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1 Leading an Effective Engineering Organization Leslie Martinich Competitive Focus.

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1 1 Leading an Effective Engineering Organization Leslie Martinich Competitive Focus

2 2 EMC BOK Market Research, Technology Updates, and Environmental Scanning Planning and Adjusting Business Strategies Developing Products, Services, and Processes Engineering Operations and Change Financial Resources and Procurement Marketing and Sales Leading Individuals and Engineering Project Teams Professional Responsibility and Legal Issues

3 3 Topics Leading Managing innovation Aligning your team with your company’s direction Gaining support for your team’s projects Topics we will not cover –Operations management –Project management –Financial management –Professional responsibility and legal issues

4 4 Leading Engineering Teams Different strengths, preferences, skills, propensities Different communication styles and preferences Provide people with opportunity to do meaningful work, to make a difference

5 5 Problem Solving and Creativity Differences in ways of thinking, solving problems, creating Adaptors and Innovators Working within a structure vs. working outside of a structure continuum Adaptors Innovators

6 6 Activity Your company has two projects. Decide which one your group wants to take. Your company is one of the top 3 widget firms, and has 15 years of success in widget engineering to build on. Typical widget development efforts take 6 months. Your firm expects to continue its leadership for the next several generations of widgets. It has a budget in place to support the next 10 years of exploratory efforts. What are your strengths and dispositions? What are your priorities and what do you hope to accomplish? Team A is responsible for delivering the next generation of widgets. Team B is responsible for exploring new technologies and figuring out what will be the product to replace widgets in the future.

7 7 Utilizing Talents Apply talents to appropriate tasks You need all types to complete the puzzle Give people opportunities to do meaningful work and make a difference (and that varies with the person)

8 8 Communication Preferences Face-to-face Big picture Talks through alternatives and decisions Quick decisions; can correct mistakes Email Lots of data Thinks through alternatives and decisions Time to analyze the data

9 9 Communication Listening –Management –Colleagues –Staff Understand your audience –What is important to them? –What are their goals?

10 10 Leading the Team Understand your own and your team members’ strengths, dispositions, problem-solving styles, communication preferences Next Topics: –Managing innovation –Aligning your team with your company’s direction –Gaining support for your team’s projects

11 11 Industry Assessment Suppliers Your offering Customers Partners Distributors Competitors Alternatives Industry Structure

12 12 Industry Assessment: Competitive Forces Industry Competitors Rivalry Among Existing Firms Buyers Potential Entrants Suppliers Substitutes

13 13 Innovation Value chain, timingWhen? Distribution, channelsWhere? Processes, manufacturingHow? Markets, demographicsWho? Products, technology, solutionsWhat? StrategyWhy?

14 14 Innovation Phases Early Phases –Period of chaos and uncertainty –Need flexibility and adaptability Later Phases –Focus on efficiency and process –Focus on cost

15 15 Phases Overlap As one technology matures, innovations create another technology Mature Innovation

16 16 Example: News Distribution News Industry Media distribution Changes in distribution –Print –Online –Pod Casting –??? Is the firm in the “newspaper” business? Or the “information” business? Or something else?

17 17 Example: Photography Digital photography Photo processing -> Printing Consider players: –Polaroid –Kodak –HP –Ink providers –Sony –Canon Mature

18 18 Industry Assessment: Innovations What forces are changing in your industry? Platform changes Technology changes Supply chain changes Market changes ?????

19 19 Where Are We? Choose your industry How do you define your industry? What is the industry structure? What competitive forces are operating? What innovations are shaping the future? Where are you on the S-Curve? What is the basis for competition—features or price or relationship or something else? Given the answers to the above questions, what are your strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats?

20 20 Industry Assessment Suppliers Your offering Customers Partners Distributors Competitors Alternatives

21 21 Leading the Team Understand your own and your team members’ strengths, dispositions, problem-solving styles Managing innovation Next Topics: –Aligning your team with your company’s direction –Gaining support for your team’s projects

22 22 Leading Your Team: On the Right Path Analyze Team’s Position Analyze Industry Direction Devise Action Plan to Get Team on the Right Path Big picture, Innovations What ARE we doing? What SHOULD we be doing? Strengths, Fit

23 23 Strategy Alignment What should your team be doing? Where should your team’s focus be? Where we are now Where we need to be

24 24 Paired Comparison: What’s Important A = 10 (50%) B = 3 (15%) C = 6 (30%) D = 1 (5%) E = 0 Weighing the relative importance

25 25 Pareto Analysis: What are We Doing? Where are you spending your efforts?

26 26 Leading Your Team: On the Right Path Analyze Team’s Position Analyze Industry Direction Devise Action Plan to Get Team on the Right Path Where are we spending our time What SHOULD we be doing? How can we get there?

27 27 Team Alignment Choose your team’s industry What is your team’s (or firm’s) current focus? Where is the industry going? What SHOULD you team (or firm) be doing? What can you eliminate or reduce or redirect in order to allow your team to do what it should be doing?

28 28 Leading the Team Understand your own and your team members’ strengths, dispositions, problem-solving styles Managing innovation Aligning your team with your company’s direction Next Topics: –Gaining support for your team’s projects

29 29 Gaining Support for Your Team’s Projects Internal selling Leading Up Managing Up Acquire needed resources Improves chances for success of your projects Understand communication preferences of –Colleagues –Executive staff –Your staff

30 30 Selling Your Ideas Selling up –Figure out who has the decision-making power –Initially ask for input and suggestions –Restructure your proposal to include input Selling down –Solicit input and listen! Selling laterally –How does your project benefit other stakeholders? Remember personal needs and interests

31 31 Negotiating for What You Need What are the goals and objectives of the organization? How does the issue at hand fit into the goals and objectives of the organization? What are the goals and objectives of the individuals involved in this conflict? What are the additional interests of each of the individuals? If we can’t negotiate a resolution to this conflict, what is our best alternative? What are some possible solutions or resolutions? How can I elicit additional information?

32 32 Negotiation Planning PartiesYou_________ Objectives / Position Interests Best Alternatives Options

33 33 Make a Proposal Your team needs to focus on X What is your plan to gain support for X? Who are the members of your audience? What are their communication preferences? How are you going to communicate with them?

34 34 Leading an Effective Engineering Organization Understand your own and your team members’ strengths, dispositions, problem-solving styles Managing innovation Aligning your team with your company’s direction Gaining support for your team’s projects

35 35 Working Together Understand the people on your team Provide meaningful work Understand your industry’s directions and trends Align your team’s efforts with the organization’s goals Gain support for your team’s projects

36 36 Questions Leslie Martinich leslie@competitivefocus.com www.competitivefocus.com


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