Decisions and results - two different factors
Managing for results - pay for performance schemes - are increasingly
practised by modern organisations for business reasons but this
principle can fundamentally be flawed if that is the only criterion for
evaluating managers. But the counter argument would be decision has no
tangible value but positive outcome.
People, including managers and business leaders, typically equate the
quality of a decision with the quality of result. When people observe a
good result, they conclude that they made a good decision.
Likewise, when a bad result is observed, people conclude that a bad
decision was made. This is not true. Decisions and results are two
different factors.
Time elapses between a decision and the realisation of result.
Decisions are made at a specific moment in time. Later, people implement
these decisions, and the result is observed in the future. The future is
uncertain. There are no facts about the future and nobody has a crystal
ball. Events can happen in the future that managers and organisations
cannot control. Events which managers could not foresee could happen.
Such events can cause good decisions to have a bad result - and vice
versa.
Bad results
Therefore, the quality of the result is not an indicator of decision
quality, and the result is irrelevant as a measure of decision quality A
blame culture triggered by bad results stifles experimentation,
innovation or trial and error.
If leaders do not tolerate failure and error in business innovations,
they will kill the prospect of anyone taking initiatives.
Since business activity is the primary engine for personal income
growth, value creation and societal economic development, an
organisational culture built on blame and punishment has implications
beyond the boundaries of our any one business.
Taken to national proportions, a blaming culture inhibits societal
growth, development and evolution. Managing for results leads to crisis,
at the least, it can lead to bankruptcy, at the worst.
Being accountable only for results may not be the right standard for
performance. Of course, people must be held accountable for what they do
in a business context. But they need to be held accountable for the
right things.
They need to be held accountable for things under their control that
is, operating with a good process of high quality.
They should not be held accountable for uncontrollable events.
Conversely, if business leaders only want good results, it is easy to
understand that, ultimately, any process to achieve good results will
become acceptable - even an illegal process.
This is yet another way in which managing for results can become the
origin of crisis and bankruptcy.
A manager who achieves an excellent result but, in the process of
achieving it, has de-motivated his team is clearly not a good leader.
Reward
Companies typically do two things on average, to achieve, better
results. First, they implement a good process. Managers can learn to
become better business executives.
They can learn the process of decision-making, learn how to be better
at execution and build their business via the knowledge, experience and
informed intuition that is inherent in decision-making and execution.
Through this, managers will find that they are becoming better, more
thoughtful business leaders - more aware and better informed about what
they are doing.
Being compensated only for results doesn't measure one's true
contributions to the organisation.
It is possible that bad managers using wrong processes will sometimes
enjoy good results. But their luck will run out eventually.
Therefore, in the long run, it is necessary for organisations to
evaluate the quality of a manager's decision-making process over the
span of his or her career. Over time, managers will make many decisions
and take many actions.
Organisations should therefore, reward the longer-term performance
achievements of managers.
It may seem controversial, but we firmly believe that even managers
with bad results should be rewarded - if they have used a good
decision-making process.
Keeping in mind that good decisions are for good results, the onus is
on you to ensure that good decisions deliver good results leaving luck
aside. |