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Succession_Planning_-_10_Vital_Points_for_Business_Success
| Succession Planning - 10 Vital Points for Business Success
Succession Planning isn't just about preparing for boardroom
changes or grooming your son or daughter to take over when you
want to retire. It's much more about how those managing others
create seamless changeovers, preparing who you have, for
opportunities that might present themselves.
And it's about making managing people much more effective,
creating spaces for whoever you are, with people management
responsibilities, to focus on your job, not theirs. Through
empowering them, you generate enthusiasm and engagement.
Everyone thrives, especially your business or organisation your
business.
By cranking up others development to meet your business needs,
big or small, not just for right now, but for the future, you
will find payoffs, big-time. Here are a few ideas to get you
started.
Building Relationships
By ensuring that you have informally built good relationships
with every one of your team, you will have a head start when
developing the intelligence needed for effective succession
planning. This is not just about the business, it is about
aligning with whatever is important to each individual and
showing an interest in them.
Create a Vision
Clearly understanding what ‘good looks like’ is the first stage
of planning for the future. Taking the time out to develop this
is well worth the effort and provides a marker against which all
decisions, people or otherwise are made. If possible, involve as
wide a range of people in this activity.
Right People, Right Place, Right Time - Ignore Names
Once you have your vision, deciding who is need, when and where
becomes easier. It important that you focus on the facts rather
than the emotion first, so that you ignore individuals in this
assessment. You can fit people in afterwards, as long as they
will have the capability to deliver your vision for your
business. Some may be a work towards.
Consistent Performance
By considering your key people, their aspirations and
expectations for the future, you will gain an insight of where
your gaps might come and then you can start planning to avoid
problems. This will enable you to provide for anticipated change
and start developing others to cover at least. This also helps
when changes happen unexpectedly.
Confidence Grows
As individuals are involved in the possibilities for their
future, without over-promising, they start to want more. They
appreciate learning and developing as they see what might unfold
for them. As they learn and experience more, their confidence
builds and they want stretching.
It’s Cultural
As your communication processes involve everyone in Succession
Planning, a groundswell of positivity generates a shift in your
business culture. Your people start to realise that there is
more to this than a job – it’s building their feelings of self
worth and future. This culture becomes just ‘the way we do
things around here’ and new employees commence at a higher,
different level.
Many Winners
As you start to build the capacity of those around you, there is
a lot that can be delegated safely as a development opportunity,
suitably supported and coached. You crate space to do the more
important things in your role. They develop and build
confidence. With confidence comes improved customer
relationships, greater efficiencies. So managers, employees, the
business and ultimately stockholders all are winners.
Time Efficient
There is a certain amount of workload involved in creating a
Succession Planning process. Once these initial stages are
completed, only a small amount of time outside normal activities
is required. In fact, with the added skills and development of
your people, far greater efficiency and effectiveness results.
Manages Performance
Using a Succession planning process sits very appropriately with
Performance Management. As potential has been identified, the
next steps in development are constructive and clear. The
individual takes accountability for their own development and
practically self-manages their performance.
Value-Creating
By using management skills far more effectively, skilling up all
the people in the business and creating seamless transitions
when people move on, all improve business performance.
Developing the latent potential of many of your people raises
the bar for their performance – it is just shifted up several
notches. And ultimately with greater sales and efficiency,
bottom line profit is maximised.
And with these ideas in place, you will create more
effectiveness and involvement in your people - which can only be
good.
About the author:
© 2005 Martin Haworth is a Business and Management Coach.
He works worldwide, mainly by phone, with small business owners,
managers and corporate leaders. He has hundreds of hints, tips
and ideas at his website,
www.coaching-businesses-to-success.com.
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