Saturday, November 12, 2011

The Effective Executive by Peter F. Drucker – Part One


Introduction

I recently started reading a book called “The Effective Executive” which in a nutshell tries to guide the knowledge workers as executives in an organization. We all have heard the adjective “Go getter”; also the phrase “He gets the job DONE”. But the integral point of this book is the attempt to guiding the executives to be effective by getting the RIGHT THINGS done. In the following summary of the book, you will find how and why right things need to be done.

Why Effective Executives

As the main focus of the book is on educating EFFECTIVE executives, the question of why we need such people in the first place is answered. To answer this question we need to distinguish a typical worker from a knowledge worker. Knowledge workers are the educated workers whose abilities are not mainly physical but rather what they can contribute using their mind. Also, the motivation of a knowledge worker is thrived by the effectiveness of his contribution to his work. There are many workers who can get things done right but only effective knowledge worker who are potentially the effective executives who are the ones that get the RIGHT things done. During the past 100 years, we have leant to be efficient by doing thing s right; what is more important now is to be effective and get the right things done.

The Effectiveness

Intelligent, imagination, and knowledge are three essential resources to be an executive but only effectiveness converts them into results. Executives are not in an organization to operate same as other workers. They own vital role in an organization to make executive decisions which define the path of the organization. There are many distractions such as meetings, events, other employee’s problems etc. for an executive’s effective time but one (executive) will defiantly fritter himself away OPERATING if he let the flow of events determine his work, his priorities, and his decisions. In that case, the mentioned executive has wasted his knowledge, brilliance, and all abilities not knowing of effectiveness he might have achieved.

The best part about effectiveness is that it is not a gift. It is not a talent that one is born with. If it was so, the human’s civilization would be completely invulnerable if not untenable. Effectiveness is a habit which requires competence and balancing scales. Now that we know it can be learned, questions such as the constitution of it, the aspects and lessons of it, and its method of learning – concept through education, skill through apprentice, or practicing elementary actions over and over will arise.  

There are five practices for this habit of the mind that have to be acquired for making effective executives. Those are knowing how to effectively using your time, focusing on outward contribution to produce expected results from executives,  concentrating on strengths and making decisions based on the strengths of self and the organization, focusing on priorities and managing the scope, and finally, taking the time and making effective decisions.

Time

Before starting to plan, before starting tasks, and before setting any priorities an effective executive starts with his time. He starts learning how his time is being used. Time, Time, Time….the fact that the time is being mentioned in this book as the first factor to become effective, stresses on its importance. Time is a limiting factor. ANY other resource is replaceable, negotiable, and storable except time. The most important factor that distinguishes an effective executive is tender loving care of time.

Identifying Where Time Goes

There are three steps to fully assess where one’s time is being used. They are recording time, managing time, and consolidating time. Managers tend to waste more time than others in an organization. Since their time is mainly wasted by dealing with everyone’s problem, they are the first people who should start managing their own time. In order to find out where one’s time goes, an effective executive tends to ask three important questions from himself first and then the people in his organization. The first question tires to identify and eliminate the things that are only waste of time and do not add any productivity. That question is “what would happen if this were not done at all?” The answer immediately determines if the activity needs to be stopped or not. The second question tends to allocate time to the people who can make the best use of it. It is “which of the activities on my time log could be done by somebody else just as well, if not better?” Let that sink in for moment... This does not mean that one is trying to get rid of his own responsibility. This rather means if a certain job could be done by somebody else so one does not have to delegate but can really get to one’s own work, that is a major improvement in effectiveness. And the last question which one should ask from others in his organization is “What do I do that wastes your time without contributing to your effectiveness?” This question must be asked with complete open-mindedness.

By identifying where time is being wasted, an effective executive realizes that disposing large chunks of time for productivity instead of small dribs and drabs of time, directing his and others’ focus on specialty and away from opportunities, and centering his concentration on results and the outcome (outside) away from his own vision for increasing performance is the first step to approach maximum effectiveness.

Other Time-Wasters

There are other time wasters; over-staffing is one thing. If the senior people of an organization spend more than small friction of their time on problems of human relations, then the work force is certainly too large. Another common time waster is mal-organization. Excessive meeting is one of the symptoms. Ideally, in an organization which is systematically perfect, there are no meetings. Imagine any car manufacture where robots do almost all the assemble; there is no meeting among robots and electric devices. And that is because they all know what they are supposed to do. They have been orientated once and they keep doing what they are supposed to. Yes, we are not robots, but if all the required information for everyone’s responsibilities is available and job descriptions are fully understood by job owners there would not be any unnecessary meeting. Too many meetings indicate that responsibility is diffused and that information is not addressed to the people who need it. But sometimes meetings are needed for instance brainstorming sessions; but let’s not forget that meetings must be exceptions not habits or rules. In that case, the meeting needs to be purposefully directed; otherwise they become DANGER, not only a small chunk of wasted time. And that last time waster is malfunction of information which typically is the result of miscommunication.

Consolidating Discretionary Time

Effective executives begin with estimating how much discretionary time they have on their own. Then they set aside continues time in a proper amount. If later they realized there are matter which encroach their reserved time, they scrutinize their record again for making the maximum productivity out of their time by eliminating time wasters. This process should always go on as an executive’s log must be updated in order to be effective. 


To be continued...