Author: admin

  • Are You Present?

    Here’s a quick career tip, to enhance our working life – be present!

    When you go to a meeting, or join a colleague for cake and networking are you ‘in’ the room in mind as well as body?

    Or are you Tweeting, texting, Facebooking (is that a verb now? …I sincerely hope not) or simply wondering what to have for dinner?

    When we’re ‘present’ and concentrating on the other person we build a stronger connection with them, which increases the level of trust they feel for us.

    This could be the difference that makes the difference that gets us the job, clinches the sale, or turns a contact into a friend.

    So, this week….please put your phone away, hold one conversation at a time, switch off your internal dialogue and Be Present!

    People will like you for it!

  • Standing Still Is Work

    When was the last time you engaged in a process improvement activity in your business? Or maybe at home?

    We all waste time through inefficient processing, where we have too many steps that don’t add any value. For example, when we staple paper together the only part of the process that adds value is the moment when we push the stapler down. Fishing around in a desk drawer to find the stapler, then walking to the cupboard to find the staples and then hearing that crunch sound as the staple jams mid-cycle is all a waste.

    I use this example to make the point that process improvement doesn’t have to be concerned with the complexity of a large factory. It can be small in scale and entirely to do with smoothing our daily stresses and giving us back an extra 5 minutes of free time.

    The secret of success is not found in a clever formula though. It’s about observation, because as the mantra has it:

    See it – sort it
    Measure it – manage it

    To see it all we need to do is to stand still and look. The Japanese would call this Gemba.

    We can call it Tea & Biscuit Time, when we take a moment to dunk a Hobnob and look around us to see what exactly is going on.

    Standing still could be the best 5 minutes of work we do this week, because it will give us the stillness to see wasted effort, which in turn creates the opportunity for improvement.

    I think I’ll sort out the black hole of a stationary draw and refill the stapler!

    What will you do?