From the Blogosphere
November 30, 2007 11:00 AM
From David Maister Blog: Passion, People and Principles
Three more reviews of my new book this time from bloggers who focus on (respectively) the accounting, legal and marketing communications agency worlds.
First, Dennis Howlett compares some of the points I make in the book to his own experience. He
writes:
“When I was in practice I made a conscious decision that I would never
compete on price and that I would never take on work I didn’t believe we could
execute against. That takes courage - something David notes is rare and therefore
a source of competitive advantage. You’ve also go to have unshakable belief in
your business model. That’s not the same as a rigid belief. It is one of the
reasons I believe in value pricing.
People will pay a premium (relative to the general perception of market value)
if they know what you stand for and if you can clearly demonstrate
differentiated knowledge and ability. The same is true for existing clients.
“That meant at times, I’d enlist the services of firms that were better
qualified than ours to handle specific problems. It wasn’t that I didn’t want
to do the work. I knew the client would be better served elsewhere. In the long
run, it meant the client was better served overall.
“These are principles I follow to this day. Last week for instance, I
mentioned to a colleague that I will not work with certain companies because I
don’t share their values. We’re incompatible from the get go and any
relationship is bound to be problematic for both parties. In some cases that
has meant turning away otherwise very good business. That’s always a tough call
but in life I’ve found material reward is but a fraction of the total reward
for undertaking an assignment.
“David makes the point and he’s right - following certain principles
involves an emotional investment in the things that matter to you. With that
comes pain and pleasure. Fortunately, the upside far outweighs the inevitable
lows.”
Julie Fleming-Brown, in Life At The Bar, picks up on another point in the book that discusses viewing firm personnel
in the relationship or transactional mode.
I wrote:
“Are you saying,” they (senior people) ask me, “that I need to show an interest in my
subordinates as people and care about their career ambitions?”
“Only if you want them to respond to you,” I reply. “If your
subordinates feel that you are prepared to work at a relationship with them,
ensuring that both sides benefit, then they will give you more of what you
want. That’s human nature, not a political or religious point.
“But if they think that you, their superior, are just trying to get out of
the deal more of what you want from them? Harder work, more billable
hours, whatever? Then they will respond in kind. They will view you
as you are viewing them: useful only to the extent that they can get out of it
when they want in the short run.
“There will be no long-term loyalty and no commitment to the larger
interests of the firm, because you have set the pattern that this is truly a
temporary transaction, not a relationship. If you treat people as THEM,
as objects, or as ‘other,’ they in turn will treat you instrumentally.”
Julie’s comments were these:
“And that, my friends, is the crux of the associate retention problem in big
firms. Maister nailed it, in my opinion. Associates view
partnership as a distant, likely unattainable goal, perhaps even a goal they
don’t want to attain. Firms offer money as the short-term
benefit, “greedy associates” are born, and associates become eager to move on
to the high bidder, to the firm where they can get the most short-term benefit,
figuring that at some point they’ll end up in a firm where they can and will
make partner — but that’s down the road after they’ve switched firms a few
times. (Of course, there’s nothing that will motivate a lawyer toward
money like facing $100K or more in law school debt, but that’s another
thread.) According to a NALP study cited in “Law-Firm
Life Doesn’t Suit Some Associates” (which I discussed here a couple of days
ago), 60-62% of entry-level associates have left their firms by the end of the
fourth years.
“What can law firms do to encourage good associates to
stay? Create a sense of mutual loyalty. Pay attention to
associates’ professional development, career satisfaction, and concern for the
person. Make sure associates know that they’re not fungible, that they’re
part of a team, that they contribute to something important. Help them
recognize meaning in their work — and I’m not talking the do-gooder kind
necessarily (though that often keeps lawyers working in public interest
despite low pay, lack of resources, etc.), but the kind that comes from
practicing an area of law that fits, taking on advancing responsibilities,
receiving appropriate guidance that promotes professional growth. Say
“thank you.”
Finally, Rich, at CopywriteInk says, "Maister expertly paints an accurate, if not frightening, picture
of business as usual today."
“It is not uncommon for me to be told
even by the most senor people that their firm’s impressive financial results
have been accomplished by a management team which has consistently created an
environment of fear and insecurity,” writes Maister. “The simplest explanation
for the prevalence of this ‘abusive behavior’ is the simple fact that, in the
right situation, it works!”
Rich goes on to say:
"However, he distinguishes that such short-term work-under-fire tactics are
exactly that — tactics that will eventually lose their effectiveness and
eventually elicit resentment. In contrast, proactive, passionate, and positive
management teams energize and excite people about what they do, which in turn
becomes tangible in the way the workforce interacts with clients. Long term,
applied wisdom will lead to better financial results.
"He’s right. As I’ve often advised agency owners, especially those who have an
account executive background, negative reinforcement can teach mice to press a
bar for cheese, but it never did anything for creativity. And even with mice,
too much negative reinforcement will eventually immobilize them.
"My net assessment of Strategy And The Fat Smoker is that it provides some much
needed advice for the increasingly fast-paced world of random transactions,
especially those that occur online. Business, especially communication, is
poised for a shift toward relationships that mean something, whether that means
people to people or product to consumer."
eplace this text with your post.
[ Read the entire post at David Maister Blog: Passion, People and Principles ]
Other recent entries from David Maister Blog: Passion, People and Principles: