Risk & Business Magazine JGS Insurance Magazine Spring 2019 | Page 18

EXCELLENCE >> training, which can take the form of online or in-person courses, professional training classes, or even just relevant business reading, Peters says. Unfortunately, business owners still treat training as an expense rather than an investment in their employees—an investment that can lead to greater job satisfaction, enhanced productivity, better pay, and increased loyalty. “There is a national imperative, whether you have six employees or 666, to ensure that an employee who leaves your organization is not only better at doing his or her job but also is better prepared to be a citizen of this topsy-turvy world than they were before walking in the door,” says Peters. “You have a moral obligation to help them become well-equipped for tomorrow.” Peters describes a recent scenario in which, in the midst of a “100-year storm” in his home state of Massachusetts, he was forced to summon a refrigerator repairman to fix a broken compressor. Not only did the repairman come out during severe weather, but he revealed that he had just completed a three-week training course on artificial intelligence to stay on top of fast-changing compressor technology. “That’s my ideal,” says Peters. “Regardless of what comes, that gentleman has a future.” Peters harkens back to his days as a parent of young children when, he says, “there were third-grade teachers you would walk through gunfire for—that’s how spectacularly they treated your children— while others would enter their classroom as if punching a clock.” A great teacher probably has a great principal who gives him or her the tools they need and makes them feel like they are doing a worthwhile job, he points out. These are teachers who don’t just teach to a test but also understand that if there are 17 kids in the class, each one is different than the other 16 and needs to be treated differently. Leaders who recognize this type of individuality can nurture employees with real staying power, he says. The call for customized treatment of employees comes hand-in-hand with the recent shift in thinking that favors liberal arts majors—with their creative thinking, writing, and analytical skills— over pure technology students, Peters notes. Publications from the Harvard Business Review to Fast Company to Forbes have touted the emerging status of these graduates, with Forbes asserting in a 2015 article by George Anders that the “useless” liberal arts degree “has become tech’s hottest ticket.” Peters is well-known for his bias toward action in the workplace—a favorite philosophy he attributes to Fred Malek, his boss from 1973 to 1974 while working in the White House Office of Management and Budget. In his new book, Peters reasserts the importance of the “Eight Basics,” which he originally cited in his first book, In Search of Excellence, as the bedrock of success: 1. A Bias for Action 2. Close to the Customer 3. Autonomy and Entrepreneurship 4. Productivity through People 5. Hands-On, Value-Driven 6. Stick to the Knitting 7. Simple Form, Lean Staff 8. Simultaneous Loose-Tight Properties Of these, A Bias for Action deserves its top billing, even more emphatically than before, says Peters. He devotes a good chunk of The Excellence Dividend to addressing the merits of what he calls WTTMSW, Peters-speak for Whoever Tries the Most Stuff Wins. This, he says, is “the only thing I’ve learned for sure in the last 50 years.” The best example in the business world was the early Silicon Valley competition between software rivals Apple and Microsoft. While Microsoft was quick to launch new products at “blazing speed,” Apple was on a quest for perfection, slowing the company down considerably in introducing new technologies. Although Microsoft’s products—arguably launched prematurely at times—could contain flaws, the company would simply correct these problems in its next release. The challenge, says Peters, is that the pursuit of WTTMSW requires a WTTMSW culture, one in which “you are ready, willing, and able to seriously play.” "Serious play’ is not an oxymoron,” he adds. “It is the essence of innovation.” Unfortunately, research shows that even young children are conditioned to shy away from trying new things after hearing the word “no” many times more often than the word “yes.” Peters laments the loss of the “playfulness” aspect of work, which he describes as “teammates taking immense pleasure in the messy process of many approximations and wrong turns and dead ends on the way to market.” Of course, this type of freewheeling corporate culture must come from the top down. Many companies get so absorbed in developing strategies that they get stalled by numerous roadblocks before any implementation has even been started, he notes. “A detailed strategy is stuff and nonsense,” says Peters. “You head off in that general direction, and as you go, the environment shifts shape again and again. The key is to be flexible and open to opportunities that may crop up along the way.” Another critical roadblock to action is often the lack of cross-functional collaboration, Peters says. “I fervently believe that in most any organization of more than a dozen people, the number one issue that causes delays, implementation failures in general, employee angst, and customer ire is failure of cross-functional communication and integration,” says Peter. Internal barriers can be more of an Tom Peters is a leading business management guru and founder of the Tom Peters Company. He continues to be in constant demand for lectures and seminars. Peters is the author of 16 books, including In Search of Excellence (with Robert H. Waterman, Jr.), which is often cited as among the best business books ever written. He lives in Massachusetts. 18