Categories
Book Review Coaching Leadership

The Goal

There’s loads of value in going back and revisiting the classics, not just to remind ourselves why they are a classic, but also to see which of those lessons we are missing out on and could be making more use of in our day-to-day lives.

The Goal is one of those classics that anyone in a large organisation should take the time to read. It’s a story based around a struggling factory, a company under stress and a leader who can’t find the way forwards. It’s also a lot more than that. It’s a primer in system thinking, the theory of constraints and some of the basics of queuing theory.

Before you go too far, it is also worth highlighting that it’s a bit of a product of its time, some of the scenario is very “mid century American corporate”, whilst the trappings may feel dated, the core principles are solid.

It strips everything back to the core question. What is the end goal of a company? To make money by providing maximum value. What other measures matter? None.

You go through a journey of learning, identifying where the bottlenecks are, removing them in turn and finding more capacity than you ever thought you had, with no fresh investment.

Forcing things through, chasing with “urgency” might just fight your immediate fire, but it won’t transform your delivery, or get you out of a hole. Only taking the time to step back, to look at everything going on, find the thing that is constrained and fixing it. Only having that discipline will make a difference.

We learn that making assumptions is misleading. We need to get out on the shop floor to really see what’s going on. We all learn that small fluctuations lead to large delays in the end, especially as the number of steps increases.

Wherever you can remove a dependency, you speed everything up. Each time you remove wasted effort from your bottleneck, you speed everything up. Where you find a way to put more resources to serve your constraint, you speed everything up.

When you look at the system overall, you see the cost/benefit equation differently. The costs of an hour in the bottleneck is a cost of an hour of overall production.

Improving things that aren’t the bottleneck is just waste. Piling up more half finished things in a queue for a constrained machine is a cost, not creating more value.

Improving the bottleneck is worth doing even inefficiently. You don’t consider the cost of the step, you must measure against the cost of value forgone overall.

This way of thinking isn’t easy to come by, it’s a lot easier to manage a dependency, to optimise on the micro and to celebrate getting your bit done. Switching to this model of systems thinking requires discipline, and it requires lots of belief. These findings are counter-intuitive, and contrary to the easy answer or standard thinking.

You need to convert the production line concepts to your own context, which you can do in any creative endeavour.

Give people this book, get them to read it and then you can start your experiments in optimising the system and delivering the most possible value!

Categories
Book Review Coaching Leadership

Slack

Tom de Marco’s Slack is a great example of why we should go back to the classics, rather than chase the hotness of the thousand new business books released every month.

It’s short and powerful, and hits you with the core message early and often. Efficient organisations are brittle. They cannot react to changing conditions, and things often take longer to achieve end-to-end.

Instead, we should strive to be effective by ensuring there is Slack in the system.

We recognise that people are not fungible units of resource. It takes time to change contexts, to build expertise and to get good at a job. Splitting someone’s focus to two tasks comes with an effectiveness cost. Splitting them to several means they may as well not be there. The orchestration costs more than the benefit they bring.

Sometime you need people to not be 100% busy, so they can do the important thing when it turns up. The value is in being able to absorb the change, and to be effective you need to accept the ‘cost’ of them not ‘producing’ all the time.

More pressure slows people down, knowledge work requires space to think, experiment and think again. You don’t get better long term outcomes by forcing more onto people, you get better outcomes by them having space to breathe.

Tom takes us through thoughts on how to scale this thinking to the organisation, on the right time to drive change (before things go bad), and why the connecting layer of leadership is key to giving you this successful org.

Watch out for the push to efficiency if you want to be effective!