Has The Pendulum Swung Too Far On
Seeking Consensus?
Are CEOs, senior executives, business owners, and managers of all
stripes seeking consensus too often?
The demise of top down, arrogant, autocratic management is cause
for celebration. Many executives and managers have seen the light
and now treat their employees with more respect. They have come
to realize that employees with differing expertise, experience,
and positions within the company can provide valuable and varied
input and ideas that facilitate problem solving, improve decisions,
lead to more sustainable improvements, and save time. Furthermore,
they now realize that involving employees in the organization's
challenges doesn't just enhance that one particular situation, it
also energizes employees, stimulates good ideas, improves employee
judgment, and saves time throughout the organization on a daily
basis. They also realize there is no shame in not having all the
answers themselves and real danger in making important decisions
without getting critical input from others.
Some old school managers still adhere to the old top down practices.
Most people I know abhor working for such companies and leave when
the opportunity presents itself. I don't want to say anything to
suggest that companies return to this style, however, I believe
the pendulum has swung too far in many companies. Many executives
are now proud of having evolved to being consensus driven and they
now do everything by consensus. And that is where the problem lies.
I encounter executives and managers daily who no longer seem able
to make a decision by themselves. I see CEOs take a decision first
to one group, then another, and maybe more. The decision drags out
for months. The process resembles a fishing expedition, casting
here and there, motoring around to different corners of the lake.
The result is similar too: another day gone.
In a random, wandering process, decisions are rerouted or derailed
entirely for all the wrong reasons and tremendous time is wasted
with the involvement of so many people in countless, endless meetings.
There is a huge difference between appreciating the value of achieving
consensus and doing everything by consensus. Being consensus driven
is the opposite, and equally extreme, position to being autocratic.
Both are wasteful and problematic in any organization. A consensus
driven manager takes pride in gathering people and running meetings,
but they likely spend more money evaluating a purchase than the
purchase price, more time talking about an option than it would
take to just try it, more anxiety hoping to pave the way for a change
than it would take to deal with the consequences.
Don't think about being autocratic versus consensus driven. This
is not a personal style issue. There are times when managers should
be autocratic, make a decision, and get on with things, and there
are times when managers should delegate the entire decision to a
group and get out of the picture completely. In between, there are
countless variations. The point is to choose one that best fits
the circumstances.
In making that choice, factors to consider are:
- Time Available
If the window of opportunity is short, a quick decision is
essential. Sometimes it is more important to act than to wait
for more information. For example, when a customer complains,
the organization that can address the concern on the spot, makes
the customer happiest. Or perhaps an opportunity pops up that
requires an immediate response. He who deliberates loses. You
may wish you could get more input but collecting information
takes time.
Ask yourself how the passage of time affects the situation
and be sure you decide as quickly as needed.
- Significance of the Decision
The most important decisions deserve the best resources, the
most rigorous process, and adequate time. You don't want to
devote more resources than the decision warrants. You don't
want expensive resources making trivial decisions. You don't
want large groups leaving more important work to make decisions
of limited consequence. And, even on an important decision,
you don't want to devote resources to debating options A and
B if the differences are inconsequential.
Ask yourself how much money it makes sense to devote to the
decision and then figure out how to best allocate those resources.
A thorough understanding of the
steps of the decision process will help
you choose and allocate your resources effectively.
- Knowledge
If you don't possess the knowledge needed to make a decision,
you have no choice but to get input from others or live with
the consequences. This is where the arrogance of autocrats leads
to stupid decisions. They make decisions they know nothing about.
This is where the consensus driven managers waste time and money;
they often fish for more opinions without thinking through the
best way to identify and collect the most important knowledge
and opinions. You will never have all the knowledge you need
because their will always be unknowns.
Ask yourself who can best shed light on the most important
aspects of the decision and involve those people. Just keep
in mind the investment you decided was appropriate for the decision.
- Need for Commitment
Employees usually accept decisions, whether they agree with
them or not, if they believe the decision process was fair and
informed. To be seen as fair, a decision requires honest, open,
and reasonable objectives and deciders who are dedicated to
those objectives. To be seen as informed, the deciders must
take into consideration important factors such as the impact
on those affected by the decision.
This does not mean every affected employee needs to be involved,
but it does mean they need to believe their interests were well
represented. Furthermore, it does not mean that everyone involved
in a decision must be involved in every step of the decision.
For example, senior management may decide to cut budgets without
input, but when it comes to where specific cuts should be made,
others need to be involved.
Ask yourself who will be impacted, how they will be impacted,
where their input is most critical, and how you can obtain it.
The biggest impact often involves implementation and can be
easily obtained with focused discussions.
- Employee Development
Involving employees in decisions is a great way to develop
their skills and understanding of the business. Furthermore,
it can pave the way to delegating decisions entirely, which
helps move them lower in the organization where they likely
belong.
This may sound like an invitation to involve everyone in every
decision but that would be at the expense of everything else
they are supposed to be doing. Ask yourself where it makes sense
to invest in training because that is what you would be doing.
However, if you want to teach employees to become better decision-makers,
be sure you model good
decision-making yourself. This is particularly
important with group decisions. There is no point in teaching
employees how to flounder through decisions.
If you have gotten in the habit of making all decisions by consensus,
it is time to step back and consider the cost each time you hem
and haw and assemble a group for a series of meetings.
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