Sunday, November 8, 2015

BUSINESS: 13 Things About Staffing You Need To Know Before You Start Your Business

So you have a great idea or product you think you can start a business with. You’ve worked out the details and how much profit you should make every year and how much your business should grow annually. However, how much attention have you really paid to the actual engine that will produce this profitability and growth?
Business researchers have found out that out of every twenty businesses that get started in a particular year, only ten survive to do business in the second year. By the tenth year, only one of those original businesses still remains viable –if the others have not folded up, they have been merged with stronger businesses.
Most of the time the reasons for this failure reported seen are the lack of a unique product without a strong competitive advantage in the presence of countless competitors, inadequate access to finance, and wrong choices that led to lowered productivity. However, given last place as a reason for failure is usually the engine, the staffing you employed to translate a business starter’s ideas into profitable reality.While the product and business environment reasons are valid and important, the staffing employed also has a big role to play in the success of the business you create.
Lists by Jules brings you 10 things about staffing you need to understand before you start your business.



13


HIRE QUALITY STAFF


 

Except you are a mind-reader, you cannot possibly know the best people to hire out of your possibly numerous choices. However, never hesitate to fire staff who show themselves to be undisciplined and unruly, no matter what you think their abilities are. At this sensitive stage, it is difficult to get things done if your staff do not respect and obey you.
The extent of authority you possess is really defined for you by the extent to which your subordinates are willing to accept this authority. Don’t be a harsh person, as this will only reveal insecurity, but do not accept continued incompetence from any staff member.
The quality of staff you hire is really the foundation of your success, the more specialty qualitative, and temperamentally compatible people you have working with you, the more your chances of surviving beyond that first year.




12



KNOW YOUR STAFF



Now, you’ve hired the most qualitative people for your business. These are people who recognize your authority and do not despise your instructions though the business is still in its infancy stages. These are people with the mindset to work. These are people who know that this is a business despite what it looks like at the moment.
However, to build upon this strength, you need to do something more: you need to “know” your staff
Now, you’re probably thinking: “But I know them; I hired them didn’t i?”, but there is a big difference between being acquainted with your staff and knowing your staff. How do you get to know your staff? It is the little touches that make all the difference. If you know that Mr. Desmond who you hired has a sick daughter, make it a point to enquire after that child: for an awareness of such personal information is very necessary. Don’t miss that golden opportunity. Especially as your business begins to grow and more staff are being hired, it is important to have frequent face-to-face contact with your staff; there is no real substitute for this.
You will do well, but for your business and in maintaining your compassion for humanity, to realize that your staff are real  flesh and blood people like you who have personal lives of their own – with worries, anxieties, joys, and sorrows, and not merely as part of a working machine to make you rich or grow your business. If you receive a leave application (no matter how small your business is, make it as professional as possible) from a woman whose husband is ill, you must realize how much this leave application means to the woman who is making it. Or if one of your men is ill in hospital, a visit will make all the difference.
You must not seek out these types of scenarios, but wait for them to come to you. That way you do not seem insincere.
Think about the army for a moment. Why do soldiers follow their commanders and NCO’s to death if necessary? The main reason why discipline is so good in the army is that an NCO or officer makes it his job to know his men. He sees that they write letters to their homes, he sees that their trousers fit, he ensures that their boots don’t pinch: and the result of all this is very good discipline. An officer will never eat until he ensures that his men are properly fed. You can get the same high standard of discipline in civilian life as well, if you try to adhere to these principles.


11
TREAT GRIEVANCES PROPERLY AND INSTANTLY


I am assuming that by now you have at least ten staff members.
The next important thing to remember is to treat grievances properly. You will probably find out that you are so busy with your day-to-day work, that you will tend to treat grievance petitions (professionalism, remember?) from your staff with a certain amount of irritation; you may tend to brush them aside. But this is one of the worst possible things to do. You must remember that a grievance is the most important thing in the world as far as the person making it is concerned. For that reason alone you should treat grievances as being important, no matter how trifling they may appear to you. Reply to letters properly. If it is verbal, make sure you give a patient hearing to the man making it. It is easier said than done, but if you follow this you will get good results from your staff.
 


10
ORGANIZE INFORMAL GET-TOGETHERS



 

Another thing which could be very useful is an occasional get-together outside the office or workshop. A picnic with your staff is an excellent idea. The extraordinary thing about office or workshop picnics is that when you go to them you do so with the idea of doing your duty, but you usually find that you end up having a good time yourself! You will be surprised at how enjoyable such a picnic can be. And these events build morale. I recommend them thoroughly; such things, you will find, have excellent results.


9


UNDERSTAND THAT YOU ARE PART OF A TEAM


 

As a boss, you must remember that you are just one person. The men under you may be anywhere from ten to fifty, but no matter how hard you work you cannot do much more than one man’s work. So your primary function is to ensure that the work of all the personnel is properly organized. When you arrive at your office or workshop in the morning, you must not think so much of what you yourself are going to do for that day; its far more important for you to think of what the various people under you are going to do. You will find out that this is not at all easy, because there is always the temptation for you to try to do everything yourself so that your staff do not see you as a passive commander. But this is wrong. You must learn to delegate your work. The more you delegate the better you will be able to lead your staff. Delegation overtime also ensures that in the event that you are absent from the office owing to an illness for example, the work still goes on.
If you try to do everything yourself, you will eventually lose sight of the things that really matter: which is to think critically about the future courses the business should take. Also, you will probably start to subconsciously despise your staff for not showing as much zeal as you, forgetting that you denied them the opportunity by spoon-feeding them. Thinking, really, is what you receive a salary for, not putting out day-to-day fires.

The task of leadership is to combine decisive leadership with an insistence that subordinates show creativity, initiative, and individuality. This can be done and is being done, but it takes a fair amount of hard work and hard thinking.
The management of people is your most important task, because your main job is to get tasks done through other people. But ‘people experience’ is one of the few important things that one cannot get in a campus or under laboratory conditions. In most cases people experience can only come with the actual hustle and bustle of everyday work, with face-to-face experience of people themselves in their own setting.



8


MAKE WORK INTERESTING         

A boring job is one of the biggest drains on creativity. Keep your staff informed about the company and about the jobs they are doing. This will not only give them a pride in the organization in which they are working but will also give them an interest in their jobs. And if they are interested in their job, they will do it much better. Even if the particular staff is working on a machine tool, let him have an idea on the job he is doing and what it’s all about. You may find that if a workman is told what he is doing and what part his job plays in the success of the whole organization, he will do his job far better because he will become interested in his job. Make every worker feel that the job they are doing  - no matter what it is, being a lowly secretary, cleaning lavatories, machining a bolt, or sweeping the floor – is important and that without this job the factory or business just could not carry on. Oftenstaff, especially those on the lowest rung in the organization’s ladder, responds wonderfully if you take an interest in them and make them interested in their jobs. Often in the rush of daily work, you may tend to forget this and focus on the more ‘important’ things. It is usually not very conscious, but brushing aside anyone has a terrible effect on a worker’s self-esteem and should never be done.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           



7



GIVE A PAT ON THE BACK




You may forget to give appreciation when a job is well done. More often than not, one is inclined to criticize and find fault. This again is something you must watch. Psychologically it is far easier to criticize and find fault than it is to give a pat on the back. Many bosses have the idea that if they appreciate people and give a word of encouragement every now and then, they will take advantage of it and tend to become very lazy and idle, but if you have done your work well in picking the right quality of staff, this attitude among staff should be in non-existent or negligible proportions. Besides, you should never shirk discipline for improper or ineffective behavior even if you praised the person for work well done a day ago.
You will find that a pat on the back acts as a spur and an inspiration and makes everything better all-round: this is a point well remembering.



6


KNOW WHEN NOT TO SCOLD


 

It is difficult to avoid the tendency to dress down a staff member in the presence of other staff member, or worse his subordinates. But this is a thing which should never be done. Call them to the quietness of your office, and there scold them if necessary.




5



ALWAYS ASK FOR SUGGESTIONS



Try to get suggestions from your most dutiful staff members. This has a double effect. In the first place, you may get first-class ideas which you could put to real use. Secondly, the mere fact that you asked for suggestions tends to heighten your staff’s self-respect and feeling of importance. And this in itself is an excellent thing. You cannot always see or know everything.



4
BE COST CONSCIOUS


If a task can reasonably be done by one person, don’t hire two. Don’t waste money just to give yourself the feeling that your business is indeed growing. All these costs will impact the pricing of your product or service, and may therefore eliminate potential customers. Use your men, materials and machines effectively and without waste. Be cost conscious.
 



 3
LEARN FROM YOUR MISTAKES
 


 


No matter how perfectly you adhere to the principles listed in this article, you will inevitably make some mistakes. Learn from them. Every new boss makes mistakes but the important thing is that once a mistake has been made, every effort should be made to study the mistake, analyse it, run over it again and again, and try to discover why you have made the mistake. Try as hard as you can to learn from your mistake.
I recommend keeping a little diary and note down the various mistakes you make. And then run over these mistakes from time to time. You will find that as the years go on, that by analyzing the mistakes you have made, you make fewer and fewer of them.






2


KNOW WHEN AND HOW TO APPLY PRESSURE ON YOUR STAFF

 





One of the problems you will face is knowing the degree of pressure to apply: to what extent should you repeatedly control and check your staff? Pressure is not necessarily bad, but excessive pressure certainly is






1


NEVER REPRIMAND IN GENERAL TERMS

 




Finally, an important point in leadership is to be able to know that when something wrong has been done, the person concerned must not be made to feel that they are being reprimanded or rejected as a person. Reprimand that person for their specific behavior or for their fault at that particular moment: that is all. Generalities about the person’s character and the person’s attitude must be avoided at all costs, because this does tremendous harm and only makes matters worse.
 




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