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Why do we make things so complicated?
Humans have a way of making things complicated, even when we try to simplify things, the result can be a more complex solution than was necessary.
“Everything should be made as simple as possible, but no simpler.”
Humans have a way of making things complicated, even when we try to simplify things, the result can be a more complex solution than was necessary. Road signage can be a good example of overcomplicating a solution. How often have you driven to a new location and been overwhelmed with signage?
In general, knowing where you are going, and where to park once you have arrived are important pieces of information. But often we have signage overload. It’s clear the original thought process was well-intended but the result is too much information to onboard. The driver is faced with so many signs they don’t know where to focus their attention and miss the important piece of information they need. The original purpose of making the driver’s life easier seems to have been forgotten somewhere along the way.
Complex journeys
Work environments can be complex, meetings about meetings, then there are the reports, workflows, forms, processes, and emails. So many emails. Ask a colleague how their working day is going and often the response is “busy”.
We are all so busy; our workdays are filled with meetings, emails, calls and reports but how much of it adds to productivity? From the conversations we are having with companies, there is the awareness that the workplace has become overcomplicated. Like multiple signs on a road, the intentions were good but along the way, people lost sight of the purpose of the signs.
Workers are feeling overwhelmed and burnt out by work, whether they are office-based, remote or hybrid. There is too much to do, too many distractions (video call fatigue, anyone?) and expectations on all sides are higher than ever. It’s time to create simpler workplaces, where employees are empowered, know what the direction is and are unencumbered by legacy work rules that have outlived their time.
Keep things simple
You would have thought creating a simpler work environment would be easy. But sometimes what should seem simple is anything but. Lisa Bodell, a leading advocate of simplifying work recounts a conversation she had with a neurologist. They made the comment:
“The brain is the most amazing organ we have, it starts working from the very moment we wake up, and it doesn’t stop until the very second we step foot into the office.”
Thinking in the workplace is a daring act as we rarely have the space and time to just sit and think. We have confused activity with productivity and forsaken thinking and innovation.
Reducing complexity removes barriers to getting things done. However, not all complexity is bad, some matters are complex and require appropriate processes that serve a purpose. The answer is identifying the complexity that causes inefficiency, creates barriers, confusion, and loss of morale.
The path to better answers is asking better questions. Leaders need to ask employees provocative questions, create productive agitation, and get under the skin of the problem by lifting people out of the status quo.
Demolish barriers
How often do we carry out tasks in a certain way because it’s always been done that way?
We assume it’s a company rule and go with the flow, not questioning why things are the way they are. After all, the rule must be in place for a good reason otherwise it wouldn’t remain a rule, right?
These cultural assumptions hold us back from questioning whether rules, reports, processes etc are still relevant or whether they have outlived their time. It’s important to identify what is holding back creativity and innovation - and then demolish those barriers.
The decision to change the culture and embrace a simpler one must be followed by action, or it won’t happen. It isn’t a one-time activity or an annual event. We spend more time making things complex than we do simplify them. For culture to change, leaders must pledge to a code of conduct and commit to simplification as an operating principle.
Change is a choice and for change to happen it must be a daily habit. For every task, meeting, and activity we need to ask ourselves ‘is this necessary’ and ‘is this being done in the most minimal way possible’ whilst still achieving the goals.
By simplifying the work environment, we empower people to make decisions and to identify and remove barriers. We create space to think, and we give innovation an opportunity to flourish. Employees will direct their attention to where their leaders focus – don’t deviate from the journey and neither will your team.
9 meeting personality types – can you spot yours?
Understanding the personality types of team members and how to deal with them is an important part of keeping meetings productive. Here we identify nine personality types and the best way to deal with them. See if you can spot yourself...
How to facilitate meetings to get the best from every personality type
Productive meetings are a great way of achieving objectives, creating new approaches to solve tricky problems, and stimulating two-way communication. Effective meetings leverage all the brainpower in the room in pursuit of getting work done. However, with so many personality types in one room, it can be a challenge to engage everyone.
Understanding the personality types of team members and how to deal with them is an important part of keeping meetings productive. Here we identify nine personality types and the best way to deal with them. See if you can spot yourself...
The Hippo
Heavy by name and heavy by nature, the Hippo (Highest Paid Person’s Opinion) casts a large shadow in any meeting. Their views can carry more weight, especially with impressionable and junior members, and this can bias outcomes. The best way to deal with the Hippo is to speak with them before the meeting and ask if they can take a step back and invite others to express their views. This will encourage debate, the sharing of ideas and empower meeting participants to contribute.
Outward signs of seniority can promote further power imbalance, stifling opinions and creativity. After all, it’s called power dressing for a reason! Removing obvious status symbols such as designer outfits, luxury branded pens and military decorations can help to create a balanced atmosphere despite title differences and seniority.
The Resigned
Usually, in a trance-like state, this personality type has checked out before the meeting has even started. The Resigned has been in so many unproductive meetings, they have given up trying to change them. The best way to revive their interest is to give them hope that their contribution counts. Be clear on meeting purpose and follow up, ask for their input and if necessary, pair up fellow Resigned personalities to work together in pairs.
The Prisoner
Told to come along to the meeting by someone else, the Prisoner can be a disruptive force. With the sole aim of gaining freedom, the Prisoner will mount a rebellion against incarceration until they are released from captivity. The only way to deal with this personality type is to signpost the way to freedom and encourage them to leave the room.
The Sweat
This character believes that over contributing to meetings will win them brownie points with the HIPPO or Owner. To get the best out of this personality type, channel the Sweat’s energy into a specific task. It will aid facilitation and drive their focus away from seeking praise and to the task at hand.
The Pedant
Dotting the i's and crossing the t's is a way of life for this personality type. Uncomfortable with ambiguity, the Pedant needs to get every detail right, there is no room for error. This personality type is all about the details, and that is completely at odds with ‘big picture’ people. In their quest for getting the details right, the Pedant can lose sight of the objective so play to their strengths by making sure they attend planning meetings. Think right person, right time – and keep the brainstorming/strategy meetings far away from the Pedant’s schedule.
The Visionary
Pedants beware, the Visionary doesn’t do detail! Overflowing with big ideas that stream out, mostly unfiltered, the Visionary provides a deluge of thoughts, concepts, and brainstorms. Be prepared for frequent plot twists as you sift through the torrent of ideas to find the golden nugget. Get the best out of a visionary by being clear on the purpose of the meeting and what must be achieved. Always have the question visible to sharpen the focus of these creative thinkers. Lastly, ensure everyone understands that the Harvesting section will be tasked with finding the diamond idea amongst the rubble.
The Waffler
The term filibuster was invented just for the Waffler, talking until he’s blue in the face. Once they gain the floor, they have no plans to relinquish it anytime soon. Just like the name implies, the Waffler loves to blather on and on, making the same point repeatedly. Setting solid ground rules and rewarding good behaviour is the way forward with the Waffler. You want to encourage them to adhere to the rule of ‘telling, not selling’ but if it all gets too much switch to silent ideation mode if needed.
The Owner
Requests the meeting in the first place – but rarely has a clearly defined purpose, goal, or subject matter that the meeting needs to address. The Owner tends to hold the reins too tightly and struggles to relinquish control, constantly telling the facilitator how to run the meeting. The way to deal with the Owner is to ask powerful questions until the objective is well-defined. It’s vital to clearly outline the role of the Owner and Facilitator in the process. Once parameters have been established you can move forward and agree meeting objectives together.
The Facilitator
Like a chess grandmaster, the Facilitator’s role is to use all the pieces on the board to achieve the outcome set by the Owner. Fortunately, they have benefited from facilitation training with Treehouse!
Facilitating Better Meetings
Facilitating meetings can be stressful and unrewarding unless you know what you are doing. Fortunately, we have an online course to help you learn the skill of facilitation. Facilitating Better Meetings will help you develop the skills to make your meetings more effective, dynamic, and engaging.
Advanced Facilitation
As well as the online course Treehouse has two further levels of facilitation training available:
Facilitating Workshops Foundation – available virtually or face to face
Facilitating Workshops Advanced – available virtually or face to face
Investing in the skills to make your meetings engaging and productive will save your organisation money, enable you to achieve your objectives and make your people happier – who can beat that feeling of being part of a team that is firing on all cylinders, powering through the work and creating great solutions that delight customers?
Make meetings great again!
Meeting culture is taking a toll not just on employee morale but also on the financial wellbeing of the corporate balance sheet.
Today’s meetings
Meetings are part of our daily professional lives, not even a work-from-home mandate during a global pandemic eradicated them from our work calendars. We merely adjusted our schedules and shifted from meeting in person to online.
Yet many of us think that meetings are ineffective and unproductive, according to research data collected from a variety of surveys. In fact, findings suggest that many meetings are not only inefficient but are counterproductive and have a negative impact on morale, with 67% of employees complaining that they are spending too much time in meetings, hindering them from being industrious at work.
Research into working practices show that the average British worker spends 26 working days per year in meetings. That’s more than most employees holiday allowance! Managers and professionals aren’t immune to meeting mania either, losing on average 30% of their time in meetings that could have been invested in other productive tasks.
Meeting culture is taking a toll not just on employee morale but also on the financial well-being of the corporate balance sheet. A survey of 6,500 people from the USA, UK, and Germany found that among the 19 million meetings that were observed, the ineffective meetings cost the UK economy up to £45 billion per year.
Embedded into culture
Meetings are so embedded into office working culture that we often fail to appreciate just how much time employees spend in meetings. The statistics speak for themselves:
Overall, 15% of an organisation’s time is spent in meetings, which has increased year on year since 2008.
On average middle managers spend 35% and upper management spend 50% of their time in meetings.
More than 35% of employees cited spending 2 to 5 hours per day on meetings and conference calls but say they have little output to show for the time spent.
No tier of management spared
Meetings are viewed as a necessary activity to keep projects moving forward and keep the team engaged. However, the research doesn’t back this up; a survey of senior managers in a range of industries revealed:
65% said meetings keep them from completing their own work.
71% said meetings are unproductive and inefficient.
64% said meetings come at the expense of deep thinking.
62% said meetings miss opportunities to bring the team closer together.
Just who or what is driving this culture of endless meetings when surveys reveal that even senior management feels it’s a wasteful use of time?
It appears we have sleepwalked into accepting unproductive, inefficient meetings that chew up valuable chunks of our working week. But it doesn’t have to be this way. When run effectively, meetings are an opportunity to clarify issues, set new directions, sharpen focus, create alignment, and move objectives forward.
Improvement requires change
People are social creatures and meetings can be the sweet spot where we get work done, together. Meetings that are run effectively can be energising and morale-boosting, facilitating people to come together to collaborate on projects, coordinate resources and build their community.
To achieve this, we need to make meetings super effective, to leverage all the brainpower in the room in pursuit of clear meeting objectives, aligned with the purpose of the organisation. Adopting the right approach not only increases a successful outcome but it is also respectful of people’s precious time and the intention of making the most of it.
The good news is that running better meetings is a skill that can be easily learned, and it is called facilitation. Treehouse has an online course called Facilitating Better Meetings that will help you develop the skills to make your meetings effective, productive, and engaging.
Reap the benefits of better meetings
Meetings can be highly effective in getting work done, creating new ideas to solve tricky problems, and stimulating two-way communication. Increasing the effectiveness of meetings can:
Accelerate innovation - increasing the quality, volume, and frequency of strategic insight.
Improve speed to market – by exchanging ideas and insights across projects and responding more quickly to customer needs and market opportunities.
Increase accountability – creating an environment where more people contribute to discussions and decisions more often, resulting in higher levels of personal ownership.
Optimise time management – effective meetings are more productive, saving time and money.
Innovation and Change Management
Embracing innovation and change allows organisations to seize new opportunities, improve efficiency, and build resilience
By investing in the skills to make your meetings more engaging and productive, it will ultimately save your organisation money. It will make your people happier because they will feel involved and valued as a contributor and empowered to achieve their objectives.
There is no greater feeling than being part of a team that is firing on all cylinders, powering through the work, and creating great solutions that delight customers. When it comes to meetings, we should think like a 90's techno band and aim for shorter, better, faster, stronger.
Survey data sources: Harvard Business Review, Moo, Timely, HR Digest.
What is your Personal Brand?
We all have a brand and whether the first impression is in person or from an online presence, people will form an opinion of you. The question to ask yourself is do you want to be the person controlling how you are perceived?
What is your personal brand?
Gravitas and Personal Brand
This course will help you understand your Personal Brand and how to evolve it to positively influence people's perceptions of you, now and in the future.
And if you aren’t managing yours who is?
Not many of us think of ourselves as a ‘brand’, let alone giving any thought to how we should be developing our own. Whether you are aware of it or not, you have a personal brand – it’s what people say about you when you are not around to hear it. Your personal brand is based on the interactions you have with people, both in-person and online. If the thought of developing our own brand feels like an exercise straight out of the David Brent Book of Leadership, it’s time for a rethink.
Ask yourself this question, when a colleague tells you a new person is joining the team, what is the first thing you do? I would be amazed if the answer isn’t ‘Google the name to learn more about the person’ because for most of us that is exactly what we do!
We all have a brand and whether the first impression is in person or from an online presence, people will form an opinion of you, and this will build over multiple interactions. The pertinent question to ask yourself is do you want to be the person controlling how you are perceived?
What do we mean by ‘your personal brand’?
In a word, it’s your reputation. Every interaction you have with others leaves a memorable experience and instils in people what they can expect from you. When consistent in delivering those experiences, it leaves an impression and builds a strong reputation.
By being conscious of your brand, delivering it clearly and consistently across a wide audience, you can open doors to opportunities that may have once felt closed. You can differentiate yourself from the crowd, and professionally from the competition. Your brand becomes your personal calling card, a distinct and authentic representation of you.
In building your personal brand, you define your individuality, maximize your strengths and manage your choices to create future opportunities. It gives you the chance to showcase your unique combination of skills and experiences that make you who you are.
Know your value
People with strong brands are clear about who they are. They know and maximize their strengths. The first step in building your brand is understanding your strengths, your abilities, and your value so you can present yourself confidently and consistently.
The American entrepreneur Malcolm Forbes once said, “Too many people overvalue what they are not, and undervalue what they are.” Having a good understanding of who you are and being confident of your skills, knowledge and expertise makes personal branding an easier task.
Be consistent
Do not underestimate the power of emotions in professional interactions. When people describe having a gut feeling about someone, it’s usually an emotion-based judgement. Being conscious and deliberate about your interactions with people can influence what they think about you, so endeavour to always make those interactions positive.
The emotions you evoke with your team, your peers and your management can have an impact on your career. By being more intentional in how you behave and conduct yourself, you can influence what people think of you.
Be authentic
Authenticity is at the heart of your personal brand. It’s far easier to be consistent in how you interact with people if you are always true to yourself and to others. Building a personal brand isn’t about creating a perfect persona. It’s about being confident in who you are and what you do.
Personal branding is not about selling yourself or a product. It's about being true to yourself and being consistent with who you are and ensuring your reputation reflects the true authentic you.
Discover your X-Factor
Building your personal brand is not a one-off event, just like you, your personal brand is constantly evolving. The process of understanding who you are and validating your skills should be something you revisit many times over your lifetime.
Identifying who you are and what makes you stand out can deliver many benefits. In particular, it will give you the clarity to know where you would like to take your career and life. If you want to understand your personal brand but don’t know where to begin, we can help. Our course is self-paced, allowing you to build and evolve your brand at a speed suitable for you. Start your journey to a more authentic and consistent you today.
Improve or Move?
If you are finding yourself questioning whether you are as motivated and engaged as you once were in your role, it might be time for a change. However, change doesn’t always mean leaving your current employer.
Improve your prospects and build your brand
The start of a new year is when most people draw up a list of resolutions, effectively a wish list of things that this year (as opposed to previous years) they WILL achieve. With a spring in our step, we optimistically identify areas of our lives that we want to address and start a plan for self-improvement. They say the path to hell is paved with good intentions and in our zeal to improve everything all at once our professional lives rarely escape scrutiny.
YOUR PERSONAL BRAND ONLINE TRAINING
How to positively evolve and influence people’s perception of you
If you are finding yourself questioning whether you are as motivated and engaged as you once were in your role, it might be time for a change. However, change doesn’t always mean leaving your current employer. The grass might be greener elsewhere but if you are not ready to make the leap, the change you are looking for might be closer to home.
Don’t move – improve!
After the two years of tumultuous change, you would have thought people would be craving the safety net of a known environment. Yet social media is awash with new year resolutions and for many a change of company or career is high on the list. It seems that in 2022 we are keen to purge more from our lives than the 3kg of Quality Street consumed over Christmas.
The reality is that the pandemic forced many of us into survival mode. Our daily routines were turned upside down, our homes, workplaces and schools all merged into the one crowded, noisy, chaotic space. We had to batten down the hatches and get through it. It was difficult but we coped and that has given many of us the confidence to take a step back, reassess and think about our professional goals and ambitions.
Look before you leap
As we mentioned in our previous blog, The Great Resignation, Covid has provided an opportunity for employees to reflect on their role, whether their skills are being put to good use, and explore a sense of their own value. Work occupies a huge part of our lives, and the pandemic has shown that we want to be part of something bigger and more meaningful. When looking for a change it’s tempting to think the answer lies in leaving for pastures new. Before making the leap it’s important to think about what it is you want to change. Are you looking to enrich your role or improve your promotion prospects or change career path altogether?
If you feel like something is holding you back, it could be your personal brand. The term ‘branding’ used to be reserved only for commercial businesses. However, in a digital world where many of us can be Googled to within an inch of our lives, our personal brand is something we should be mindful of. Most people are not intentional or thoughtful about what they stand for, or how they come across to others. If you feel stuck in a rut, overlooked, or under-appreciated developing your personal brand could help.
Building a strong personal brand
Your personal brand is the unique combination of skills and experiences that make you who you are. It is how you present yourself to the world and differentiate yourself from the crowd. Jeff Bezos, the founder of Amazon, was famously quoted as saying, “Your brand is what people say about you when you’re not in the room.”
A personal brand is about making a lasting impression and connection with people. To do that, you need to represent yourself honestly and consistently. You can influence what people think of you by understanding how your behaviour and conduct affects those around you.
The process of building your personal brand will help you consider how you define your current place and where you want to be in the near-distant future. It helps determine who you are and where you are going. Without clear direction, you might get stuck in the rut of your current path.
Increase your visibility and reputation
Building your personal brand takes time and effort but it can change the way people perceive and respond to you; impacting how your team, peers and management view you. To understand your personal brand and how to evolve it in a positive direction, enrol today on our course.
Make 2022 the year you invest in yourself; it could be the best personal and professional new year’s resolution you have ever made - and stuck to!
Hybrid working: Are you at risk of implementing a one-size-fits-none approach?
Hybrid working: Are you at risk of implementing a one-size-fits-none approach?
Is your approach to hybrid working really working for all?
In the 1800s, the Industrial Revolution moved workers from fields to factories. In 2020, the Covid-19 pandemic was the catalyst for a similar shift, with most suddenly forced to swap their offices for their kitchen tables. This once in a generation opportunity to reimagine how we work has been welcomed, with 85% of those questioned for a recent Office for National Statistics survey admitting they wanted to use a hybrid approach of both home and office working in the future.
In the Treehouse, we’ve been talking to existing and new clients about the demands that hybrid working is placing on professionals in all industries and at all levels: leaders, managers and team leaders. There certainly seems to be an appetite to embrace change, but we sense there are still some barriers to actually designing and implementing your hybrid policies.
So, how can you ensure you implement an approach to hybrid working that works for all?
The first step is to acknowledge that you don’t already have all the answers. You may think that you know what your team wants, simply greater flexibility and more opportunities to work from home, but you will find that their needs are far more complicated than just physical location.
We’ve learnt that each level of a team has distinct learning needs and it’s essential that you tailor hybrid working programmes for each group. If you fail to assess and respond to the individual needs of each level of the team and make everyone, no matter their position, feel supported, appreciated, and empowered during the transition, you may find your approach becomes one-size-fits-none.
The key to success is to take a hybrid approach to hybrid working.
We suggest breaking down an organisation into three levels: leaders, managers, and teams. Starting by addressing the needs of these three groups individually will be the best way to create a hybrid working model that will fulfil the needs of the majority, not the few.
Leaders:
As a leader, you are probably the person your team looks to for answers, but this is unchartered territory and you now need to adapt and learn the necessary new skills to help navigate others through the transition to successful hybrid working.
Although this opportunity to reimagine the world of work is good news, as a leader you now have to take a step back from an environment you know and have succeeded in, and find the growth mindset to identify new processes and solutions.
As well as finding the solutions, you also have to develop your communication skills to clearly explain any new policies to your team. Effectively communicating the thinking behind any hybrid solution and encouraging every member of staff to buy into it is an essential change management skill that every effective leader now needs to hone.
Hybrid working brings with it many benefits, but it also has negative health and well-being implications. As a leader you now have an important pastoral role to play, nurturing relationships and communicating to staff that the organisation understands the new challenges and that you are there to offer support. Similarly, you must regulate your own work-life balance to help you cope with change.
Find out more: What skills do leaders need for the Hybrid Working era?
Managers:
Keeping the wheels on the bus turning has just become even more difficult, with remote and hybrid working adding many challenges to the role of manager.
As a manager, you may not have been involved in building the strategy behind any new hybrid working approach, but you will be required to implement any changes and keep all members of your team, no matter their location, on time and on task.
You’ll be expected to develop new communication channels and encourage your team to use them. Seamless collaboration and communication in a hybrid world will be the glue preventing your team from segregating and stagnating.
Hybrid working means presenteeism is now outdated and as a manager, you must adapt your thinking and performance measurements to take a more outcome-focused rather than output-focused approach to managing your team.
Pastoral care will become a far more important part of your role but remote working brings some challenges to that task. Where team members were previously there in person, you now have to effectively communicate with them both face-to-face and remotely and learn the skills to gauge a team members well-being and morale no matter where they are working.
Developing these soft skills will be key to making all employees feel appreciated and empowered.
Find out more: What skills do managers need for the Hybrid Working era?
Team Members:
Hybrid working means that being part of a team now looks very different. Formal and informal discussions whether in the boardroom or by the water cooler have now been almost entirely replaced by video calls or emails.
You will already have had to learn how to work much more independently but in a hybrid working model, you will have to develop the skills to work both alone and face-to-face.
Time can be wasted without knowing and understanding the systems and processes you should be using in a new hybrid working world and it is up to you, and every colleague in your team, to play your part by taking the time to understand the resources and tools at your disposal.
Relationship building remotely is one of the hardest skills of hybrid working but forming and nurturing bonds with customers, suppliers, team members and managers is essential if your projects are to be kept on track.
You must not allow more home working to lead you or your projects to stagnate. It’s up to you, and the colleagues on your team, to continue to collaborate, innovate and drive success.
Being open and trusting of your managers and your co-workers will help you draw support from others. Being alert to your own and others' emotional reactions will also help you to respond and adapt to the changing situations and challenges that the hybrid working world brings.
Find out more: What skills do team members need for the Hybrid Working era?
The future of work is hybrid
While surveys are clearly showing that the great shift to more work-from-home has been welcomed and surprisingly effective, there is no doubt that it has brought some negatives in terms of diluting office culture and belonging. But the future of work is most certainly hybrid and implementing a new normal that combines the best of office and remote working will require you, and every member of your organisation, whether a leader, manager or team member, to adapt, develop and play your own part in driving the future.
The great resignation: Why leaders need to listen, not just hear.
Workers leaving their jobs in record numbers in the US has sparked organisations in the UK to address its own labour shortage and skills gap challenges.
Workers are leaving their jobs
Around the world, workers are leaving their jobs in record numbers, in America the problem is so acute that it has its own trending hashtag, #thegreatresignation. In April this year, the US recorded more than four million people quitting their jobs, according to a summary from the Department of Labor. This represents the biggest spike on record.
A Microsoft survey of more than 30,000 global workers showed that 41% of workers were considering quitting or changing professions in 2021, and a study of workers in the UK and Ireland showed 38% of those surveyed planned to quit in the next six months to a year.
Readdressing work-life balance
Is this trend a response to the pandemic or a symptom of something deeper? Let’s face it, full-time work occupies a significant number of our waking hours. Add to this commuting time, which for many can be around an hour at the start and end of each day, we spend a great deal of our life in and commuting to, work.
Working from home stress-tested us all; families were suddenly plunged into living, working and home-schooling together for months on end. Many city dwellers noticed that things were greener on the other side of the fence and voted with their feet, heading for the coast or countryside and this was reflected in price spikes in these locations.
Wherever we lay our hat may be home but when you are couped up together 24x7 that home can suddenly feel quite small and confining. That could be one reason for the rise in shed sales, where space is a premium, even a run of the mill shed looks attractive.
Worker rebellion for the modern workforce
The data shows that for many employees, lockdown prompted a life re-think. A recent study conducted to determine why job changers left their previous roles, showed that 40% of employees cited burnout as their top reason for leaving their job.
In many respects, the pandemic poured petrol on an already lit fire. Workers are rebelling against woeful leadership that focuses on presenteeism over productivity, dictatorial managers, and tone-deaf companies that refuse to pay well and take advantage of their staff. No longer can companies wheel in a table tennis table into the staff room and hope that’s enough.
Workers have taken a step back and reassessed; Covid provided an opportunity for employees to reflect on their role, whether their skills are being put to good use, and explore a sense of their own value.
Pre-pandemic, companies focused on offering the ultimate office experience, with nice coffee machines and breakout rooms with sofas and gaming consoles. But this didn’t count for much when we all suddenly had to work from home. The capability of managers to manage and communicate effectively was exposed.
The way forward
The veneer has been stripped and it’s a good thing. Companies can stop focusing on office fripperies and address gaps that the pandemic has harshly exposed. The benefit is that these are areas of substance that will make a positive difference to company culture and productivity. Companies need to trigger a sea change and that starts with asking some tough questions about current company culture.
Leadership: Employees want to be part of something bigger and that starts with leaders who set a clear vision for the business which is linked to meaningful goals for each employee. Leaders need to know how to lead well, have organisational insight and make timely, bold decisions. They need to be able to simplify organisational treacle and set the right environment in which their people can flourish.
Management: People are promoted into management roles because they have the right technical skills for the department they manage. What is forgotten too often is soft skills. Does the manager have the capability to manage their team well? Do they realise that being promoted into a managerial position is a cross-functional move? Has their capability kept pace with their role? Is there learning & development support in place?
Team members’ engagement and motivation: Have they been developed well? Do they fit in their role or are they a square peg in a round hole? Have they had the right long term career planning support and personal capability development along the way?
The UK has a labour shortage and a skills gap; the pendulum has swung in the employee’s favour. How a company treated its people over the last year and a half will determine the course of the future. Investing in the learning, development and overall wellbeing of your workforce is not only good for staff retention, but it also makes good business sense. It creates a culture of engaged and motivated employees who feel part of the bigger picture and are resilient to weather whatever storm may lay ahead.
Hybrid Working Programmes
We’ve had plenty of enquiries in the Treehouse about our tailored Hybrid Working training programmes. New and existing clients are looking for programmes to help their business adapt; some are looking for short programmes to focus on leaders, whilst others are looking for longer programmes to support managers or team members.
Take a look at some examples of our tailored hybrid working programmes.
It’s about team success, not team location
Hybrid working is more than just working anywhere, it’s about embracing a vision for what the future of work can truly be. But at the end of the day, hybrid work is just .. work.
our working future has changed
The pandemic turned the world of work on its head and overnight companies had to enable everyone to work from home. It wasn’t an option; it was a business imperative that had to happen, and IT departments pulled out all the stops and made it happen.
The pandemic may have started as a destructive force, but it showed us what could be achieved. Future digital and business transformation plans became reality almost overnight. Businesses had to reframe the concept of work and ask themselves, is the value of what staff achieve based on what they do or where they do it?
Pre-Covid resistance to flexible working
Prior to Covid, many businesses were hesitant to implement a flexible working policy over concerns that productivity would decline. The pandemic forced a global work from home experiment and the outcome was that productivity didn’t fall off a cliff as many companies had feared. It proved the age-old adage that work is something we do, not somewhere we go. Irrespective of location, teams performed, and work got done.
Hybrid working will likely be the default mode for many companies in the post-Covid environment. The transition from everyone working remotely to a hybrid arrangement may take some getting used to for leaders, managers and team members. At Treehouse we have seen an uptick in requests from organisations trying to find their way in the new normal and it’s a subject we have been discussing with new and existing clients.
Vision into action
Hybrid working is more than just working anywhere, it’s about embracing a vision for what the future of work can truly be. It requires action to happen at three levels: organisation; manager and teams coming together to build a hybrid working model that delivers business results and meets customer, supplier and staff needs. At Treehouse we have developed programmes to help your business to adapt. We have short programmes that focus on leaders, and longer ones to support managers or team members.
The great thing about working with Treehouse is that you can choose from standard elements like our Onboarding in the Hybrid Working Era module and then customise your learning journey with modules such as Executive Coaching, Action Learning Sets, or a specially tailored module. We will work with you to design and deliver a programme that enables your workforce to thrive in the hybrid work environment.
Example Hybrid Working Programmes
Training programmes to help organisations adapt and increase their capability for Hybrid Work.
Seize the opportunity
Whether your company labels it hybrid work or remote work, the important fact is it’s just work. When teams perform cohesively, they deliver results and meet expectations, a poorly functioning team doesn’t, irrespective of location. The pendulum is unlikely to swing back to how things were pre-pandemic. Hybrid working is a positive leap forward that empowers people to do their job in a way that works for everyone. It puts the focus on team achievement and business success not on presenteeism.
According to a study by the Centre for Economic and Business Research, flexible work would allow almost 4 million parents, carers and disabled people currently locked out from work to re-enter the workforce. It would enable part-time workers to do more hours and could add £48.3bn to the UK economy each year.
Companies have endured disruption and survived, now is the time to develop hybrid work models and thrive. By building on existing business resilience, you can ensure your organisation is always ready for whatever comes next.
How to get the best out of team Workshops
You’ve not managed to get your team together for some high-quality thinking in person for ages. Facilitated workshops are what your organisation needs for those strategic resets, new business development launches and team bonding experiences.
Workshop Facilitation – the way to reset your strategy and set your team up for success
Your team has been dispersed and mostly working from home for almost 18 months. Some people may have popped into the office, but you’ve not managed to get your team together for some high-quality thinking for ages. Zoom and MS Teams are better than nothing but being able to get everyone in a room together and chew through some meaty (or vegan!) strategic questions and think richly about the future opportunities or challenges together has been missing, right?
We have recently seen an uptick in requests to facilitate strategic planning workshops, campaign development workshops and senior leadership team meetings in person. Some at (almost deserted) offices, others at very pleasant but equally quiet hotels and conferences venues.
These facilitated workshops have acted as strategic resets, new business development launches and team bonding experiences.
What can a professional facilitator bring to your workshop or meeting?
- Independence: good facilitators are agnostic – they don’t get involved in the content but manage the people and the process to get to the desired outcome. No waffling. No bias. Just high-quality conversations.
- Leveraging all the brains in the room: the workshop facilitator has permission from the group to facilitate. Sounds obvious but we use that permission in ways someone on the inside cannot. We do not defer to the HIPPO (highest paid person’s opinion), we are able to cut off unhelpful conversations, steer people away from rabbit holes and bring in quieter members of the group in ways that they find suitable. We also ensure people work during brief backs – no zoning out!
- Managing the emotions: Skilfully and gently helping people reconnect after a difficult and lengthy period apart, where we’ve all had to deal with some big stuff and that needs to be recognised and managed carefully.
- Managing the energy in the room: keeping people engaged by taking breaks (sometimes unorthodox ones) when people need them and enabling them to work hard during the sessions.
- Sticking to time: we start and end when we say we will. No overrunning.
- Delivering the outcome: before the workshop we work with the problem owner to clearly define the questions to be answered and the desired outcome from the workshop or meeting. Then we deliver it.
- Flexing and adapting: as the military say ‘no plan survives first contact with the enemy’. The same holds true for a workshop’s agenda. Expert workshop facilitators know what’s essential to achieve and flexes the methods to suit. We have probably encountered the situation before and know what to do about it. We check in with the problem owner so that changes in direction are conscious, deliberate and for good reason. No flip flopping. No aimless meandering.
Workshop facilitation is a capability that every organisation needs. If you don’t have it, then ask us – we can help either to facilitate your workshops and meetings or to train key internal people to become facilitators.
Hybrid Working – the business case for reducing business miles
Is your defence organisation putting more thought into managing essential business travel in the new normal?
An opportunity to reduce your carbon footprint?
In the pre-Covid world, most defence organisations clocked up thousands of business road and air miles to liaise with customers, suppliers, other sites / facilities / teams. The bottom-line benefits of the lockdown loss of this expenditure have not gone unnoticed and most defence organisations are rethinking what constitutes essential business travel.
Well before Covid-19, reducing your carbon footprint was a growing priority for consumers and businesses alike. Some defence companies had established green travel plans to encourage staff to travel in a more environmentally sustainable way to reduce costs, improve the health and morale and boost environmental credentials.
To add further focus to the environmental agenda, the Ministry of Defence published a Climate Change and Sustainability Strategic Approach report in March 2021 with a commitment to ‘recognise both the necessity and opportunity to build on our existing successes in cutting carbon and mitigating Defence’s impact on the environment.’[1]
Your Hybrid Working Capability
Is your defence organisation is putting more thought into managing essential business travel in the new normal? Do you need wider help building your hybrid working capability? We’re here to help, no one has all the answers, there isn’t going to be one size fits all.
- The Hybrid Working Capability Diagnostic: Identify, in just 5 minutes, where the gaps are in your organisation’s hybrid working plans and what to do about them.
- Upskill your leaders, managers and teams to equip them for effective hybrid working with our hybrid working tailored training modules
- What are the implications of Hybrid Working for the defence sector? Treehouse has written a research whitepaper involving new and existing clients and have concluded there are 7 complications around Hybrid Working that organisations need to explore.
If you’re not sure where to start, our Capability Diagnostic will help you identify what your organisation’s current capability is and then provide recommendations for improvement.
Sources
LawDonut, Environmental business travel
[1] Corporate report Ministry of Defence, (March 2021), Climate Change and Sustainability Strategic Approach
“I’m not returning to the previous life”
With a slow and cautious creep out of lockdown and the reality of hybrid working is beginning to take shape with many noticing the push and pull of going back to the office versus staying at home.
The Push and Pull of the new working normal
In the Treehouse our clients are starting to come together as work teams for the first time, for team away days and to be in the office for one or more days a week. We’re beginning a slow and cautious creep out of lockdown and the reality of hybrid working is beginning to take shape with many noticing the push and pull of different perspectives about what good looks like in the new normal working world.
For those who have benefitted from a better quality of life during lockdown slipping back into old habits is something they are resisting. This is particularly true for staff who have valued:
less time on the road and the benefits of less road / air miles, many noticing improved physical and mental health and stronger relationships with friends and family
getting back chunks of time previously spent commuting to and from work in heavy traffic and on overcrowded public transport
protected time and space in a quieter home office for purposeful, clear thinking
the flexibility to work when and where they are most effective, sitting in the garden or going for a walk being some of the most frequently mentioned productive workspaces
For others there’s a strong pull back to the office:
to have a clearer boundary between home and work life
to end the isolation of living and working alone or with a limited number of friends and family during lockdown
for a better connection to the internet and online work tools
to access office facilities from photocopiers to whiteboards, meeting rooms, the watercooler and the coffee machine.
If you’re noticing a push and pull dialogue in your organisation as you build your hybrid working capability we can help:
Need help building your hybrid working capability?
- Where are you on hybrid working? No one has all the answers, there isn’t going to be one size fits all. Identify, in just 5 minutes, where the gaps are and what to do about them.
- Upskill your leaders, managers and teams to equip them for effective hybrid working with our hybrid working tailored training modules
- What are the implications of Hybrid Working for the defence sector? Treehouse has written a research whitepaper involving new and existing clients and have concluded there are 7 complications around Hybrid Working that organisations need to explore.
If you’re not sure where to start, our Capability Diagnostic will help you identify what your organisation’s current capability is and then provide recommendations for improvement.
The Implications of Hybrid Working
For many UK workers, some activities during a typical day lend themselves to remote work, while the rest of their tasks require their on-site physical presence.
Traditional Office Culture is becoming a thing of the Past
PWC have told their 22,000 staff that they can now start and finish work when they want and spend 40 to 60% of their time remote working. Nationwide and BP have taken it one step further, embracing a full-time home working model.
As we slowly move out of lockdown, it’s obvious that for many of the 32million UK workforce, the 9 to 5 pre Covid office culture will be a thing of the past.
Not all work can be carried out remotely
Is a remote or hybrid working model feasible for all industries across all sectors?
McKinsey have studied the time spent on different activities within various occupations. Unsurprisingly, their analysis found that remote work is best suited to those whose roles require cognitive thinking and problem solving, managing and developing people, and data processing. Finance, Management, Professional Services and Information Sectors are amongst those with the highest potential for remote work. The findings also suggested that highly skilled, highly educated workers are those most likely to succeed in their roles while working remotely.
What about the UK defence and supply chain sectors ?
Unlike many of the professional services roles identified by McKinsey as being suited to remote work, there are many jobs in the defence and defence supply chain sector that are not so clearly defined. While some activities during a typical day lend themselves to remote work, there are other tasks that require a physical presence and a more hands on approach.
The importance of technology for hybrid working
The transition to remote working has been seamless for many thanks to advances in communication and collaboration technology. The businesses that have moved from an office to remote model successfully have heavily invested in the required communication technology and software. Beyond having a work-issued laptop and smartphone, collaboration software (eg Miro, SoCreative, Kahoot and Jira7), meeting software (eg MS Teams, WebEx, Skype and Zoom), communication software (eg Lync and Jabber) are used widely in many industries to support hybrid working.
It is clear that the ability to remote work depends on these technologies, and whilst financial and professional services organisations have prioritised this spending, the public admin and defence sectors have not. If the UK defence and supply chain sectors are to be able to offer any form of hybrid working to their workforce, they may need to consider greater investment and a balanced risk approach to communication technology, software, and hybrid office infrastructure.
Hybrid Working has implications for power, influence and competence
Hybrid working is inextricably tied to power; it creates power differentials within teams that can damage relationships, impede effective collaboration and could ultimately reduce performance. It reinforces divisions between the ‘head office/ major sites’ crowd and the ‘remote working’ crowd. It’s easier to have a team of 20 all being remote rather than 15 people in a room and five remotes. To lead effectively in a hybrid environment, leaders and managers must recognise and actively manage sources of power that can impede or facilitate hybrid work.
Managers may not have the skills to manage Hybrid Working Teams and Projects
The burden of delivering change, including the transition from total lockdown remote working to post June 2021 Hybrid Working will fall most heavily on those with management responsibilities. A successful hybrid working model will depend on managers having the people, process, communication and collaboration skills to leverage the contribution of the wider team. Existing core management skills will need to be sharpened, as one Treehouse client said “I need to work out how to package bundles of work for staff to do when they’re working from home.” Different ways of working will be appropriate at different stages in a product life-cycle so hybridity working factors will need to become a normal part of project planning and design reviews.
Staff may need to develop the skills, confidence and mindset for hybrid working
It is not only senior leaders that will need to learn new skills to actively manage hybrid working. Team members will also be required to gain a range of soft skills to increase their contribution and thrive in a hybrid environment. Adaptability, willingness to learn new ways of working and to develop trust and proficiency in new technology are all keys to a successful transition from on site to off site working.
The transition to a hybrid workforce also requires a ‘people-first’ strategy, one that establishes the skills, agility and learning culture an organisation and its workforce will need to be successful.
Most importantly, we need to identify the wants, needs and drivers of staff as they embark on their own personal journeys to becoming part of a hybrid workforce.
Onboarding and talent management can be more challenging
Most of the learning in organisations is informal or on-the-job. CIPD’s report identified how managers were conscious of how remote working during Covid 19 had reduced opportunities for ‘shadowing, and the things that you just instinctively pick up by being sat with a group of people with a similar responsibility to you’.
Informal learning is important throughout a career but there are several points when learning needs are particularly intense. These include:
new starters at junior (apprentice, graduate) and senior levels,
following a promotion,
when taking on a new task or area of responsibility and
when switching teams.
To address this managers need to be alert to recognising the points when more support is needed and to organise more structured development opportunities. This could include organising a wider support network instead of a single mentor together with better documentation. In project based work, managers could deliberately mix people up on consecutive projects to create greater opportunities for development.
Seize the opportunity
If there is one positive to come out of the Covid pandemic, it’s that the ingrained working norms of the past have been reviewed and re-evaluated. Whether a remote or hybrid working model is a practical and realistic choice for every industry and every role is doubtful, but the pandemic has made managers and team members think and consider alternatives. Organisations that take this opportunity to review their working models and take into consideration the opinions and requirements of all team members from the top down have the greatest chance of making any new style of working a success.
References
Susan Lund, Anu Madgavkar, James Manyika, and Sven Smit (2020), What’s next for remote work: An analysis of 2000 tasks, 800 jobs and nine countries (McKinsey & Company)
The Office for National Statistics 2019 report
The Office of Communications (OFCOM)’s 2019 Connected Nations report
Ismail Amla (2019), Empowering people in a hybrid workforce (Capita)
Emma Jacobs (2020), How to make the hybrid workforce model work (FT.com)
Mark Mortensen and Martine Haas (2021) Making the Hybrid Workplace Fair (Harvard Business Review)
(CIPD's) 2021 report, Flexible Working: Lessons from the Pandemic
Hybrid Working - is it the new norm?
COVID-19 forced remote working to be the norm for many people, but once it passes, will it stay?
What is Hybrid Working?
At its simplest, hybrid working means some staff working from a central office and others working remotely from home or at another location. This can be contrasted to distributed working which enables companies to hire, train and support an entirely remote, full-time team across the country, or even multiple countries.
Is the Hybrid Working Model new?
Ahead of the curve, big tech, Silicon Valley companies such as Google, Apple and Twitter were well practiced in distributed working. In the UK remote working has been a gradually rising long-term trend, the Office for National Statistics reported that 6% of the workforce were working remotely full time and 30% working remotely for at least some of the time by the start of 2020.
As we all know, COVID-19 suddenly accelerated this trend. In March 2020 we were told to “work from home if you can”. Employers responded quickly and during the period 23 March to 5 April 2020, the average proportion of the workforce that was working remotely from their normal place was 48%.
Will the Hybrid Working Culture stay?
Individuals and many organisations have been pushed to the limit over the last 12 months. Feedback from Treehouse clients suggests that most have successfully made the transition to remote working. Programmes are continuing to deliver and special arrangements are in place for occasional access to facilities for those that need them.
So, will remote working stay? There seems to be demand from employees. In a study carried out for BBC News and King's College London, conducted by Ipsos MORI, a third of workers 32% say they anticipate working from home more post lockdown. Many employers have been conducting regular pulse surveys to capture employees thoughts on wellbeing and working arrangements. Some employers are responding quickly. This week the UK’s biggest building society, Nationwide announced that 13,000 office staff could choose where they work under a new flexibility scheme.
Most businesses are considering Hybrid Working
63% of participants who responded to the Chartered Institute of Personnel Development's (CIPD) employer survey said that they planned to introduce or expand the use of hybrid working to some degree, combining time in the workplace with time at home, depending on the needs of the job, the individual and the team.
Hybrid Model for the future
It remains to be seen how significant the move from office working will be in 12 months time. For many employees, some activities during a typical day lend themselves to remote work, while others require access to office or other on-site facilities. This suggests many sectors operating a hybrid model of some sort, with employees working remotely and from office/ on-site facilities during the working week. Treehouse sees an opportunity, or perhaps a necessity, to treat hybrid working not as something to simply get through but as the start of lasting change to the way organisation’s work.
References
Distributed Workforce Model: Why it could be the future of work (People Matters)
Coronavirus and homeworking in the UK labour marketing (ONS)
Business Impact of Coronavirus (COVID-19) Survey, expectation responses over time, UK 1 June to 23 August 2020 (Waves 6 to 11) (ONS)
Covid: More walking and family chats post-lockdown - poll suggests (BBC)
Aerospace and defence organisations must use their experience from COVID-19 to change how they work forever (PA Consulting)
Flexible working: Lessons from the pandemic (CIPD)
The 23 Skills of an Integrator
The skills and the skill progression of the modern integrator. Download this handy guide.
The 23 Skills needed by the modern Integrator
As discussed in our “Integrating the Integrators” blog, the integrator role is increasingly becoming a necessity in every business.
The integrator has the immense challenge of bringing together a variety of non-connected elements of a business, or indeed a supply chain, to deliver a successful solution for the end-customer. To achieve this, the integrator must be equipped with a variety of skills.
Download our free guide: “The 23 skills of an Integrator”
At Treehouse, we have identified that there are 23 skills needed by the modern integrator split across four stages of development (learning and experience):
Foundation: the who, what, why and how of integration
Advanced: the facilitation of integration
Mentoring: drawing upon experience to help other integrators
Leading: leading integration across the organisation
Complete your details to download the full guide below:
Why is Integration so painful?
The four reasons why integration can be painful for organisations.
Why is integration so painful?
Our experience from working with many organisations over the years has highlighted that integration can be a painful experience.
We’ve identified four reasons why integration can be painful
Helen explains what these are and why in our video below:
Integration Scorecard
How do you rate your organisation or team in its Integration prowess?
Integration Self-Assessment
How do you rate your Integration skills? Take the test and find out.
Giving and receiving feedback
People want to succeed at work so receiving no feedback could lead to them doubting their own abilities, believing that others are more qualified than them, feelings of anxiety about job security or promotion possibilities.
Pens in A Box Feedback Exercise
The pens in a box feedback exercise illustrates what it feels like to work blind vs being given high quality feedback.
The Importance of Giving and Receiving Feedback
We’ve all been there. Those times when you’ve slogged your guts out on a project or piece of work, you press save and send feeling pretty pleased with your efforts, only to receive a cursory ‘thank you’ email from your manager in response.
In the short term, some us with high emotional intelligence could possibly shrug it off temporarily and move on, but for most of us, this lack of feedback could open a huge can of worms.
People naturally want to succeed at work so receiving no feedback could lead to them doubting their own abilities, believing that others are more qualified than them, feelings of anxiety about job security or promotion possibilities. In a nutshell, not giving your team members constructive feedback, can leave them feeling rudderless!
4 reasons to give and receive feedback
Feedback is a gift; it provides valuable information that gives us an opportunity to look at ourselves in a different light.
It helps us to understand how others perceive us and the impact that our behavioural style or ways of working has on others.
Feedback can enable anyone to improve their focus and results - to grow.
Feedback is key to engaging people; we generally think about feedback between a manager and a team member. However, feedback can and should be given up, down and sideways.
How to effectively give and receive feedback
Feedback needs to be heard, understood and accepted. Those are the areas in our control, we have no control over whether the person that we’re giving feedback to chooses to act upon our feedback, that’s for them to decide.
There are a number of key principles for giving and receiving effective feedback:
be timely, do it regularly, be specific, be structured and use “I” statements ‘I was surprised when you criticised the team at today’s review’.It’s also important to think about the skills that we need to receive feedback, especially when it is something that we may not want to hear or when it’s given clumsily. Active listening, using questions to clarify the situation and focusing on managing our emotions can help us to open the gift of feedback more readily.
According to the Harvard Business Review, 72% of people feel their performance would improve if their managers provided corrective feedback. The same survey found that 57% of people prefer corrective feedback to purely praise and recognition.
Remembering to provide considered, constructive feedback for every task, to every employee and fostering a culture where team members provide feedback more freely is a powerful tool that could reap long term rewards across your organisation.
References:
Your Employees Want the Negative Feedback You Hate to Give (HBR, 2014)
What is the difference between Integration and Project Management?
Integration and project management are terms that are often confused, particularly when it comes to the skills and complexity required to fulfil the objective, but are quite different.
Same or different?
The management of integration and project management are often confused, particularly when it comes to the skills, the roles and responsibilities and the complexity required to fulfil the objective, but in reality they are quite different challenges altogether.
In a nutshell, here is the difference:
Integration: is the act of bringing together smaller components into a single system or entity that functions as one.
Project Management: is the application of knowledge, skills, tools, and techniques to project activities to meet the project requirements and end goals.
Well, that makes integration sound like a project doesn’t it? Correct! Integration can be a project with the goal to bring operational unity between people, engineering, systems, tools and a multitude of other components to achieve a permanent effect.
And, as pointed out by some of our colleagues in system engineering, integration can also be an element of a project to merge a project deliverable into the wider environment.
Here are three scenarios we have come across in pictures:
Here are the two compared further:
Integration
Integration is the achievement of permanent operational unity and harmonisation among:
functional specialists
teams
departments
systems
tools
technology
projects.
The scope of integration can apply across a team, department, business or a business supply chain ecosystem.
Project Management
Project management is the ability to deliver a project which typically has the following characteristics:
clearly defined client objectives
scope
budget
stakeholders
the management of risk
a project team
project resources
an end point
milestones and timescales
success criteria.
So, If integration is a project, why this article?
The table above makes it look like integration is primarily the goal of a project manager handling an integration project, so why this article?
Integration doesn’t just happen - it requires special focus from an organisation to get right:
integration requires a different skillset, of which project management is one
an integrator needs to be an influencer (without necessary having authority) at all levels and be equipped to have ‘difficult conversations’
integrators act along the value chain from raw materials to end-product - cutting across the silos or functional boundaries of an organisation. Organisations are generally not structured by value chains (more likely by function), therefore the integrator can be working against the grain of an organisation which takes resilience, courage and well-honed soft skills
the challenges of the integrator are more complex and require a different way of thinking and an adaptability beyond the boundaries of a project
integration is very much about the ‘bigger picture’, particularly the way that ‘change’ affects the lives of employees, organisational culture and ability to deliver for and delight customers.
Why is Integration Different?
By understanding the difference between project management and integration, companies can select the most appropriately skilled people to undertake the task.
Though integration and project management have many similarities and overlap, an integrator is much more than a project manager.
Integration is fundamentally about achieving change and permanent operational unity. Consequently, the integrator needs to be up to the task of bringing people, businesses, systems, technology, processes and projects together - they are like the glue that sticks the disparate pieces of the system together into a cohesive whole to deliver solutions that not only meet customer requirements but surprise and delight them too.
References
Business Integration and what it really means, IT Chronicles (2019)
The New Management Job: The Integrator, HBR (1967)
Relationships between Systems Engineering and Project Management, SEBoK
What is Project Management, PMI
With thanks to the many integrators within BAE Systems’ Mission Support team who helped in creating this article.
Integration SElF-ASSESSMENT
How do you rate your Integration skills? Take the test and find out.
InTegration ScoreCard
How do you rate your organisation or team in its Integration prowess?
Treehouse, helping to deliver transformation in Royal Navy training
Treehouse is part of Team iMAST (Intelligent Maritime Adaptive Synthetics and Training) - the innovation ecosystem which will collectively modernise and transform Royal Navy training over the next 12 years.
Treehouse is part of Team iMAST (Intelligent Maritime Adaptive Synthetics and Training) - the innovation ecosystem which will collectively modernise and transform Royal Navy training over the next 12 years.
About iMAST
iMAST was formed in 2019 by an industry and academic alliance including Babcock, QinetiQ, Thales, Centerprise International, Learning Technologies Group, University of Portsmouth and University of Strathclyde with the simple vision: working in true partnership with the customer to transform and modernise Royal Navy training in innovative ways that will deliver more, better trained Royal Navy people to the front line quicker.
The innovation ecosystem to support and deliver iMAST includes more than 50 experienced, specialist SMEs of which Treehouse is one, and a dedicated programme website announced the consortium in June 2020.
“iMAST is committed to playing its part in realising the vision of a modern Royal Navy; its people better trained and more capable than ever before and meeting today’s and the future’s operational needs.”
— John Howie: CEO Babcock Marine and Technology – lead contractor in the iMAST Alliance
The Treehouse Role - delivering innovation in training
We were selected to be involved as a result of our experience and expertise in unlocking opportunity and catalysing change through people. Our specific role, though changing and evolving as the programme develops, will be to:
Quickly and effectively gain powerful insights into what the trainers and trainees need.
Leveraging that insight to co-create with trainers and trainees a vision of what new solutions might look like.
Testing and refining the vision iteratively until the right solution is established.
How will we deliver this?
Crowdsourcing
Workshops
Interviews and Listening Groups
Analytics
Structured testing processes
The trick for a good programme is the blending together of insight at the individual level and then amalgamating into good principles for the programme as a whole. Agility at the individual level is key as it more accurately adds up to a training solution with outcomes contributing to an ever evolving yet ‘FutureFit’ Royal Navy service as a whole.
Why Treehouse?
We’re experts in empowering people and teams to unlock potential, growth and opportunity using proven tools to encourage different thinking, identifying fresh approaches and improve organisational effectiveness, innovation and collaboration.
We use insight as a springboard for everything we do. Within iMAST we’ll be using insight to co-create solutions that fit perfectly, hand in glove with focus on the individual to develop solutions that deliver results for the whole. The whole ends up being more than the sum of its parts.
We catalyse change, one person at a time.
Innovation EcoSYSTEM
A Treehouse solution to bring together your support network of both large and small organisations to work as a collaborative, innovative force
More Reading:
iMAST - intelligent Maritime Adaptive Synthetics & Training website
ADS Advance (15/06/2020): Industry and academic alliance aims at transforming Royal Navy training
Babcock press release (10/09/2019): Team iMAST sets out to provide a step-change for UK Royal Navy and Royal Marines Training
Integrating the Integrators
The increasingly complex and dynamic nature of organisations and projects accompanied with the rapid rate of technological change means clearly defined integrator roles are increasingly becoming a necessity in every business.
The Essential role of the integrator
In 1967, the Harvard Business Review published an article entitled ‘New management job: the integrator’. The authors suggested that within the next decade, “one of the critical organisation innovators would be the establishment of management positions, even formal departments, charged with the task of achieving integration.”
More than four decades on, it’s still rare that you’ll find a colleague with the job title of ‘integrator’ on their business card, let alone whole departments tasked with integration. Of course, every company and project has ‘integrators’- people with integration as part of their job description, but they are more likely to be engineers, data architects, project managers, systems engineers, change consultants, account managers to name just a few.
In reality, the title doesn’t actually matter, but the role is essential! The increasingly complex and dynamic nature of organisations and projects accompanied with the rapid rate of technological change means clearly defined, customer-centric, integrator roles are increasingly becoming a necessity in every business.
What is an integrator?
Put simply, integrators are the glue that brings things together! Where visionaries are those that create the future, integrators are the ones that make it happen.
An integrator is a person who has the ability and skills to bring together various non-connected elements of a business, service or project, to deliver a final, coherent and successful solution for the customer.
Taking on any problems or needs that arise, through coordinating, collaborating and communicating, they find the solutions, keep projects on track and facilitate positive change.
The challenges facing integrators
Like the job title, the keys to success of an integrator are not clearly defined. Positive results are as much about a way of thinking as they are about defined skills, but what is consistent is that an integrator must be adaptable and have a desire to bring together non-connected elements of a solution or service to deliver success for their customer and consequently for their own business as well.
Integrators have to be resilient and know when to push forward and also when to pause and question. Transforming anything has its challenges and so understanding the ‘big picture’ is paramount. We are by nature sceptical of change in all areas of our lives, with business organisational culture and resistant employee attitudes often compounding the turmoil associated with any change. Integrators must be sensitive to this whilst retaining focus on the customers’ requirements and the internal teams’ needs to deliver it.
Integrators need to be excellent communicators, and most are, but that is just one part of the story. They also need to build a rapport with every stakeholder in a project. Only by developing this skill can they build trust and loyalty to harness the commitment that will ensure they receive the right communications, data and assistance required to achieve their objectives.
In today’s modern workplace there are many barriers to building these crucial communication channels:
Lack of access is a common challenge; getting face-to-face time with all stakeholders who will be affected by, and involved in, a project is difficult when many employees now work remotely.
Integrators are often joining as a team member on a project and do not have direct authority over the individuals and team concerned.
Asking employees to give time to assist in integration projects is not made a priority by managers.
Integrators are deemed to be an internal resource with some reluctance to put them in front of customers.
The integration function is not included at the right time. Integration is perceived to be what happens at the end when crucially it needs to be involved at the start through the whole chain thus removing much of the friction later on.
Scepticism and resistance to change amongst teams and individuals regularly needs to be overcome.
The under-valuing and misuse of the integrator’s role can result in a lack of trust, understanding and tensions. So what is the solution?
Managers need to realise the importance of integrators in any situation, champion their role and help pave the way to their success.
Keeping the customer at the heart of everything.
All team members must be encouraged to accept change and be brought into the objective so they can provide information, feedback and data - all essential to facilitate positive outcomes.
The integrators themselves need to be able to influence without authority, lead change, prioritise improving communication channels to foster collaboration, build long term trust and clear out obstacles to achieve solutions.
The workplace is evolving at a much greater pace than ever before and organisations are becoming increasingly complex. At the heart of this rapid change is technology. All sectors are facing some sort of digital transformation and only by preparing for, accepting and facilitating change will businesses be able to keep up.
In today’s rapidly changing work environment, the role of the integrator in any organisation is now crucial, not only to facilitate positive change, but also to help staff engage with and adjust to new ways of working, rather than seeing them as a threat.
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The most in demand skill? Being human
With the modern workplace becoming more digitalised and with artificial Intelligence promising so much, it raises the question of what skills and knowledge will be needed and valued in the future. It turns out what employers’ value most is our social and emotional skills.
The demand for ‘soft skills’ is on the up
The world is overflowing with technology and automation has replaced many manual or repetitive roles across all industries. With the modern workplace becoming more digitalised and with artificial Intelligence promising so much, it raises the question of what skills and knowledge will be needed and valued in the future. It turns out what employers’ value most is our social and emotional skills.
Uniquely human skills
A recent survey[i] revealed soft skills, such as listening skills, are most in demand by employers (74 percent), while quantitative skills and computer and technical skills were less so (47 percent and 50 percent, respectively).
According to the survey the top skills today’s employers are looking for in candidates include:
Listening Skills
74%
Attention to Detail
70%
Effective Communication
69%
Critical Thinking
67%
Interpersonal Skills
65%
Active Learning
65%
As the survey results show, employers aren't looking for the same level of deep knowledge and technical skill as they did in the past. The nature of work is evolving, which is partly why we have a skills gap. Manufacturing and factory jobs that once powered the economy have largely been automated. However, soft skills such as networking, building relationships and collaborating with others are the skills that automation or artificial intelligence just can’t replicate.
The power to relate
In the future emotional intelligence will take on new significance. As our use of technology expands, our human skills of compassion, empathy and the ability to relate to our colleagues will be the competitive edge in the workplace, not only for individuals but for entire organisations.
Unlock the PotentIal in your Workforce
Helping people, teams, organisations with soft skills is what we do.
It turns out that the most in demand skill needed in the future is the one thing humans are uniquely suited to master. Forward thinking employers should seize the opportunity to unlock the potential within their workforce and benefit from improved organisational effectiveness and collaboration.