Saturday 19 March 2011

SPEED (Kills) - Go Faster?

The 'elephant in the room', the subject that most businesses fail to address head-on, is speed. Speed, actually, is just about the only thing that really matters.
  • Speed of response
  • Speed of decision-making
  • Speed of action
  • Speed of getting back to people
  • Speed of getting feedback
  • Speed of creating subtle changes or modifying your action or responding to the environment
  • Speed of changing direction
It is just all about speed.



Remember, no speed = inertia = death.



So, what are you going to do about it? (And can you make these decisions right now, please!).
  1. Quicker Steps Decide to move much faster. Every part of your body/business... Create momentum; destroy inertia. Create an excitement and a buzz around what you do and how quickly you get things done. (Not just you but also in your business.)
  2. Bigger Steps Decide to move further when you do move. Take bigger, more daring steps.
  3. Deal with the under-performing customers, the ones who don't get how you work best. Try to fix them and if you can't fix them then sack them. But do it all now. Don't wait.
  4. Deal with the under-performing products and services, the ones you never should have taken on. Try to fix them and if you can't fix them then sack them. But do it all now. Don't wait.
  5. Deal with the under-performing suppliers, the ones who aren't giving you the quality of product/service that you had expected. Try to fix them and if you can't fix them then sack them. But do it all now. Don't wait.
  6. Deal with the under-performing staff. Try to fix them and if you can't fix them then sack them (ideally you do this legally). But do it all now. Don't wait.

    QUICK RANT:
    The problem with under-performers is not that they under-perform. No, their under-performance is simply a result of you allowing them to under-perform. You not being clear about what you expect or you not telling them when you feel disappointed or you not telling them when they've done well. They under-perform because you have let them. Stop that right away.
  7. Try stuff faster. And fail faster. And learn faster. And pick yourself up again faster.
  8. Employ people who move/decide/act quickly.
  9. Run a team that has at its heart the belief that it must move/decide/act quickly.
  10. Create space to design and develop clarity, direction and purpose so that you can move even faster.
  11. Mix with fast people, people who make things happen. People with experience.
  12. Create simple/fast/effective controls and systems in your business. Measures that are relevant. Dashboards that are easy to create and even easier to read and respond to.
  13. Enable everyone in your business to think the unthinkable and say the unsayable.
  14. Find ways to create prototypes that are good enough so that you can get feedback from the market. Do try to create the perfect solution. You must deliver, deliver, deliver and deliver.
  15. Lead from the front. Show your team, your customers and your competitors exactly what you mean by 'speed'.
The impact of all this speed is immense. You see results quicker, you get more response. You have something to work with, you come alive. You become a magnet for others looking for the leadership and direction that your speed creates. The speed helps you become bolder to take bigger, bolder steps: better or more expensive products that offer more to more people faster.



BUT BEWARE you don't confuse speed with wheel spin. You must create business not just activity; sales not just conversations. Measure and test and use a simple yet powerful and effective time management system to make sure you are being as effective as possible. Don't assume faster always equals better.

What I am proposing here will not make things easier at first.

Doing more things more quickly, things will get messy. Very messy. And, I might say, you have to do more things at the same time. You cannot grow a business one-project-at-a-time. Sequential planning may work in the multi-national... it may look pretty on a GANT Chart but in a growing entrepreneurial business you neither want nor can you afford such an unnecessary luxury.

Rigid adherence to 'the plan' signals the death knell of the small business. Accept that you need to do things fast and as a consequence a lot will happen at the same time. Do things simultaneously and not just sequentially.


All those posters were right when I was a child. They said "Speed kills..." It does kill, it kills your competition!

15 comments:

Louise said...

Oh YES - but HOW????? Nice words but simply impossible for the average human being.

Sue_Walton said...

I think the speed thing is quite dangerous as you do suggest. Speed in its own right is inot a 'good thing'. You need to do moreo than just be fast. You need to make better and smrter decisions.

However your main point, that we do not go fast enough, fo rfear of this that and the other is right.

Sue

FredEdwards said...

See http://fred-myfd.blogspot.com/2007/08/time-silent-killer-of-businesses.html
"Time - the silent killer of business"

JerryB said...

Pardon me for being rude but uit seem that you aretaking this speed thing a bit too literally.

Having looked at your site and your newsletter, you are running a Growth Challenge, maybe one for accountants, an event for professionals as well as all the other bits you claim to be doing: consulting, mentoring, keynotes. Spread too thin I think. Surely this proves why you should not be focusing on speed. Jack of all trades etc

Trotski said...

Love it right up my alley... you just need to get the ducks in a row faster too!

Robert Craven said...

Jerry B
Thers is a lot going on. All will be revealed over the next week or so. Exciting times.
RC

Dean said...

Come on, give us a clue.

Dean said...

Thanks for taking my call today. So, the answer is NOT some cute five ways or seven Ms or six Ws but there is no surprise there, I guess. What is fascinating is how one can create a better business. Cheers for the insight.

Robert Craven said...

SPEED is only part of the solution. My current concern is the sheer volume of get-rich-quick schemes that people rush into. There is probably no such thing!

You can follow a 10 Tips type set of tactics but normally the root cause for issues cannpoy be sorted by the simple pulling of a lever here and pushing a button over there. Having siad that, my experience is that an expert/outsider does have the capacity to help you move on.

And as for DIY... it can work for some I agree but not always.

Jeremiah said...

Fully supportive of the speed philosophy but we do need to make sure we do not confuse speed with effectiveness. Sometimes smaller, slower steps can get you further. Something about more haste., less speed, eh!

Sian said...

I think it is lack of speed that kills.

John McDougle said...

I have two thoughts. What you are saying has echoes in both the idea of 'Try a lot of stuff and keep what works' idea and the Observe Orient Decide Act cycle created by John Boyd, where by moving through the cycle faster gets you inside the decision making loop of your competitor. This enables you to disrupt their decision making and so get an advantage. It applies to faster product development, getting more marketing messages out faster, etc. My second is how about the 'Slow is smooth, smooth is fast' quote. Speed is not enough on its own without precise targeting.

Robert Craven said...

Yes, John, I have been thinking in a similar direction. Using the 'Good To Great' analogy we need to be nimble but not like a fox (shooting off in all different directions and we need the rock-solidity of the hedgehog (we know what we are great at and we stick to it).

So the solution is a hedgehog on steroids! First writhe around making the tough decisions and once made get on with the job in hand.

Lots of mixed metaphors but I am sure you know what I mean.

Jeremiah said...

Clever to see this serialised on Twitter

Robert Craven said...

You could... attend my next webcast: 10 Things to do in the Next 10 Days http://bit.ly/mt1Jca