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Article Title:
==============

Five Ways to Alienate Your Employees: A Manager's Guide To Investigating Errors

Article Description:
====================

Are you a manager with too much time on your hands? Do you go
home at the end of an eight hour day with boring regularity,
leaving a clean desk and a clear conscience? Wouldn't you rather
have NO discretionary time in your life? Here are five sure-fire
tips to create fear in your employees and keep them from ever
participating openly during problem solving discussions.


Additional Article Information:
===============================

787 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2008-04-23 10:48:00

Written By:     Norm Howe
Copyright:      2008
Contact Email:  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]


Norm Howe's Picture URL:
   http://vcillc.com/about.html

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Five Ways to Alienate Your Employees: A Manager's Guide To Investigating Errors
Copyright (c) 2008 Norm Howe
Validation and Compliance Institute
http://www.vcillc.com



Are you a manager with too much time on your hands? Do you go
home at the end of an eight hour day with boring regularity,
leaving a clean desk and a clear conscience?

When rare errors occur in your organization do your employees
openly discuss what went wrong so that you can find the root
causes. Do they then compound the problem by volunteering to
implement solutions?

If you work in the drug, medical device, or any other FDA
regulated industry, then you must be particularly troubled. When
the FDA inspectors show up and ask for your Corrective And
Preventive Action files, are your's too thin? Do the inspectors
leave your company too quickly in search of someone else to
inspect?

If all this sounds familiar, then you are not alienating your
employees enough. Your employees have too much trust in you. They
are too willing to share their experiences because they have no
fear of retribution from you when you decide on corrective
actions for errors.

Wouldn't you rather have NO discretionary time in your life?
Here are five sure-fire tips to create more fear in your
employees and keep them from ever sharing facts openly during
problem solving discussions.

Blamestorm, don't brainstorm. When you investigate errors, focus
on the people, not the business process. Frame your questions
around the assumption that the employees are at fault. When you
write up your corrective actions, use such terms as "Employee
needs to be more alert" or "Employee assigned to be
retrained". Your employees will never realize that these terms
are business-speak for "This employee is a negligent moron."

Your corrective actions should never include engineering or
procedural changes. These changes are a waste of time because
they address basic business processes. After all, management
designed the business process, and so couldn’t possibly be wrong.

Don't use a Standard Operation Procedure for investigating
errors. Use a different method for investigating errors every
time. This makes so many good things happen. First of all you
will never have to worry about getting better at root cause
investigations. How could you, if you use a different technique
every time?

Another advantage is that your employees will never know what's
going to happen. Predictability allays fear. You don't want that
to happen. You want to show them who's boss.

Assume that none of your employees want to do a good job. You'll
be surprised how people will live down to your expectations.
Sure, you might get disappointed. Every once in a while someone
will overcome your expectations and actually contribute a
thoughtful suggestion during problem solving sessions. But those
occasions will be rare. They will feel your attitude and will
cover up problems just like you assumed they would.

Don't be concerned about fear in the workplace. W. Edwards
Deming, the famous quality guru, insisted that managers must
drive out fear. But why should employees fear you? After all
you're a nice person and besides, you are just doing your job.

Forget that Deming said that fear arises from the structure of
the employee - manager relationship. Forget that in the mind of
the employee the manager has all the power in the relationship.
Forget that the manager determines the employee's raise, that
the manager can hire, that the manager can fire.

You don't have to drive out fear from your relationship. You
don't have to build trust on a daily basis. You don't have to
meet simple commitments that you make to employees. If you say
that you will meet an employee at a particular time to discuss
something of concern to him, don't worry about it. You're the
boss. He'll understand it if you just blow him off.

Management By Walking Around. Stay parked in your office all day
and don't get out where your employees work until the next
crisis comes up. Make sure your employees only see you when you
storm out of your office with a problem and an attitude.

Don't try to build relationships when you have time for a calm
discussion about something the employee thinks is important. You
want to give the impression that you're overloaded with
important manager stuff. You can't waste time with their
problems.

Follow these five simple principles and you'll never have to
worry about having any free time on your hands. Your root cause
solutions will never start to build on each other to form a solid
operational foundation that prevents future errors.

Your desk will be stacked to Biblical proportions with
uncompleted projects. Your email in-box will explode out of your
computer monitor almost daily with complaints about the latest
error in your department. Eight hour days? Forget it. You're
going to be living at work. 




---------------------------------------------------------------------
Norm Howe, Senior Partner at Validation and Compliance Institute, 
consultants for the pharmaceutical and medical device industries.
He got his BS at UC, Berkeley, and a Ph.D. in chemistry at UCLA. 
He has held many management positions in FDA regulated industries, 
most at BASF. http://www.vcillc.com


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