How to Successfully Build a Business Operating System for Your Company
Business Operating System
A Business Operating System (BOS) is your company's unique way of doing things--how it operates, goes to market, produces and deals with its customers. An effective BOS transcends the people who are doing and managing the work, and is more valuable as a result. A business that effectively operates without you is always more attractive to public and private sources of capital.
Components of Your Business Operating System
It
is important to create each BOS component to be scalable, up or down,
for future growth or contraction. The components are interrelated as
with any living system. Therefore, the successful leaders address all
components and understand how they affect each other.
A description of the five components is presented in priority order for effectively creating your BOS.
- Processes
- Systems
- Roles
- Skills
- Structure.
1. Processes
Underdeveloped
work processes are the most common risk factor for growing companies,
and are the first thing that will crater a company in tough economic
conditions. In addition to traditional work processes, we include other
processes like communication, decision-making and conflict resolution.
It is easy to say, "We need a new system". However, effective leaders
have the discipline to resist the illusion that a new system will solve
their problems. Streamline your manual processes before changing
technical systems. Companies who jump into a new system typically
automate their own inefficiencies. This is why Processes should be the
first BOS component you create.
Effective processes are:
- Clear
- Replicable
- Documented
- Supported by tools
- Easily accessible.
2. Systems
This component addresses hard and soft systems including: technology, financial, marketing, operations and people. A hard people system is your payroll and human resources information system, whereas soft
people systems include performance management, selection, compensation
and development systems. Well-designed and applied systems create
predictable customer and employee experiences and also enhance your
operational efficiency.
Looking at the
80/20 Rule, the 20% of the most effective employees (who produce 80% of
the results) inevitably use some kind of a system to enhance their
effectiveness. A client recently had to let go of 70% of its sales
force and found that the remaining 30% actually accounted for 90% of the
company's revenue. Sure enough, the remaining sales people were
disciplined in using a system of prospecting, qualifying, proposing,
presenting and closing business.
3. Roles
Defining
clear roles is a big challenge that requires significant personal
discipline. You should write a job description (even if a brief one)
for all roles within your desired BOS. Remember to focus on the role
itself, not the person. At the early stages of your BOS, one person may
play multiple roles. By creating the roles first, you acknowledge
this. As your company changes, predefined roles will enable you to make
more effective decisions about which roles an employee should continue
or discontinue doing and who you should add/delete from the payroll to
effectively implement this change.
Resist
jumping to the structure component when defining roles--again this
requires personal discipline. This step is about defining the required
roles to accomplish your company's mission, not how those roles relate
to each other.
4. Skills
Now
that you have clear roles that your business requires, you can more
precisely match the necessary skills to each role. Effective processes
and systems will ensure the highest and best use of your talent. Your
systems and processes should be created for the lowest common
denominator so they are not people-dependent. This will free up your
employees' minds and time so they can focus on more creative, proactive
ways to improve your business. It is common to see talented employees
who are underemployed because they are using excess time trying to
figure out how to get their work done.
When
you fill your roles, it is important to match the role requirements
with the employee's skills and natural style. Ensuring a skills match
has obvious benefits. Matching the role with the employee's natural
style is subtler but is often even more critical. This can be achieved
via a simple style assessment and helps the employee be successful. We
all can remember a time when we were in a role for which we were not
ideally suited, resulting in greater stress and lower productivity than
we (and the company) would prefer.
5. Structure
The
key to an effective organizational structure is to design it before you
need it--then grow into it. It takes great discipline for leaders to
design the other four BOS components before they design their
organizational structure. In fact, tinkering with structure is one of
the great executive past-times. Unfortunately, this tinkering typically
ignores the other, more substantial components.
Structure dictates process. That's why I have outlined the sequence of BOS components in this order. If you create a structure first, your business process will be constrained by your structure and may not reflect the needs of your business and customers. Defining your processes and systems first, as we suggest, results in an organizational structure that supports the way you do business rather than constraining it.
Winston
Churchill said, "For the first 25 years of my life I wanted freedom.
For the next 25 years I wanted order. For the next 25 years I realized
that order is freedom". Your BOS will provide you and your business the
order and freedom to work on your business rather than in it.
Although
I suggest a particular sequence for creating your BOS, most companies
have naturally created one or more of the five components. Since each
component may be developed at different levels, it is helpful to
prioritize the readiness of each component.
Source:inc.com
Source:inc.com
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