
Getting distracted
You want to look for information, you will get it – lots of it. There will an equally large number of journals that will tell you that “research shows…” that you ought to be doing something. There will be an equally powerful publication that will tell you that what you just spent time learning and telling your team to implement is the equivalent of “fake news” in the world of management. You want to get on with your ever-growing To-Do list but these shiny objects keep distracting you. You are not alone.
Design-Thinking in HR

The next fad is the next drain on resources
The Wall Street Journal describes this in this article called How Bosses Waste Their Employees’ Time
“The CEO of one firm I studied, for instance, fell in love with new management concepts, such as “lean” operations, and frequently announced new companywide initiatives—often once a quarter. But those announcements typically didn’t take into account initiatives from previous quarters. Employees were often asked to drop what they were doing before and start a new mission from scratch.”
What can leaders do?
When I read the article, I found myself guilty of this problem. Not following through an already existing initiative tends to make heroes out of those who work on the new initiatives. Those who work on completing the older projects do not get appreciated as much. What can leaders do to avoid getting distracted by every new fad:
- Encourage criticism and candor. Very often skits and humor can tell the leader in hushed tones where the problem is.
- Don’t ignore them in your talent identification process. When you draw up a list of people to reward, promote or identify for plum roles, check to see if you have lined up a set of yes-persons only. That list may need scrubbing.
- Review the impact of the new projects: When you mumble vaguely that you like a new idea, it quickly becomes the flavor of the month. Check to see if your team is groaning with the workload. Avoid adding new projects without reviewing the impact on resources and skills.
WSJ likens this like mowing a lawn. “The best leaders discourage this addition sickness by praising, promoting and paying employees who remove destructive friction and waste.”How have you dealt with the temptation of getting distracted by the next big shiny management fad? Would love to know.=======Join me on Twitter @AbhijitBhaduri or on LinkedIn.Sign up at abhijit2.spidertrainers.com to get more ideas and resources mailed to you. It is free.


