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W. Edwards Deming said 94% of problems in organizations are system driven. Only 6% are people problems. We all nod when we hear that. We love the quote. We put it in our slide decks. And then we go right back to building performance improvement plans.
The Work Institute found that 75% of voluntary turnover is preventable. Three out of four departures did not have to happen. And yet we're spending our energy on the 6% while ignoring the 94%.
Imagine you're a surgeon and your patients keep dying on the table. You blame the patient. You get a new patient and they die too. At some point, do you start to wonder if maybe the problem isn't the patient, maybe it's the operating room?
What You'll Learn
The faulty assumptions that get leaders stuck:
The four questions to ask before any PIP or exit:
The plays for next week:
Key Quotes
"A bad system will beat a good person every time. If your system makes failure likely, you will keep finding people to blame until you run out of people."
"We're not saying individual accountability doesn't matter. We're saying most of what we call individual failure is actually a system failure wearing a name tag."
"Fixing people is a low altitude mandate. Fixing systems is a high altitude mandate."
"If replacing your top performers with average performers would break the system, you're relying on heroics. And heroics don't scale."
"You can hear the problems while people are still on payroll, or you can hear them on the way out. That's a choice."
The Diagnostic Questions
Resources
By Jackson O. LynchSend us a text
W. Edwards Deming said 94% of problems in organizations are system driven. Only 6% are people problems. We all nod when we hear that. We love the quote. We put it in our slide decks. And then we go right back to building performance improvement plans.
The Work Institute found that 75% of voluntary turnover is preventable. Three out of four departures did not have to happen. And yet we're spending our energy on the 6% while ignoring the 94%.
Imagine you're a surgeon and your patients keep dying on the table. You blame the patient. You get a new patient and they die too. At some point, do you start to wonder if maybe the problem isn't the patient, maybe it's the operating room?
What You'll Learn
The faulty assumptions that get leaders stuck:
The four questions to ask before any PIP or exit:
The plays for next week:
Key Quotes
"A bad system will beat a good person every time. If your system makes failure likely, you will keep finding people to blame until you run out of people."
"We're not saying individual accountability doesn't matter. We're saying most of what we call individual failure is actually a system failure wearing a name tag."
"Fixing people is a low altitude mandate. Fixing systems is a high altitude mandate."
"If replacing your top performers with average performers would break the system, you're relying on heroics. And heroics don't scale."
"You can hear the problems while people are still on payroll, or you can hear them on the way out. That's a choice."
The Diagnostic Questions
Resources