My first post to this blog was my own definition of organisational resilience. I followed this by a summary of some key characteristics of a resilient organisation. Keeping true to the purpose of this blog, to encourage discussion around resilience, I would like to share with you a New Zealand take on organisational resilience which has been backed by a significant amount of research and more recently some learnings from the 2011 Christchurch earthquakes and other earthquakes over the past few years.
I would encourage you to explore the site and read some of the papers. The Site is called 'Resilient Organisations' (I have no affiliation with the site). You can find it at www.resorgs.co.nz or via this link.
I hope you find this informative and thought provoking.
Organisational resilience and security strategy are critical to business success. This blog provides a place for me to reflect on resilience, security, risk management and business continuity management. From time to time I will blog about organisational leadership and culture during disasters, emergencies and crisis. The view expressed in this blog are my own.
Monday, 25 June 2012
Monday, 18 June 2012
Checklists? Plans? Adaptation? Plan to Adapt!
The Checklists
Many an academic debate about the merits or otherwise of
checklists, plans or adaptation is started over a red wine. All three have
their place but they work best in concert with each other with respect to emergencies
and other organisational crises.
Checklists are widely used in OH&S and certified
standards such as ISO27001 and ISO9001. They support quality checks and help
ensure critical processes, steps or requirements have not been missed. In
emergency management, they are also regularly used for key position holders in
the emergency management team so they know what to do in a usually
time-pressured, unfamiliar environment where the space to think is limited. The
challenge with checklists is to focus on the outcome that needs to be achieved
rather than on the string of tasks as a starting point. With this in mind, checklists
can be a powerful tool but they are not the panacea.
In emergency management, I personally advocate checklists
being made up of several elements including:
- Role and accountabilities
- Tasks (can be by phases)
- Considerations
Considerations are included to ensure the person reading the
checklist does not become singularly focused on the task at hand to the
detriment to the overall response and recovery objectives. How to apply
considerations also may need to be included in a plan. Outside of an
engineering / process environment where critical variance limits are very
tight, checklists can result in a singular focus that is at risk of becoming
tunnel vision. They also lack the
broader framework provided for by a well formed plan.
The Plan
Plans are usually more detailed than a checklist (may
include checklists as attachments) and will typically include:
- Background/purpose
- Objectives/goals
- Strategies to achieve those objectives
- Contingency arrangements and special contract arrangements
- Tools to support plan implementation
Plans provide a great basis for developing understanding and
establishing the approach to be taken when crisis hits. They are an essential
component of good business and good emergency and continuity management.
However, Plans of themselves will never remove the risk as they tend to focus
on a specific type of disruption or a specific threat. They can never account
for the complexity of chaos. The cost of an
organisational crises usually occurs as a result of the secondary and tertiary
effect and the complexity born out of a multi-dimensional, multi axis wicked
problem. The plan prepared for an emergency, contingency or crises will not
survive first contact (initial execution) without change. For this reason, plans should not be
developed to artificially constrain necessary action.
Adapt
Perhaps, then the answer lies in adaptation and agility, the ability to rapidly, change direction. To change, you need something to
change from and in to. In terms of crises and emergencies, that change can
often be very quick and sometimes painful if the level of preparedness is
inadequate. Adaptation relies on effective leadership and a change ready
culture. It also relies on risk intelligence. Without all these elements, we
may end up morphing into something that does not meet the needs of the current
situation. We may run head long into danger, never knowing what that danger
really was.
Plan to adapt!
Every organisation is different and we often have difficulty
‘templating’ the success of one organisation and applying it to others. This is
not to say we can’t learn from experience and adapt to our needs. Lessons and
experiences should be built into plans and checklists, accountabilities,
delegations and roles should also be clearly set out. The key though is to plan
to adapt and continue planning, but faster (often much faster). In this way,
all three elements work together to ensure the response (and recovery) meets
the unique circumstances at the time. No business can afford to become
blinkered in terms of their overall response to adversity – We must plan to
adapt but not get lazy and think adaptation is the panacea to all our problems.
Sunday, 10 June 2012
Stop choking on the dust
I attended an ASIS
International breakfast (Qld Chapter)
this week which featured a guest speaker, Robbie Sinclair who is also a friend of mine. He
spoke about the need for, and value of, security professionals acquiring and
maintaining leadership and management skills. His presentation is below.
I walked away from the morning having consumed significantly more caffeine than is probably good for me; reflecting on the need for security professionals and others to align their outcomes with those of the business. As leaders and managers, we need to ensure we are also good followers.
I walked away from the morning having consumed significantly more caffeine than is probably good for me; reflecting on the need for security professionals and others to align their outcomes with those of the business. As leaders and managers, we need to ensure we are also good followers.
I often see people get very frustrated by an inability to gain
organisational commitment, budget or other resources when their proposal is important
and should be a priority. What they may not realise is that there are also many
CEOs who also get frustrated when they get approached by managers
and subject matter experts who articulate very well the specifics of what they think is needed without understanding their internal customer (in this case the CEO).
We often complain about the sales person who tries to sell
something we don’t need or something that is outside our own budget (even if it
is shiny and new). Why do they waste my time? Don’t they know I can’t afford
that? Don’t they know I would never use that? Don’t they know I have other
priorities at the moment?
If we take the time to reflect on our own experiences, we
should come to realize that the CEO has many internal (and external) ‘sales
people’ who are trying to tell him he what he needs. The most painful thing is
that the CEOs strategy tells these people what he needs most, what drives the
business and what road the organisation is travelling on yet many fail to
see this.
Understanding this, will help us provide solutions that are
appropriate to the path being taken. A boat is no good if the path is not over
water and a truck is no good if we are travelling light.
Investing the time in
understanding the CEO, the Board and the rest of the team helps us get engaged
and make progress (not to say you should not expect potholes and bumps).
Sometimes, you may just need to repackage what you are passionate about,
compromise or realign your efforts to supporting the
boss and making sure you don’t get left at the back of the pack, sucking in
dust while everyone else has fresh air and good health – so to speak.
If you have read the strategy, business plan and engaged in
setting the priorities but still can’t get results, perhaps you should just ask
how you can help… and make sure you are looking at the same map and travelling the same road in the same vehicle.
Saturday, 2 June 2012
Hastie Group Limited - what went wrong?
Hastie Group Limited became a publically listed company in
2005 with a strong growth outlook in the supply of commercial air conditioners
and other commercial services as they diversified. Looking through their annual reports, it appears
that in 2009 they were struggling off
the back of the GFC, property/building bubble burst and an increasing focus on
reducing energy use/costs and carbon footprint. In 2010, profits were down and 2011
saw continued concerns despite some diversification.
Hastie Group Limited had stayed the course with their
original strategy at time of public listing through to 2011 which was to ‘expand its range of
technical building services and geographical coverage through organic growth
and acquisitions’ (2011 Annual Report). I do wonder at this continued strategy during a GFC, building sector downturn,
tightening of markets and climate change adaptation pressures. Perhaps this momentum contributed to Hasties
going into administration? The $20 million anomaly found a couple of weeks ago at a time when new
leadership were trying to revive the business and negotiate funding broke the camel’s back but failures are rarely simple.
The Financial Review released an article today titles 'Heads in the sand eventually bury Hastie' which highlights
systemic problems within the organisation around its leadership and culture. You
can find the article here.
No doubt this will be one to watch as the experts provide
further insight and analysis. I certainly will be looking at this one a little
closer of the next few months. I would encourage you
to have a look back through some of the annual reports, read some of the
analysis by the experts and make up your own minds about what went wrong and
please share your views.
While we can study this, and I am sure many of us will, let's not forget the human cost of these failures. It is as good a reason as any to continue our journey and improve our understanding and development of organisational resilience.
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