For the
unaware, when I’m not wearing my super-hero blogger spandex, I work
in IT (wearing IT spandex, you know…). Specifically, I work for a
manufacturing company, which is a lot different than working for a
company whose main business is providing IT services. Rather than
being a core function that drives value and profitability, IT is yet
one more gaping mouth sucking up overhead costs. The business has
their own priorities, many of which are of the
quick-get-it-done-now-or-the-world-will-burn-down variety that really
stretches my spandex. While I do my best to avoid it, I see how many
of my colleagues are sucked into this swirl of whack-a-mole
firefighting. Naturally, this results in a lot of frustration.
People don’t feel they are working on truly value-added projects,
or believe that many things which should have more priority are
getting it, let alone ideas that actually come to fruition.
I’m not here as a paid-proponent of Sean Covey, Jim Huling, and Chris McChesney’s The Four Disciples of Execution (2012) as a way of combating the situation described above. But I can say that even at a bare minimum, its ideas and main thrust should be at least a springboard for thought to anyone in business looking to get out of the swirl of a persistently reactive work environment that is full of good ideas that don’t often become reality.
I’m not here as a paid-proponent of Sean Covey, Jim Huling, and Chris McChesney’s The Four Disciples of Execution (2012) as a way of combating the situation described above. But I can say that even at a bare minimum, its ideas and main thrust should be at least a springboard for thought to anyone in business looking to get out of the swirl of a persistently reactive work environment that is full of good ideas that don’t often become reality.
Like many
good ideas and methods in business, The
Four Disciplines of Execution
(or 4DX as it’s known in short) is not rocket science. It’s a
simplification, in fact—a way of carving out an eye of the storm
for you and colleagues to focus on value-added effort—efforts,
plural, only as needed—and see them through to completion. I won’t
lay out the disciplines in detail—that is best done by the authors.
But I can say that they focus on four areas (surprise!): focus (on
what’s truly value-added by setting aside time with you and your
team), leverage (apply effort in the truly effective areas, not
everywhere), engagement (getting the team involved by non-
authoritarian means), and accountability (following through on
actions to reach the final goal). (Any mistake in paraphrasing is
solely mine. IT spandex only gets you so far…)
Again, not rocket science, right? And the authors are correct: getting a group of people to buy into a concrete goal and execute upon it to completion remains the crux upon which a lot of success—and careers—in business hinges. Thus, regardless whether the four disciplines are applied to the nth degree of detail (such details are available in the book, for the interested), or applied in sentiment through to the end, there is value in the concept.
Supplementing
the four disciplines are a few recurring themes: the importance of
having concrete goals (versus lofty, abstract goals); the importance
of having lag and lead measurements (and what each are appropriate
for), the importance of cadence in bringing the group together to
separate from the swirl. And there are others; I won’t steal all
the authors’ ideas for this review.
Alas for my
poor IT organization, we remain at the whims of business units which
still operate in the swirl. But there are still pockets of
opportunity to apply the principles of 4DX. Thus for me personally,
applying the sentiment of the concept has been successful—not at
super hero, spandex-wearing levels, but to minor degrees that we are
looking to build upon.
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