So Far
The founder of Strategy Management Technologies, Douglas Swallow has
been researching the primary enablers and inhibitors of optimal human
and organizational performance for the past 27 years. The research
has concluded the primary enablers and inhibitors of organizational
performance are in three areas: contextual reference, human
performance, and performance management technology.
Contextual reference is reference point from which one views the environment.
The contextual reference point is the primary filter through which
all data is processed and on which all decisions are made, right or
wrong, good or bad, etc. An individual’s contextual reference
point is a combination of their childhood programming, education, environment,
natural performance profile, experiences, goals, principles, and beliefs.
To use a metaphor, one’s contextual reference are the glasses
through which one sees their world.
Organizational contextual references are comprised of an organization’s
collective understanding of the business landscape and the principles,
strategies, processes, practices, and performance management technology.
An organization’s contextual reference is directly proportionate
to the quality of results it produces.
As evidenced by the performance of Fortune 500 companies over
the past 25 years, there is clearly a difference in the quality of
organization’s contextual references or the glasses through which
business view their landscape. Since 1980, 70% of the companies on
the list are no longer on the list and less than 5% consistently produce
pre 1980 results.
Organizational performance is a function of many external and internal
variables. One of these variables is human performance. Since 1980,
no single variable in the organizational performance equation has increased
more in importance than human performance. Executive and employee performance
now ranks as one of the top five factors in organizational performance.
Just 20 years ago, this variable consistently ranked outside of the
top 15.
Human performance in today’s workplace is a function of 12 elements:
- Cultural fit
- Professional quality profile
- Natural performance profile
- Life management skills and emotional competencies
- Integrity
- Leadership
- Clarity
- Focus
- Passion
- Obsession
- Intensity
- Environment
Research on the performance capability of the Fortune 500 companies
that performed in the top 5% were found to be largely comprised of
individuals who had high ratings in the top five, operated in workplaces
with elevated ratings in the next six, and operated in good to excellent
environments. These companies all demonstrated the ability to get the
right people into the company, the wrong people out, and put the right
people in the right places.
Performance management technology are the bundle of reports, schedules,
manuals, and statements that enable the company and its leadership
to navigate the company, keep it on course, avoid disaster, and take
advantage of opportunity. In 1980, the standard bundle of performance
management technology was comprised of seven categories of navigational
instruments, which included
- Business plans
- Financial schedules
- Market studies
- Employee policies and procedures handbook
- Compensation studies
- Job descriptions and organizational charts
- Sales and production reports
Since 1980, 235 Fortune 500 companies have gone out of business, were
sold, or merged with other companies. The average net profit percentage
of a Fortune 500 company has dropped 35% from 8.1% in 1980 to 5.2%
in 2004 and 43% or 215 of the Fortune 500 companies are unable to produce
historical market average net profit percentages.
Why did 43% of the best companies in America over the last 25 years
fail to meet or exceed their shareholder expectations? Not one of them,
before their decline, was short on resources, market share, demand
for their products or access to knowledge and best practices of the
day. All of them, by the standards of the day, had quality workforces
and experienced and respected leadership. So what happened?
The answer to the question lies in their navigational and performance
management technology. They could not see, as well as others could,
what was happening at the macro level across all industries, or what
was going on inside their own organization that was inhibiting their
ability to produce superior results. Had they had today’s leading
performance management instruments, virtually every one of the 243
companies would be here today and would be more profitable than ever
before, but they did not, and as a result they are now gone.
Today, the basic list of core navigational systems is up to 15 and
includes the original seven plus the following:
- Published business models
- Strategy maps
- Process maps and performance reports
- Benchmark and key performance indices (KPI) reports
- Workforce and vendor fit and performance capability charts
- Local knowledge reports
- Departmental playbooks or operating manuals
- 21st Century recruiting, selecting, orientation, and development
programs
The simple truth is contextual reference, human performance, and performance
management technology dictates the level and quality of results in
today’s environment. If a company operates from the same contextual
reference as the most successful companies in the world do, has a workforce
largely comprised of individuals with high performance capability ratings,
and employs the leading performance management technology, it will
produce the highest level of results in the market.
So far, what we know is:
- While less than 10% of Corporate America has embraced it and academia
remains reluctant to acknowledge it, the events of the past 35 years
strongly suggest that the industrialized nations have entered the
Fifth economic era.
This is critical, because there have only been four economic eras
in world history: Hunter-Gatherer, Military, Agrarian, and Industrial.
The criteria for the end of an economic era is when the most advanced
version of the current era’s operating (business) model fails
to produce equal to or greater than historical market average results
and/or when an alternative operating model renders the current one
obsolete.
Core economic operating models only change about every 1,000 to 2,000
years and the industrial age operating model has only been around for
approximately 400 to 500 years.
- What rendered the most advanced version of the industrial age operating
model in America obsolete was largely the result of four events in
the 1970’s: the emergence of the highly competitive environment,
the first change in leadership structure in over 3,000 years, the
emergence of a new class of employee called Naturals, and the arrival
of the first workforce programmed under the post-World War II child
programming model.
Degree of Market Competitiveness
Prior to the 1980’s degree of market competitiveness was largely
defined in terms of demand and supply. A second definition emerged
in the 1970’s, which suggested that degree of market competitiveness
could also be defined in terms of number of points of distribution
relative to a market’s ability to support those points of distribution
and produce equal to or greater than historical average financial results.
This definition led to a segmentation of degree of market competitiveness
into four levels: non, low, moderate, and high. The definition of each
is as follows.
The Non-Competitive Environment is one
in which demand exceeds production capacity and the number of points
of distribution are insufficient to meet demand. There are virtually
no competitors, and entry by competitors is legislatively, financially,
or otherwise restricted.
The Low Competitive Environment is one
in which demand exceeds production capacity and the points of distribution
are insufficient to meet demand. There are multiple competitors. Entry
is difficult, but not restricted.
The Moderately Competitive Environment is
characterized by multiple competitors. There are a balanced number
of points of distribution relative to supply, and demand and market
segments are well defined. Entry is not restricted.
The Highly Competitive Environment is defined
as any environment in which there is insufficient demand for a
product or service to capable of supporting the number of points
of distribution for that product or service at sustainable financial
levels. Entry is not restricted. Market segments are well defined.
Customer Value Propositions are well defined, (lowest total cost
solution, best total solution, or best in class). Customers are
experientially sensitive.
Prior to the late 1970’s, virtually all industries
could be classified as non- to low competitive. The companies delivering
the highest levels of profitability, shareholder value and equity did
so, using the most advanced version of the industrialized era operating
model. This operating model was built on a foundation of strategies,
processes, and technology that focused on production capacity, velocity,
scale, market share, price, replication, exactitude, sustaining innovation,
low cost structures, and minimal headcounts. This focus was optimized
through the creation of a youthful, experienced, skilled, loyal workforce,
with a finely tuned centralized management structure, supported by
a doing oriented culture, while creating price, supply chain, and legislatively
defensible market positions. Customer satisfaction, quality, and service
were not contributors to optimizing results.
With the arrival of the moderate and highly competitive
environments in the late 1970’s, came a bundle of new variables
in the performance equation that included:
- Deregulation and uninhibited market entrance
- Unstable market quality
- Rapidly evolving external environments
- Product segmentation
- Consumer segmentation by value proposition; lowest total cost solution,
best total solution, and best in class
- Knowledgeable customers who were time, value, and experientially
sensitive
- Customer satisfaction indexing
- Shorter product life cycles
- Disruptive innovation
- Resource allocation sensitivity and accountability
- Raw material availability and inconsistence
- Diverse capital, accounting, audit, and tax strategies
- Competitive capital market
- Capital and insurance markets dictating strategy, policies, and
practices
- Vendor/subcontractor procurement practices
- Vendor/subcontractor performance
- Product and consumer liability
- Candidate and employee liability
- Workplace liability
- Diverse political environments
- Supply chain integration and disruption
- Dramatic increase in the quantity, complexity, and timeliness of
decisions
- Key position unbundling
- Independent Board of Directors
- Organizational positioning statements
- Expansion of employee performance capability spectrum
- Transition from management development to leadership development
- Employee development and internal Universities
- Cultures of accountability
- Employee accountability, real-time performance feedback, and performance
intolerance
- Sales practices and ethics
- Production practices and methodologies
- Inadequate navigational technology
- Enhanced workplace technology
- Workload assessment
- Multiple cost structures
- Incentive and participation oriented compensation
- Increased operating costs
- Process quality
- Rework and waste cost analysis
- Real time inventory management and strategy adjustment
- Outsourcing and specialists
- Internal and competitive benchmarking
- Insufficient demand to support the number of points of distribution
No one variable rendered the most advanced versions of
the industrial age operating model obsolete, however collectively they
created a weight it could not support. As a result it became functionally
obsolete.
Leadership Structure
Since dawn of the second economic era, the military era,
over 3,000 years ago, organizations and their supporting institutions
have largely operated on the single leadership model, i.e. President.
In the early 1970’s, single leadership was abandoned in favor
of the first economic era’s talent oriented, leadership trilogy
of Chairman, CEO, and President. In the first economic era, the titles
were better known as the Wiseman, Hunter, and Tribal Leader.
Under the single leadership model, one individual is
responsible for establishing and executing the strategic, tactical,
and operational strategies of the organization. Under the leadership
trilogy, these three responsibilities are divided into three distinctly
different positions.
Leadership studies found the required talents or natural
endowments to produce superior strategic, tactical, and operational
results are mutually exclusive in highly competitive environments.
The talents required to develop and adjust strategies differ from those
required to optimize the acquisition of key resources, i.e. capital,
raw materials, and key relationships, as are the talents to build and
lead a workforce that produces superior results.
Overlays of the single leadership model over degrees
of market competitiveness concluded the single leadership model was
superior in non- to low competitive environments. However, as environments
become more competitive and, as strategy and operational results entered
the performance equation, the effectiveness of the single leadership
model was found to diminish proportionately with the degree of market
competitiveness.
Naturals
The leadership trilogy introduced the elements of talent,
workload, and cultural fit into the performance equation. Prior to
the 1970’s talent was not part of the employee performance capability
equation. Based on a Gallup survey of 400,000 companies worldwide,
talent is now considered to be the single most important factor in
the employee performance capability equation.
Talents are skills, but skills are not necessarily talents.
Talents are something with which an individual is born. Human performance
studies have revealed that all human beings are born with a natural
performance profile which is comprised of an intellectual persuasion,
i.e. I.Q., neuro-linguistic communication profile, auditor, visual
or kinesthetic, personality type, seven natural endowments, purpose,
dream, and a gift. These seven elements have consistently been found
to be in alignment.
All positions in a company require a core set of skills
to be performed proficiently. Experienced individuals whose natural
endowments are in alignment with the core skills of their position
perform on average 2.3 times that of equally experienced skilled employees.
Experienced employees whose natural endowments and are in near alignment
with the core skills of a given position have formed a new class of
employees, called Naturals.
In the 1990’s neurological studies emerged that
scientifically explained how Naturals process information differently
than skilled practitioners. How talent is processed on a separate neurological
pathway that bypasses the cerebral cortex and all manmade filters,
thus allowing for higher levels of performance.
State management specialists found when an individual
is using three or more of their talents their state changes in a very
positive way. The level of five neurological chemicals increases, includes:
- Norepinephrine - the joy or happiness
chemical
- Dopamine - the attraction chemical
- Phenylethylamine also known
as PEA - the physical stimulant chemical
- Oxytocin - the passion or
care chemical
- Adrenaline - the intensity chemical
Individuals in this state consistently lose track of
time and perform with high levels of clarity, focus, passion, obsession,
and intensity. They display innate knowledge of the subject matter
and cannot explain how or why they did what they did in production
of superior results.
Following these discoveries, psychological questionnaires
were developed that separated one’s talents from one’s
skills. These profiling tools have enabled companies to filter candidates
and reposition internal employees into the optimal positions and develop
workgroups largely comprised of Naturals.
Studies of consumer trends in highly competitive environments
revealed that consumers cluster along one of three value propositions;
best total cost solution, best total solution, or best in class. Companies
whose products and processes are aligned with a particular value proposition
consistently produce better results than those whose products tried
to appeal to multiple value disciplines.
Subsequent studies found that, as with consumers, all
employees have a dominant value proposition. Employees whose dominant
value proposition were in alignment with their company’s performed
better than those whose value propositions were unaligned. Workgroups
comprised of employees with aligned value propositions consistently
had less inter-workgroup conflict and were more productive.
This discovery led to the development of candidate “Fit” profiles.
These profiles enable companies to build workgroups whose collective
value proposition is in alignment with the company’s and its
core group of customers.
A characteristic of the industrial age operating model
was the bundling of positions and positional workloads in excess of
what highly skilled practitioners could effectively process in a standard
40 hour workweek. This business practice was largely based on the assumption
that employees would work longer hours, thus enabling employers to
maximize production capacity per employee and minimize overhead and
related expenses thereby improving profitability.
With the emergence of the highly competitive environment
came increased workloads, workloads that could not be processed in
a few extra hours a week. Studies of employees with excessive workloads
had five choices; (1) work extra hours at the expense of family
and key relationships, (2) accelerate work pace and errors per execution,
(3) omit process steps, or (4) produce less work product, (5) operate
in a state of indifference. All five choices would adversely impact
organizational performance in highly competitive environments.
As a result, companies began conducting positional workload
assessment and developing workload monitoring systems. This led to
the unbundling and restructuring of positions. Experienced Naturals
and skilled employees whose workloads are aligned with a 40 hour workweek
produced better results than those with excessive workloads.
In the 1970’s the macro employee performance evaluation
spectrum consisted of three levels: unsatisfactory, satisfactory, and
outstanding. In the 1980’s the spectrum was expanded to five
levels: unacceptable, less than satisfactory, satisfactory, highly
satisfactory, and outstanding. In the 1990’s the spectrum shifted
in context and was expanded to seven levels: disciplinary action required,
unsatisfactory, skilled, advanced, expert, and leader. In 21st century,
with the emergence of talent as a key variable in the performance spectrum
there is discussion about shifting and the titles of the two highest
categories to talented, and natural.
The importance and emergence of talent in the employee
performance equation has doubled the breadth and scope of the employee
performance spectrum and allowed managers to build teams that consistently
produce superior results in highly competitive environments. The development
of cultural “fit” technology has allowed managers to create
highly harmonious environments and environments that were void of performance
inhibiting inter-employee conflict. And the emergence of workload
assessment allowed managers to optimize the performance of the workplace
and individual productivity. The combination of these three events
rendered the industrial age human resources hiring, staffing, and workload
practices obsolete.
The arrival of the first generation of post World
War II employees programmed under the new child programming model.
The industrial age operating model assumes that less
than 15% of the employees will have a performance inhibiting set of
life management skills and emotional competencies. Today, over 40%
of employees profile with performance inhibiting sets of life management
skills and emotional competencies.
Life management skills are those skills required to manage
one’s personal life. Emotional competencies are the bundle of
skills that allow an individual to effectively interact with others.
Inadequate sets of life management skills and emotional competencies
manifest themselves in the workplace under the term “personal
problems.” According to a Gallup-USA Today poll, 93.6% of the
problems in the workplace are attributable to personal problems.
Life management skills and emotional competencies are
developed in childhood and acquired through childhood programming.
Inadequate life management skills and emotional competencies are the
result of the absence of and/or inappropriate council by one or more
of the primary programmers. The primary programmers are comprised of
mother, father, grandparents, self, friends/significant others, and
the community/education system.
In the development of a child from birth to 18 years of age, a child
is awake and available for direct and indirect programming 91,615 hours.
Under the traditional pre World War II child programming model, a child
spent approximately 37,207 hours in the presence of their mother, 18,952
with their father, 4,062 with their grandparents, 17,805 with friends/community,
and 13,590 in school. Today, in America, according to census data,
less than 15% of children have opportunity to be reared under this
model.
In America, in non-divorced, dual income households, with grandparents
in nearby, the average reduction in childhood programming time is at
least 19,487 hours or 21% of the total programming time. This reduction
is exclusively in two parental programmer’s categories: mother
and father. This decrease equates to a reduction in programming time
of the mother of 32% and of father 40%. In divorced households, total
mother, father, and grandparent programming is typically greater than
40% or 24,000 hours.
Child programming is a function of time, content, and environment.
Incomplete childhood programming is the result of inadequate time or
absence on the part of one or more of the primary programmers, programmers
not knowing they are accountable for programming or having the content
to provide, and/or marginalized environments.
Emotional competency studies show neither the most advanced version
of the industrial age operating model or today’s highly competitive
market operating models have proven to consistently produce superior
results with workforces with greater than a 25% deficiency in core
emotional competencies and life management skills. Workgroups that
produce consistently superior results are comprised of individuals
with emotional competencies and life management skills in excess of
the tipping points.
Studies show a direct correlation between the quality
of childhood programming and the levels of emotional competency and
life management skills. The arrival of the first generation of children
programmed with an average deficiency of 35% in core programmer time,
i.e. mother and father, in the early 1970’s was a contributing
variable in rendering the industrial age operating model obsolete.
Today, in excess of 80% of America’s workforce was programmed
under the post World War II childhood programming model.
Summary
As a result of four events: the emergence of the highly competitive
environment, a new leadership structure, talent in the employee performance
equation, and the arrival of the first workforce programmed under the
post World War II child programming model, the most advanced version
of the industrial age business model has been rendered functionally
obsolete in highly competitive environments.
Companies that will survive and prosper in the Fifth economic era
will operate on a highly competitive market oriented business model
and performance management technology, employ the leadership trilogy,
and build teams of Naturals with non-performance inhibiting levels
of life management skills and emotional competencies.
By exploring the achievement of optimal performance in business, production
homebuilding, master planned community development, urban development,
and individual excellence through the lenses of the contextual reference
of market leaders, Naturals, and performance management technology,
we have identified the primary enablers and inhibitors to optimal individual,
organizational, and urban performance. Along the way, we developed
57 performance management technologies and workshops that empower executives
to produce superior results in today’s highly competitive environments.
The following is a brief overview of the major findings in each of
these four areas.
Research and technology validity: The three biggest questions about
ground-breaking research and new performance management technology
are: is it academically valid, has it been proven to work in the real
world, and what Fortune 500 companies are currently using it? Next
to each of the following discoveries is a validity scale: * - face
validity / theory, ** academic validity, *** contextual validity /
field tested, **** employed by a Fortune 500 Company. In some cases,
the aforementioned scale is not applicable. In these cases, the term “NA” is
used. The term “Blend” is used to denote a mix of
types of validity.
The methodology in the development of the following performance management
technologies and programs was based on identification of leaders in
a field by results on workgroup specific key performance indices, collection
of supporting strategies, and the application of contextual reference
of optimal organizational and human performance in highly competitive
environments.
The following is listing of the performance management technology
and programs by consultancy.
Organizational Genetics / General Business Consultancy
The Spark – An instrument that enables executives
to quantify the degree of market competitiveness. All business models
are degree of market competitiveness sensitive. The greater the degree
of non-alignment of a company’s business model with the degree
of market competitiveness the lower it performs. Conversely, the
opposite is true.
Organizational Performance Variable Assessment Instrument – a
new market entry assessment, quantification of degree of market competitiveness,
and alignment of internal practices with the external business environment
technology.
Organizational Priorities Alignment Profile – a
simple profile that allows executives to prioritizes key performance
variables and align them with the external environment.
Organizational Genetics – leading edge strategy
mapping and alignment technology based on the discovery that organizational
strategic platforms are identical in structure, form, and function
to the genetic structure of living organism.
The Short Cut to Success – business life
cycle assessment technology for long-term strategic planning.
The Keystone to Optimal Performance in Highly Competitive
Environments – value orientation strategy, product,
and process alignment technology based on the principles of the customer
value orientations of the “lowest total cost solution”, “best
total solution”, and “best in class.”
“Fit” - candidate and employee cultural “Fit” assessment
technology for resumes, candidates and workforce assessment. This
breakthrough technology enables HR professionals and executives to
get the right people into the company, the wrong people out, and
right people in the right place.
The Leadership Trilogy and the Natural Leader – a
leadership and workforce development program based on the principles
of the leadership trilogy of the Chairman, CEO, President and concept
of Naturals.
The #1 Business Navigational Instrument – a
program for downloading a company’s business model into a publishable
document.
The #2 Business Navigational Instrument – artificial
intelligence report technology.
Winning the J.D. Power Game and Creating Bulletproof Litigation
Profiles – a customer satisfaction index and litigation
mitigation development program based on the five year study of the
strategies employed by companies that produce superior customer satisfaction
ratings.
Total Compensation – a principle shareholder
oriented compensation development program for owners and compensation
committees based on performance capability requirements, percentage
of gross and net revenue contribution, benefits, environment, base
salary and bonus compensation.
Recruiting, Interviewing, Selecting, Orientation, and Employee
Performance Evaluation for the 21st Century – the
title says it all.
How to Create High Performance Organizational Cultures – a
program for the development of high performance oriented organizational
culture based on the principles of value orientation, total compensation,
high performance environments, cultural fit, naturals, and creating
workgroups with high levels of clarity, focus, passion, obsession,
self-discipline, and intensity .
The Natural’s Sales Process and Sales Departmental Operating
Model – a program that stabilizes salesperson and
sales department results at equal to or greater than 2.3 times the
market average.
The #1 Salesperson Performance Development Instrument -
post sales process execution analysis technology.
The Employee Performance Institute
The Natural Performance Profile – technology
that reveals one’s innate performance profile and how to consistently
produce superior results and be excessively happy most of the time.
Universal Integrity – a presentation of the
ten values every culture (even the no so good ones) in the world share
that make-up universal integrity.
The 24 Principles of Optimal Human Performance – a
presentation of the 24 principles that make-up the foundation on which
all truly great performers stood and stand today.
The Wiseman’s Toolkit – the ancient’s
optimal human performance development program that produces better
performing employees than any known system today.
Love Strategies – when all else fails read the directions – compatibility
profiling and natural internal (subconscious) and external (conscious)
mate profile realignment technology.
Creating Good Kids - a time based examination of
traditional and contemporary childhood program models for parents who
want to provide their children with opportunity to have a great life
in 21st century and understand the quality of their childhood programming.
How to have the perfect relationship in 30 minutes or less
per week – an advanced inter-personal communication
system base on the “best friend” communication practices.
The Swallow Bite Diet – a consumption oriented
diet based on the understanding the average bite of food has 25 calories.
By monitoring the number of bites one consumes weight can be lost
or gained as desired.
Homebuilders Performance Research
Sweet-Spot Technology – a collection of algorithms
and practices that consistently produces projects that perform in
the top 10% of the market, reveals the “sweet-spot” within
each market and market segment, and can reduce direct cost by up
to $1.50 per foot.
Benchmark Technology – workgroup performance
development technology based on the understanding that workgroups
produce better results when their performance is measured against
the results of their peers on like indices than they are by performance
indices set by management.
Integrated Workgroup Master Project Scheduling Technology – an
inter-departmental new project key date scheduling program with artificial
intelligence capability that produces more accurate schedules than
traditional independent workgroup scheduling programs.
The Best Land Acquisition Package in the Business – a
completely customizable land acquisition package based on the leading
thinking and packages in the market today.
Top Dollar – a workshop that presents the
leading landplanning and product pricing strategies for the attainment
of optimal sales prices and absorption.
Achieving Superior J.D. Power and Customer Satisfaction Ratings – a
five year study on the strategies employed by the companies that
consistently achieve superior J.D. Power and customer satisfaction
ratings.
The Natural’s New Home Sales Department Operating Model – a
sales department operating model that produces equal to or greater
than market average results at half the market average cost that
is based on building sales teams largely comprised of Naturals.
How to Maximize Traffic – advertising budget
development technology based on annual budgeting with actual costs
for a complete program versus the widely accepted percentage approach
and theory of dead weeks, swing weeks, and go weeks.
The Psychographics of Selling, Sales Offices and Model Complexes – a
collection of the leading strategies and practices for the optimization
of new home sales environment performance.
What to do at the onset of difficult times – a
program that presents the best practices by department that results
in the minimization of the impact on financials during recessions.
Passing the Baton - preparing family for company leadership – a
collection of workshops and technology designed to prepare and empower
one or more family members for ownership and leadership of the family
business.
Master Planned Community and Urban Performance Specialists
The Edge – an MPC and urban land use modeling
program that produces the highest levels of land revenue and absorption
that based on the principles of village typing, value orientation,
and market segmentation.
Maximum Revenue and Absorption – a program
that presents the leading strategies and technology for maximization
of land prices and absorption.
The Perfect Custom Lot Program – a program
that presents the leading strategies for optimizing custom lot development
and absorption.
The Swallow MPC Development Schedule Program – a
fully customizable master planned community development schedule.
The Swallow MPC Business Plan and Development Budget Program – a
fully customizable master planned community development budget program.