According to Mark Graham Brown, from his book Keeping Score (Productivity Press, 2006), 50 percent of the time leaders spend in meetings involving data is waste, 80 percent of the pounds of published financial data is waste, 60 percent of the pounds of published operational data is waste, and middle management wastes one hour a day poring over these reports. Do you have any idea what this costs? Perhaps more important, does it even matter?
ADVERTISEMENT |
In meetings involving leaders and middle managers, there seems to be a code of universal leadership laws for using operational data. It has its own vocabulary emphasizing the words “tough,” “stretch,” “low-hanging fruit,” “accountability,” and the phrase, “I don’t like these numbers.” The code also seems to encourage tantrum phrases such as, “Find out what happened here!” “What are you going to do about it?” and, “I want a plan to fix this!”
These nine leadership laws are perfectly designed to create confusion, conflict, complexity, and chaos—and increase costs. Year after year, something magical seems to happen in January (or at the beginning of the fiscal year) regarding data display. Although everyone comes to work at the same organization that existed the day before, the previous 364 days of process behaviors seem to be reset, with a protocol for “cherry-picking,” when deemed appropriate, as follows:
1. As of January 1, the past no longer exists
Except as yearly averages, with two appropriate exceptions:
1. The current year-to-date figure can be compared only with the exact same time span of the previous year.
Trap: This assumes seasonality and treats any differences as special causes.
2. Using only this same month’s performance 12 months ago to compare with the current month.
Trap: Assuming each month is a special cause and treating the two months’ year-over-year difference as a special cause
2. If at all possible, data should be presented in tabular form
On which we will draw little circles around any numbers we don’t like (aka MBLC: Management By Little Circles). Optional: Put “Why?!” or “What happened?!” in red ink next to the circle, and mail it to the appropriate person.
Trap: Human variation in the perception of, and response to, variation as well as treating it all as special cause. Also, unnecessary time spent arguing over whose circles are most important, and reaching consensus about which ones are vitally important for action now.
Balestracci’s profound law of numbers
Given a set of numbers, one will be the largest, one will be the smallest, 10 percent will be the top (and bottom) 10 percent, and 25 percent will be the top (and bottom) quartiles. The biggest difference between any two months will be the biggest difference since the previous, biggest difference.
I wonder whether a better explanation of MBLC might be Management By Literal Chaos (or confusion or complexity or conflict). The table in figure 1, which I snatched from the hands of a colleague, is a beautiful example:
3. For important data, a trend graph of the last 12 months (only) can be useful, as either a line or bar graph, with a trend line
Should additional graphs be deemed necessary, they should not show more than the last 24 months and be displayed as follows, in any combination:
1. Separate yearly averages superimposed on the running 24-month record, with trend lines added whenever possible.
2. Plotted year-over-year by month in a “copulating earthworm plot” to compare differences and look for seasonality (the only exception for using more than two years).
3. As year-to-date, side-by-side monthly bar graphs of each of the two months’ performance.
Trap: More human variation in reaction to such nonsensical displays. I didn’t make up this graph in figure 2 of a number that “made people sweat”:
4. When displaying financial data, use rolling averages whenever possible
Trap: Common cause data can exhibit strong evidence of very obvious special causes that don’t exist!
To demonstrate, figure 3 shows time plots of the exact same data. The top plot depicts randomly generated data that has no special causes; the middle plot shows rolling averages of 4 (e.g., analogous to the commonly used four-quarter rolling average); the bottom plot shows rolling averages of 12 (e.g., equivalent to common 12-month rolling average charts, often used in calculating “days outstanding accounts receivable”):
5. The difference between this month’s and last month’s performance might need to be explained
Especially if it’s trending in the wrong direction by “too much.”
Trap: Once again, treating the difference and perceived trend as a special cause due to how the exhibited variation is perceived, and how large it “should” be.
6. The performances of this month, last month, and the same month a year ago may need a trend line
To give an idea of the overall trend, so we can compare it with last month’s trend. Then we can update our projection of year-end performance.
Trap: Once again, treating common cause as special cause, and creating a 33-percent risk of calling three data points a trend—either all going up or all down—when it isn’t.
7. When at all possible, convert a table of numbers to its traffic-light equivalents
Any green indicator is fine. We will discuss whom should get recognition, but it would be preferable to use one of these tougher strategies to get even better results:
1. Use a reward process to stretch them further. For example, if they get (pick a number) greens-in-a-row, we will tell them, “Send out for pizza and send us the bill”... and then stretch their green endpoint.
2. Set a standard. No more than (pick a number) months in a row can be non-green and will require a special report. Having (pick a number) reds in a row will require a face-to-face meeting with management to present a plan for better performance.
3. For really important numbers (e.g., customer satisfaction survey results), show them we mean business! Go around as a leadership group every week or month, and plant a red, yellow, or green flag in each department based on its most recent result. (DB: I didn’t make this one up!)
Trap: High risk of treating common cause as special, plus destroying cultural morale—and any remaining respect for the leaders.
8. Current month and year-to-date performances should be compared to goals and recorded as variances
Here’s the “getting tough” option: The (arbitrary percentage of) people having the largest variances will need to write a special report about what they’re going to do about it, and present their results to us next month.
Trap 1: Treating all variances as special cause. Also, choosing an arbitrary percentage of people as a cutoff for needing explanations—assuming the variances are special causes, when many probably are not.
Trap 2: Time wasted by people preparing these nonsense reports and unnecessarily presenting them at the next meeting.
Trap 3: At this subsequent meeting, once again allowing human variation of perceived variation to demand questionable actions based on these reports. Plus the particular trap of asking, “Where is your low-hanging fruit?”
9. All goals must end with a zero or a five
With one exception: For what we know to be an impossible situation, we will ask for only a 3-percent stretch.
Trap: Using goals to motivate. Treating individual differences between current performances and goals as special causes. Not using an I-chart to gain knowledge of the process’s actual performance, compared to any goal that suggests a common cause strategy is required.
What about the tiresome annual ritual of the budget?
Not only do all of these laws apply to the everyday use of routine data, but they also come into play during the entire budgeting process.
Trap: Treating every year as a special cause in spending, and taking up to 30 percent of peoples’ time with creating, adjusting, and readjusting budgets, not to mention routine cost-cutting meetings throughout the year.
How about plotting spending as a starting point, and then using some common cause strategies?
Isn’t all this nonsense merely reacting to the data’s reflection of routine, daily, common causes of confusion, conflict, complexity, and chaos as if they were special causes? Isn’t your company perfectly designed to spend what it spends? Isn’t all this just a symptom of a much deeper systemic (additional common cause) problem: data insanity?
Are the data “unknown or unknowable?” Perhaps, but who needs figures to see this widespread organizational cancer as a staggering cost? Might data insanity and its toxic consequences be the root cause of Deming’s disgust with American management?
Don’t believe me? There’s only one way to find out: Plot some dots!
“If we’re actually trying to do the wrong thing, we may only be saved from disaster because we are doing it badly.”
—David Kerridge
Comments
Good article Davis.
Good article Davis.
Add new comment