Live and Lead For Impact Podcast with Kirsten E Ross

EP 169 Mike Swigunski – Work and Travel With Ease


https://globalcareerbook.com/

 

Mike Swigunski is a #1 bestselling author of Global Career: How to Work Anywhere and Travel Forever. He is a remote job and travel expert that has helped build multiple six, seven, and even eight-figure online businesses while traveling around the world to more than 85+ countries! 

 

 

Learn the Delegation Strategies I’ve shared with THOUSANDS and get your team to do what you need! Grab a copy of my EBook, The Six Simple Steps to Great Delegation

DefeatTheDrama.com/DelegationSheet

 

Kirsten Ross Vogel is an author, podcast host and CEO of Focus Forward Coaching where we help leaders 

 

  • defeat team drama 
  • to 4X productivity, 
  • wow their customers 
  • and improve their bottom line 
  • with simple, actionable strategies, systems, communication hacks and mindset shifts.

 

Ready for some individualized help for your leadership challenges?  Grab a spot on my calendar and let’s discuss how I can help you transform your leadership and your team.

DefeattheDrama.com/Call

 

EP 168 3 Keys to More Productive Meetings

EP 168 3 Keys to More Productive Meetings

 

Excited – 

Who here hates meetings?

 

 

Help you feel confident and empowered as a leader

 

My name is Kirsten Ross Vogel, author, HR Pro and CEO of Focus Forward Coaching where we help leaders who want to make a bigger, bolder impact

  • defeat team drama 
  • 4X productivity, 
  •  And improve their bottom line 
  • with simple, actionable strategies, systems and mindset shifts.

 

Common Meeting Frustrations

  • Meetings Starting and Ending Late – LOOK AROUND AND CONSIDER THE TIME AND…..MONEY BEING WASTED!
  • People Not Attending or Not Prepared
  • Feeling Like You are Wasting Time
  • Unclear Objective ~ Why Am I Here?
  • Including Unnecessary People in the Meeting – HIGH JACK MTG, IRRELEVANT OR NOT FACT BASED OPINIONS
  • Dealing with Power Struggles and Undefined Roles
  • Texting/Emailing During Meetings!
  • Sidebar Conversations – OR BACKHALL AFTER THE FACT
  • No Follow Through / No Progress

 

 

INSTEAD

 

  • The Meeting Must have at Least 1 Goal
  • A Real Goal – sharing info, discussing, deciding, sharing ideas? –quick updates among team members or departments Not just someone said we should have meetings

 

 

  • A Meeting Must have the Key Players – if you need to make decisions but decision makers aren’t available – don’t have the meeting

 

 

  • A Series of Meetings Must Create Progress
  • Real Progress – if you decide in the meeting assign next steps – what will happen before the next meeting and who is accountable

 

 

Struggling with a Team or Family Business Challenge?  Grab a spot on my calendar.  You’ll get a Business Breakthrough in 15 minutes and we’ll talk next steps.  DefeatTheDrama.com/call

 

EP41: I’ve Recommended Better Processes But Leaders Won’t Implement Them

DTD Episode 41 Show Notes Defeat YOUR Drama:

I’ve Recommended Better Processes but Leaders Won’t Implement Them 

Click to download the Show Notes for Defeat YOUR Drama Podcast Episode 41

If you’d like me to share customized strategies for your drama situation go to my website http://podcast.defeatthedrama.com/defeat-your-drama/. You can type or record your message. Use your real name or an alias for anonymity. Note that recorded or written messages may be used on the podcast.

DefeatYourDramaJen from Fort Worth, TX:

I work in purchasing and previously worked in Customer Service where we made enhancements that saved time and money. In my transition, it was very clear we had broken systems and areas where we are very inefficient. I have submitted process improvement recommendations several times but they go through an approval process where I am not part of that discussion. (Leadership team) It takes some money to fix the issues. Our leadership team worried about hard cost savings but not savings where it’s difficult to justify/capture. But at the same time, they are having everyone manually handle tactical issues and being inefficient. Help 🙂

Jen, so sorry to hear about your struggles. Let’s get you some customized solutions. I am an efficiency junky so I understand your desire to improve your work processes and systems!

As always, In the Defeat Your Drama segments, I will provide solutions based on the information provided. I will obviously not have full details so will provide customized strategies based on what you share. Always consider your own specific circumstances before taking any action. These are suggestions not guarantees.

#1 Generate Some Creative Calculations

It sounds like your company is very interested in attaching dollars and cents to their decisions. There are times when, as you say, it is more difficult to capture the true savings. You’ll still want to make a business case for improving the processes so think creatively about other calculations you can generate that would illustrate the need for improved efficiency. For instance, you mention all of the manual tasks. How about calculating the money they are spending on the additional time required for these manual tasks? Use an average wage and multiply by the additional minutes or hours per person per day. If they just look at salaries as fixed costs per day they may miss this. There isn’t actually a cost savings it’s just a way of thinking about how they are spending their compensation dollars. Are ineffective processes the best use of those dollars? As an example, I often have clients calculate the cost of ineffective meetings. Tallying time spent for the wages in the room generates some eye opening results! This concept is the same. Not a cost savings just better utilization of dollars spent.

What else could be done with the captured time? Perhaps there are some revenue generating activities that have been put on hold because there is a lack of time. Multiply the revenue that could be generated by focusing those compensation expenditures on those activities instead.

You get the picture. Just think outside the box and find alternate ways to calculate costs and lost revenues to make the expenditure on new systems more enticing.

#2 Emphasize Your Unique Perspective

It sounds like the fact that you have worked in both customer service and purchasing has helped you have a unique perspective on the flow of work inside the organization. You are perhaps able to identify additional opportunities for improvement.

You don’t say how you are sharing your ideas now. You need a strong advocate. Is there someone on the leadership team you could speak with individually to explain your unique perspective? Share with them that you would like to utilize this perspective to benefit the organization as a whole. Give he or she a couple of examples you’ve identified.

Perhaps between your unique perspective and your creative calculations they would allow you to make a presentation to the leadership team yourself. You could then answer questions and connect with them around the topic. The focus would be on your enthusiasm and desire to improve efficiency and profits.

#3 Focus on What’s in Your Control

When faced with a frustration I always have clients figure out what is in their control and what isn’t. Find creative ways to solve the problems from a direction that’s in your control. Let go of the rest. So, you will try these techniques for being heard. You will create a business case for the improvements. You will see if you are able to present your ideas yourself. If that doesn’t work is there anything else in your control? At a minimum, you control your reaction to the ineffective processes and manual tasks. Being frustrated by them doesn’t help the situation it just zaps your energy. So, you can be frustrated or accept what is true about the tasks you must do. Either way they are there for the time being.

If you stopped focusing on the inefficiency would you be able to find more satisfaction at work? The goal is to make what is currently frustrating you as palatable as possible. If they won’t change the processes you have to live with them or move on. For your own sanity, avoid the feeling of frustration that arises from something you cannot change.

Submit your Drama Question at the below link…
http://podcast.defeatthedrama.com/defeat-your-drama

If you enjoyed this episode, I would really appreciate a review on iTunes and Stitcher

EP13: Simple Process Improvement

DTD Episode 13 Show Notes
Simple Process Improvement

Click to download the show notes for the Defeat the Drama Podcast Episode 13

Drama steals focus and zaps energy!

Most often when we think about process improvement we picture major data collection, pricey consultants, black belts and more. It doesn’t have to be that way, however. Most of my clients are small and medium sized businesses, often family owned. I’ve also worked with quite a few non-profits. Rarely are they engaging in process improvement. It seems too daunting. I teach them a simple version that any organization can adopt. It adds value not just through improved efficiency.

It also, wait for it……….defeats drama!

Humans have a tendency to assign negative assumptions about others in the absence of fact.

Where you have individual team members or departments working together without really knowing each other you can end up with lots of drama around work processes.

In the absence of fact about how the processes and procedures from one department flow to the other, teams tend to create negative assumptions. They create a belief that all of the snafus are a result of poor performance and a lack of caring from the other departments. Or the often assumed, they don’t do anything over there.

This generates drama!

I am, thus, a huge proponent of implementing simple process improvement!

Engaging in some simple process improvement activities will do the following:

  • Team Members Get to Know Each Other
  • Employees Gain an Understanding of the Work Flow
  • You Get More Effective Processes
  • Encourages Resourcefulness
  • Processes are Documented

To engage in Simple Process Improvement start here:

  • Capture the Following:
    – Constant Frustration
    –Frequently Miss Deadlines
    –Tasks that Take Longer than They Should
    –Hiccups
    –Snafus

Capture all of the above in a Word Doc or Excel Spreadsheet.

Prioritize the List

  • Start with the Biggest Bang for the Buck
  • Find an Issue that Can Be Resolved
    Easily with a Big Benefit
  • Prioritize the Rest Mixing
    Simple with More Complex
  • Experience Constant Movement

Assign Responsibilities and Deadlines

  • Driver/Owner
  • Doers
  • Deadline for All or Part of the Solution

Schedule Follow Up Meetings

  • Report Updates Quickly
  • Provide Accountability
  • Identify New Issues
  • Tweak Resolutions
  • Assign New Responsibilities
  • Create Communication
    Strategy
  • Celebrate

Some Simple Solutions

  • Check Lists
  • Step by Step Instructions
  • Organized Contact Lists
  • FAQ’s
  • Update Forms & Remove Old Versions

For Success

  • Document All Changes
  • Communicate as Needed
  • Train Where Required
  • Hold Everyone Accountable

If you enjoyed, I would really appreciate a review on iTunes and Stitcher