As a thought leader though, he was exceptional.  People who justify why you can get away with not being a good people leader do so in order to support an existing incorrect perspective.  Unless you are Steve Jobs or an equivalent genius, you can’t be as bad of a people leader as he apparently was.  

Also, what we don’t hear about are all the people who probably left due to his behaviour towards him.  Most of us are not the equivalent of Steve Jobs in the forward-thinking genius category, so we need to be at least an ok leader.  Then we need to offer a small number of areas that are better than companies who compete for our talent.

How does what you have to offer compare to other offers your target market is considering?  If you are a small-medium business, it is difficult to compete with larger businesses on their strengths.  If your target market of employee is weighing up working for you versus a larger player, it’s best to focus on strengths they don’t have.  

For example, in a smaller business an employee can have greater opportunities to work on a range of activities faster than in a large business that has much more specialised roles.

Most importantly and what is critical to your Customer Value Proposition, is: what is the problem you are solving for your target market?  What is the pain you are alleviating?  For example, if you are a high potential graduate looking to further your career, typical problems can include:

  • Companies want you to have two years’ industry experience
  • You are concerned about locking in a career without knowing what the work is actually like
  • You won’t receive proper training, mentoring and guidance to learn
  • There is a lack of career development and opportunities

Ensuring that you address these pain points properly and communicate what you do in a compelling way will help you to attract and retain this type of employee.  Compare this to a person of a similar age who is not yet ready to go fully into their career and is more focused on travelling and gaining life experiences.  If this were your target market, your proposition would be different if you wanted to address their pain points.


What should be included in an EVP?

So now that you are getting an idea that you need to be clear on who you are and the type of people you are targeting, who need to have similar values to the core of who your business is, it’s time to get specific on what you are offering as your value proposition.

The company purpose

This is the “why” of your company, as Simon Sinek would say.  People are looking for inspiration and want to be part of something bigger than just making profit, being the “industry leader” or being the best.  What is key to your company purpose?  You need to have a human impact.  

We feel good when we have made a difference to other people, so long as we can have a level of appreciation and affinity with those people.  This doesn’t mean you have to be a charitable organisation, in fact, your purpose shouldn’t relate to your charitable foundations unless you are a not-for-profit.  Your charities and social causes can form part of your overall proposition, but it’s not your purpose in most cases.


The work

The work itself is so important to the enjoyment of work from a day-to-day perspective.   What steps have you taken to make the job enjoyable?  Have you taken out all the unpleasant or boring bits through your processes, technology, outsourcing and/or support structure?  Are you clear and disciplined on your customer strategy so you only deal with customers in your target market who love what you do?  Have you taken what is seemingly an unpleasant job and made it fun?  

Think about the famous Pike Place Fish Market in Seattle where they throw the fish around and yell out at each other.  What sort of person would love working there?  Do you think they need to be paid big bonuses, or do they attract people because of the fun environment, opportunity to entertain, famous name and the chance to be yourself (if you are highly extroverted and energetic)?

Let me put it straight to you: Enjoyable, fun and fulfilling jobs in a great environment are more attractive than crappy, boring, frustrating jobs in an annoying environment.


Career development

A lot of people in job interviews talk about wanting to “grow”.  Often I wonder whether they know what that really means to them and the work required to truly “grow”.   Growth can be challenging and true growth is often not very enjoyable at all.  Nonetheless, many people want to feel like they are getting better and improving their knowledge and capability.  Whether or not they are up for the task of doing so is another story.  

What is important is that you have the opportunity for people to learn and develop in their own way.   Not everyone is capable and willing to climb the ladder.   Knowing this and applying an approach to help people feel they are progressing, without everyone having to reach CEO level is important for most EVPs.  


Leadership and culture

This is a more difficult one to convince anyone of.  Leaders of businesses will often describe what they are doing to create a great culture, but in reality it is often not what takes place.  Think less about the gimmicks that you have in your company. Avoid headlining your culture with your social events unless that is what you want to be known for above most other things.  

What’s more important is the day-to-day.  What are the indicators in your business that demonstrate what people are like and how they work with each other?  What is your approach to giving feedback and performance?  What is your approach to leadership?  How is feedback gained and acted upon?   

All of these things can of course be espoused without actually taking place effectively in real life.  So what’s the difference?  Sometimes it’s the smell test.  Some of you may use observations of candidates when you are hiring as part of your criteria, so observe their behaviour during the process (which is a good thing to do if done properly).  

Many top candidates are also doing the same thing with you.  What is important is that your leadership and culture is authentic to how you describe it.  You will be surprised how much can be revealed by you during your own hiring process.


Financial rewards and benefits

There are important questions here: 

  • What are you rewarding?
  • How are you rewarding?
  • When are you rewarding?
  • Who are you rewarding?

The answers to these questions will communicate to your employees and prospective employees what you value.

Just as a side note, you should avoid Employee of the Month programs.  They are fraught with danger and essentially it is exciting for one person, a non-event for some and demotivating for others.  You are highlighting one person’s efforts for the month and may not be acknowledging what anyone else did for that month. 

In terms of monetary benefits, in most cases I don’t think they should be a primary part of your EVP.  That is unless they form part of your core proposition that is valuable to your target market.  For example, if you are a travel agent and are wanting to attract people who love travel and can talk passionately about travelling adventures, then clearly having benefits related to travel such as significant discounts and extra annual leave is going to align perfectly.  

However, that same set of benefits in another business that doesn’t have the same target market will not be as valuable overall to the employees or company.  It will still be enjoyed, but anything you spend time and money on is in place of something else you could have directed your resources towards. You need to be deliberate and discerning. 

As a general practice these days, lifestyle benefits, such as flexible working, are more important in most cases than financial perks.  Financial perks can be valuable, but again they need to be relevant to the target market.


Articulating your EVP

Much like your Customer Value Proposition, your Employee Value Proposition needs to identify the target market of employees.  You may even have sub-categories of employees based on the different divisions and teams within your business.  To take a simple and commonly used structure, see below:

 For [target market] who are looking to [goal] but [pain point], we provide [value to target employees] because [what makes it true].  Best of all [special sauce]. (“Special sauce” is something extra, that makes the main part of your offering even better).


For example…


For HR and psychology graduates who are looking to develop their careers and spend their days analysing human performance at work, IPX Group provides a learning environment designed to rapidly develop your skills, knowledge and capability.  Here’s what makes this true:

We don’t hire people from the industry, because we invest a lot of time and energy into teaching our team our unique methods.  We therefore hire people who have strong learning agility, a thirst for learning and who are highly interested in human behaviour. 

  • We provide services to small-medium businesses across a large range of HR disciplines, so there is opportunity to learn across a diverse range of topics and find out what you really love. 
  • We work across a range of industries and our model is only successful when we work in strong collaboration with our clients, getting to know their businesses in detail.  This means that you will learn about how the world works through other people’s businesses.  
  • We have a documented and structured competency framework that forms the basis of your development plan, so you will always know your development path and be rewarded for learning. 
  • Because our services to our clients include training and development on high performance behaviours, you get to participate in the same training and development we provide externally, whilst being paid for your time.
  • You are encouraged to be yourself, but the best version of yourself.  This is because part of our offering to our clients is that we are transparent and honest, so there is no need to pretend you are something you are not nor to ever be untruthful to clients.
  • Best of all, because our hiring process is based on the same rigorous methods we use with our clients, you will join a team of like-minded individuals who have all met the same standard.


Key Takeaways

  • Be unique and specific to your target audience of employees. What is it that they truly value and appreciate in a workplace? Also, remember to think about who aren’t your target audience of employees.
  • Empathise. Don’t think that your employees are going to like what you like. It’s about having more than a surface level assumption and to know that even within your target audience of employees there are going to be differences as well. 
  • Whilst you can include multiple rewards, don’t include so many benefits that your EVP becomes diluted. Be clear on what you offer employees that’s valuable to them, that’s unique to your business and play to your strengths rather than trying to compete with other companies who play on their own strengths.


Actions

  • Think about your best employees past and present. Why do you think they enjoy working at your company? Why do you think they’ve stayed? Better yet, ask them. You might be surprised at their answers. 
  • Think through and possibly discuss with others, what is unique about your business and what value can you provide to that group of employees. 
  • What are the alternative options for these employees within or outside of your industry?  What are the strengths and weaknesses of what others potentially offer? Looking through the categories in the section ‘What should be included in your EVP’, what can you offer both present and in the future that can add value to your employees? If you don’t have much in place now, that’s okay. Think about what you want to have in place and make a plan.
  • Draft how you communicate it and speak to someone who has very little understanding of your business and has no reason to tell you it’s good when it’s not and explain it to them.

You can read Chapter 6: Learning and Development by clicking here.

Categories
Business Strategy Small Business Recruitment

Chapter 2 of Building a High Performing Team On Purpose — Your Business Strategy

This is Chapter 2 in the 8 part self-guided series, Building A High Performing Team On Purpose.


There is a scene in Seinfeld where Jerry and George talk about how people like to say “salsa”. 

In business, “strategic” and “strategy” are in the same bucket. A lot of businesses believe they have a strategy. Most management teams use this term loosely and will reference their plans or a set of initiatives designed to improve the business as their strategy. They may describe “strategic goals” as achieving 20% growth year on year or similar generic outcomes.  It is usually when they are talking about improving a part of the business, but this doesn’t mean they are working on a strategy. It could just be an operational improvement, which can be valuable but is not a strategy.  

It’s important to get the language right because this reduces the chance that we are kidding ourselves and confusing others. One of the simplest definitions of business strategy is “where you are going to play and how you are going to win?”. What I believe is just as important is where you are not going to play and what is not going be pivotal to winning.

I’m not going to go into too much depth about strategy here, because there is a lot that would need to be written and that’s a different topic. However, strategy in building a high performing team on purpose is highly relevant. This is for three distinct reasons:

  1. If you have the discipline to say what you are not, then you have a better chance of being what you want to be
  2. If you only deal with customers who value what you do, then the measures of success will be aligned to your strengths
  3. If your organisational design is aligned to your strategy, then the trade-offs will allow you to have better talent in pivotal areas

I’ll explain this as we work through this chapter.  


1. If you have the discipline to say what you are not, then you have a better chance of being what you want to be.

Defining what you are not is more powerful than defining what you are. Companies will often talk about being the best such-and-such company in the world. For instance, we are going to be the best motor vehicle company in the world! What does that actually mean? That’s like being the best runner in the world. A sprinter is vastly different to a marathon runner. Running the steeple chase is different from the 100m hurdles. Rather than saying you are a 100m sprinter, say you are not a marathon runner.  

It’s not about being generically better than everyone, it’s about being specifically better in a specific way to a specific group of people.

There is a very simple exercise that I conduct with business leaders in order to get the discussion going on strategy. It goes like this:

You have three areas of focus below:

  • Operational Excellence: How consistently your processes deliver your product or service to your customers.
  • Customer Intimacy: How much you know the intricacies of each customer and deliver value to their specific needs.
  • Product Innovation: How innovative your products or services are when compared to the rest of the market.

You have 11 points to allocate based on what you want your business to be best at.  

For example, you could go: 

  • 3 on Operational Excellence
  • 5 on Customer Intimacy
  • 3 on Product Innovation

This means that your execution and products are at the standard of the industry, but you are highly tailored in your approach to meet the specific needs of customers. If you switched the 5 from Customer Intimacy to Operational Excellence, you would then be reducing your tailoring to lead the industry in excellent delivery.

So, what do you choose? If you have several business partners, it would be worthwhile completing the exercise separately and then comparing notes.

There are many models and to develop a proper strategy you need to go much deeper than this. Completing this exercise doesn’t mean you have a strategy. It is a simple way to look at what you are not going to be.  

The message is to define what you are not and have the discipline to apply this. This gives you a better chance of being what you want to be.


2. If you only deal with customers who value what you do, then the measures of success will be aligned to your strengths

Another simple exercise I like to perform is to draw a picture of your target customer – down to the level of detail of what they had for breakfast. Now do the same with your “enemy” customers who kind of look like your target market but give you a world of headaches. What your target customer value should align to is what you are striving to be best at. What your enemy customers value should be irrelevant. Energy trying to please your enemy customers takes away from building capability to serve your target customers.

Some of you might be nodding your head right now but are wondering how this relates directly to building a high performing team?  Well, the first is that a high performing team is a generic term that needs to be applied to the specific. A high performing team in what? Basketball? Football? Even within the same sport, is it a run and gun team who plays at a fast pace or is it a team that has strengths in hustle and defence. Whilst all teams need to be somewhat proficient in everything, the better teams are outstanding in one or two areas and all players are geared towards this strategy.

Transferring this across to business, if you have a team who are all great at selling high value products and deeply understanding customer needs and if you have processes that are set up to deliver to the high end market, then if you take on a lot of low margin high volume deals then this is likely to cause stress and frustration for your team and not play to their strengths. 

Who likes doing their best and finding that no matter what they do, they can’t seem to win? Well, not many people I would think, but certainly not high performers. High performers cannot stand to be in a position where they are not able to be a high performer no matter what they do. Those people will become disengaged and eventually leave.  

If your strategy is not clear and/or you are not disciplined enough to focus on your target market, then you will have dilution. If your business is diluted across a broad range of customers that includes your enemy customers, your people will be feeling increased stress dealing with unhappy people.  

Here is the kicker: 

One thing that causes stress for your people is dealing with unhappy customers. Who likes dealing with people telling you that you stuffed up? That you are no good? The additional re-work that takes place also causes stress, because people are working longer hours and working on things that sap their energy. The role that they signed up for may not be the role they want.  Fixing the issues may also not be their strength, as opposed to delivering value to your target market.

The stress that this creates for your employees will build tension between them and your managers. If your managers feel powerless to change it, they will become disengaged. Your business will be less profitable, and you will not be motivated to invest in sourcing more business in your target market because you’ll be busy putting out the fires caused by your current unhappy customers and employees. 


Conversely…

If you are delivering value to your target market and not trying to please your enemy customers, you have a competitive advantage in attracting and retaining talent. You can offer talented employees an experience that is taking full advantage of their talents, without placing them in situations that highlight their weaknesses. You can offer an enjoyable workday filled with happy customers who love what they do. This is what a good Employee Value Proposition should always include, which I will touch on in later chapters.

Having a clear strategy that allows you to deal only with customers who value what you do, gives your people a better chance of being high performers and gives you a better chance of attracting and retaining high performers.


3. If your organisational design is aligned to your strategy, then the trade-offs will allow you to have better talent in pivotal areas

The first two concepts of this chapter are on having a clear strategy, focusing on delivering value to your target customers and avoiding your enemy customers. If you have bought into the concept of this being an important part of building a high performing team on purpose, then what are the steps you need to take to enable your team to deliver on this value?

Some of the questions worth asking to help define this are:

  • What value do we want to provide for what type of customer? What is the pain we alleviate and why do they care?
  • What does my business need to do specifically in order to deliver this value? What are the deliverables and in what way?
  • What capability does my business need to have in order to achieve these deliverables?
  • What part do my people play? What do my people need to be best at? What can I live with them not being best at? What do they not need to be good at at all?  
  • What are the positions that are going to be most pivotal in delivering my competitive advantage?
  • What are the behaviours I am looking for in my people that helps them be the best at that thing? What do they need to know? What else do they need?
  • How do they need to best work together? How do they best work with customers and suppliers?

To give you an example, I founded a recruitment company called Inject, which focuses on hiring talent with the right attitude, aptitude and behaviours. The target market is small-medium business owners who are challenging their industry or delivering a premium solution to their customers. The capability required is to have strengths in analysing people, thinking outside the box in terms of sourcing strategy and knowledge of what constitutes high performance. 

There is zero requirement to be good at cold calling, as this is not what the business does at all. There is no requirement to be able to sell a candidate. There is a requirement to present a complete assessment of a candidate accurately and transparently. The way they need to best work with their customers to learn deeply about what it’s like to run a business and how the impact of one poor performer can bring down a small business. To properly empathise with the business owner and present information that gives them confidence there is an alignment.  

The talent strategy at Inject is starkly different to most recruitment companies, therefore the target market for talent is completely different. What people are hired on, what they are trained on, what they are measured and rewarded on is completely different. There is no competition for talent because the overlap of what they do is so small. There is nothing particularly wrong with traditional recruitment companies, it’s just that there are thousands more like them.  

Are you utilising your labour force in a way that creates an inimitable competitive advantage, or have you become much the same as everyone else?

The capability to deliver your strategy comes from your people. If you don’t have a clear strategy, then you are just trying to hire generally good employees. You aren’t looking for them to be great at a smaller number of things. Then if you place these people in situations where your company is not best at any of those things, then they are constantly dealing with unhappy customers. When you are dealing with angry people each day and feel powerless to do anything about it, you end up unhappy yourself and don’t deliver great service.

Your talent strategy also needs to be a “strategy” and that means trading off one thing for another. It’s not about generically good. Work out what you are turning up and what you are turning down, what you are investing in and what you are leaving to one side. Having a talent strategy that supports a business strategy gives you a much better chance of building a high performing team on purpose.


I recommend you take the following three actions:

  • Clarify what your strategy is and make it crystal clear. Beware of confusing your strategy for your plans, initiatives and tactics. Be clear on the trade offs you are making.
  • Be disciplined about who your customers are and as much as possible only deal with those who are truly in your target market and are equipped to serve. Doing so will set your employees up for success (subject to making sure the business operations are actually set up to properly deliver on your strategy).
  • Build your organisational design off your strategy and by doing so define the capabilities you need to be great at to deliver your strategy (more on this in the next section).


You can read the first chapter of Building A High Performing Team on Purpose here.

Categories
Business Strategy

COVID19 restrictions are lifting… what’s next for business owners?

Reflecting on the last couple of months, many of our thinking styles, choices and actions are likely to be the result of intuitive, flash decisions made quickly. It triggered a comparison to the book by Daniel Kahneman, Thinking Fast and Slow. 

The book talks about the conflict between your intuitive, fast brain and the slow, analytical brain. You may currently be experiencing some conflict, what you’re having to do within your business, how you meant to be thinking and what the external forces are doing as well.

This blog draws three ideas from the book, discussing how they relate to business owners thinking about their people and their business in the context of COVID19.

1. Fast brain vs slow brain

This is the crisis management that business owners have been in over the last month or two. You have the intuitive brain thinking, ‘I need to make these fast decisions, make sure that I’m on my toes and making the right call for my business’, whereas many of these decisions require a slower, analytical brain and need a lot of thought behind them.

Decisions around redundancies or standing people down, moving to part time, whether to go onto Jobkeeper… For some businesses, it’s not simple. You’re thinking about whether to use the Jobkeeper enabling directions or not, thinking ‘What’s going on with my staff, how are they feeling? 

These questions are seemingly intuitive decisions, but actually when you stop and consider the implications, they require slower and more analytical consideration. 

The example in Thinking Fast and Slow gives this idea of the bat and the ball. 

The bat and ball cost a dollar and 10 cents together. The bat is $1 more than the ball. Therefore, what does the bat cost and what does the ball cost? The answer, of course, is the bat costs a dollar and the ball costs 10 cents… or does it? 

For many of us who haven’t read the book and who aren’t mathematical geniuses, we will come up with the same result.  However, the difference between a dollar and 10 cents is, of course, 90 cents so that’s not correct. The correct answer is a dollar and five cents. A dollar and five cents for the bat is a dollar more than five cents for the ball.


It’s time to slow down your thinking

Think about the business decisions that you’re making now.

If you use our intuitive brain, you might be coming up with the wrong decision whether to do something or not do something. A question to ask yourself is, do you have space in your calendar, in amongst all of the craziness that’s going on out there, to slow down your brain and to be able to think analytically about some of these really big decisions? 

Whether you decide to do something or not, you need to be able to slow things down amongst the crisis. 


2. The path of least resistance 

The second idea is around cognitive ease. This is when the brain takes the path of least resistance to conserve energy. In the Stone Age, cave men and women would survive better if they were in a familiar environment, which makes sense. 

It’s a similar concept when a new starter joins an organisation. Typically, managers tend to talk at them on their first day. The fact is, the new hire is not taking in anything the manager says.  Giving them important information is a waste of time because they’re taking in the fact that there’s a photocopier by the wall and a coffee machine in the open plan kitchen. 

They’re not listening to you because they’re processing the unfamiliar surroundings. 

However, once they realise that these things are all there and they’re familiar with their environment, then they’re ready for you to talk to them about strategy and their role. 


High value activities for business owners

Similarly for business owners right now, there’s so much information coming your way. Whether it’s the stimulus package announcements from the government and Jobkeeper, or information coming from your business about revenue performance and how your people are feeling. 

Even having more video conference meetings is more tiring than normal meetings because of all the things you need to set up and plan for. It can sap your energy and drain your brain.

You may find yourself doing the equivalent of sitting in the corner doing a crossword puzzle or whatever that looks like in your job because your brain is saying, ‘I’m just going to focus on this because I can’, when there could be other things you should be working on. 

So my question to you is: Do you have a list of five to seven high value activities for your job as a business owner that you should be spending time on, scheduled in your calendar at a time when you have the most energy? Because if you don’t, you will find that you spend that time on those trivial tasks that don’t create value.

 

3. Sunk cost fallacy

There’s an example in the book about a conference. You book the flights, take the time away and spend your energy to attend this two day conference. You get there and day one is terrible, the speakers are no good and the content is not useful. 

You think, okay this was a bad decision, but you’ve gone all the way there so you might as well go to the second day and see what happens. Lo and behold, the second day is just as bad as the first. 

That’s a sunk cost fallacy. 

You knew Day 2 was likely to be just as poor as Day 1, but because you spent all that time and money, you decided to attend anyway.

What you should have done is look at that second day and go, how should I best spend that day to create the most value to myself and my business? 

Similarly, right now we’re making decisions to change our businesses to deal with this crisis. You may have gone down a particular path but at some point, your environment is going to change again and the business will have to adapt. 

If you succumb to the sunk cost fallacy or the fact that you’ve invested all this time and effort in one direction, you might not make the right decision based on what is right at the current point in time. 

Maybe this isn’t something you’re faced with right now but we’re flagging that this could be the case down the track and to be aware of it when it does occur.

 

We always welcome questions, so send any our way through here.