Performance Consulting
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THE PERFORMANCE CONSULTING PROCESS

As performance consultants, we become aware of a need to improve business results in a variety of ways—a discussion with a line manager client, a request from a middle manager, an alert from a staff specialist, to name a few. The need to improve business results is identified on the “front end.” If the need is warranted, it begins a process that results in improved business and measurable performance results on the “back end.” Let’s look at the steps contained in the Performance Consulting Process as shown in Figure 1.1.

Identify Strategic Opportunities

The first phase of the Performance Consulting Process involves activities associated with identifying opportunities where we can partner with our clients. Sometimes these opportunities are identified in a reactive manner (step 1). This occurs when a client requests a specific solution. In these situations, the goal is to reframe the request so that the focus is on the results the client seeks, rather than the solution that the client has requested. Techniques for reframing are described in Chapter 4.

FIGURE 1.1 Performance Consulting Process

Opportunities to partner with a client can also be identified in a proactive manner (step 2). When using this approach, you initiate discussions with your client about future goals. You want to raise your client’s awareness about factors that should be considered regarding specific goals. These may include how best to prepare a workgroup to implement a new strategy or how to determine supervisor readiness to support the new strategy. The key is to discuss performance issues that are not currently on your client’s radar screen but are contributors to business results. Techniques for proactive discussions appear in Chapter 5.

Whether a need is identified reactively or proactively, it is important to explore the situation sufficiently to determine if it is best managed in a strategic manner (requiring some level of assessment) or in a tactical manner (moving directly into solution implementation). These decisions occur in step 3 of the process. They represent a key judgment you will make, frequently in the moment of the discussion. It is your responsibility as a performance consultant to sort and sift requests, using the information you obtain from your client to determine the most appropriate route to take in moving ahead. A strategic situation meets the following criteria:

One or more business needs are directly supported by the initiative.

You have direct access to the client(s) accountable for achieving the business needs.

The client is seeking performance change from people in one or more employee groups.

The client is willing to share accountability with you for producing the required change.

The client will provide you with time and access to the appropriate people so you can obtain necessary information before deciding on and implementing solutions.

The situation focuses on a group of people, not on a few individuals.

To qualify as a strategic opportunity, each of these criteria must be met. It is possible that a criterion may not be evident during the early stages of the engagement. For example, the fourth criterion—that the client is willing to share accountability for producing change—is often difficult to affirm following a single meeting with the client. Will this client truly share accountability over the long term? As long as you have no reason to think the client will not share accountability, move ahead. Should it become evident over time that the client is unwilling to share accountability for producing change, it will be necessary to address that lack of support—and perhaps even stop the initiative.

Assess Business and Performance Needs

Any situation determined to be strategic must move into the assessment phase of the process. In this phase, you conduct one or more of the assessments described in Chapters 4 through 6. You will be conducting a solution-neutral assessment. By solution-neutral, we mean that you begin the assessment with an open mind as to what solutions may be needed. The data from your assessment will help determine what solutions are required. Tactical work often requires assessments. The difference is that a tactical assessment focuses on obtaining information to ensure that an agreed-on solution is designed and implemented successfully. For example, a learning needs assessment is one that focuses on identifying the specific skills and knowledge required for the learning solution; a performance management process (PMP) assessment is one that focuses on determining elements to include in the design and execution of that PMP. Each of these assessments occurs to ensure that the tactical solution will be designed and implemented effectively. Strategic assessments, in contrast, result in information that is used to decide on what specific solutions will be implemented.

Three types of strategic assessments are possible in the Performance Consulting Process:

SHOULD assessments. The goal of these assessments is to determine, in specific terms, what operational results are required of the business and what people need to do day-to-day if these results are to be achieved. In essence, you are identifying the desired state for both the business and the performance of people who support that business.

IS assessments. When conducting an IS assessment, you are identifying the current state for both the business and employees. What are the current operational results for the business? What are employees currently doing on the job to support those goals? What are they not doing? With this information, we can identify the gap that exists between the desired and current state.

CAUSE assessments. This assessment answers the question “What are the root causes for gaps in business and performance results?” It is vital to focus on root causes, and not symptoms, when taking actions to close gaps. Once you know root causes, you can select solutions and begin the process of designing and implementing those solutions. The data obtained through strategic assessments becomes the basis for the measurement objectives and processes that you and your client agree on.

In Chapters 6, 7, and 8, we discuss how to conduct these three assessments. We include techniques for obtaining multiple kinds of data during an assessment. Clearly, a great deal of valuable information is obtained before agreeing on and implementing solutions.

Implement and Measure Solutions

Solution selection, design, piloting, and implementation occur during this phase. The Performance Consulting Process flowchart shows two routes to this phase of work. For tactical projects, you move directly from step 3 to solution design and implementation. For strategic projects, you partner with your client and obtain more information through the assessment phase. In step 5, you determine the solutions. In step 6, you plan, design, and select the specific solutions to be implemented. You also agree on a measurement strategy. Five levels of measurement are possible:

Reaction: Are people viewing the change and the solutions in a positive manner?

Capability: Has the capability of people increased and is the organization supporting the change?

Performance: Has the on-the-job performance of people involved in the initiative been enhanced?

Business: Did the needed operational results occur?

Return on investment (ROI): Do the benefits to the organization outweigh the initiative’s cost?

During the assessment phase, measures associated with these five levels are identified; however, agreement on which levels of measurement to focus on is reached with your client when deciding on solutions (step 6). Implementation of agreed-on solutions occurs in step 7. As you can imagine, this step often requires implementation of multiple solutions. In fact, one of the most crucial roles of a performance consultant is to coordinate and track the many solutions that are part of any initiative. If these solutions are to have sustained impact on business results, you as a performance consultant must be rigorous in tracking the effectiveness of the solutions being implemented.

While the Performance Consulting Process shows that measurement data is obtained in step 8, the actual collection of the measurement data can occur during and following solution implementation. Therefore, you want to have your measurement strategy in place prior to solution roll out. Technology and software programs enable data collection and analysis. Chapters 9 and 10 describe the development of a measurement strategy and the creation of a data collection plan. It is important to work closely with your clients as you plan and implement the measurement process to ensure that credible, reliable data is both obtained and discussed.

Report and Sustain Results

In the final phase of the Performance Consulting Process, you share the measurement results with your client and other stakeholders (step 9). When results are positive, it is time to celebrate. When results are disappointing, it is time to discuss the reasons for the insufficient results, agreeing on additional solutions and actions that will improve results. Frequently, you and your client may both be celebrating a positive outcome while also agreeing on additional actions to ensure long-term success. Remember that the status quo can be compelling to participants in a change process. Removing focus from the initiative and the actions to sustain the change may possibly cause the organization to revert to the prior state. This “flavor of the month” approach occurs when people’s attention moves elsewhere, returning to what was done previously. Chapter 12 describes what actions you and your client can take to ensure your change initiatives and the results that follow are more than a flavor of the month—they are a sustainable part of the organization’s success.

One final observation about the Performance Consulting Process: Across the top of the flowchart are the words “client partnerships formed and maintained.” Developing strong partnerships is not a step in the process but rather a thread woven throughout it. We believe partnerships are the “art” that makes performance consulting work. Without access to clients and the formation of a partnership based on mutual trust and respect, we do not get the opportunity to partner on strategic initiatives.

The Performance Consulting Process provides a flow of steps for the work we do as performance consultants. There is, however, another key element: the logic by which we do our work. In essence, this logic is the mental model we bring to situations that will guide our behavior, interactions, and decisions. This logic is discussed in Chapter 2.