“I’m curious,” Millie announced.
“That’s a good mind-frame,” I replied.
“How come every time I get the team together to talk about a new method or procedure, when we are done talking, they go back to the way we did it before?” she asked.
“I assume you got some feedback and agreement at the meeting?” I replied with a question.
“Well, no one objected,” she said. “They nodded. At least they pretended they paid attention.”
“And, they pretended to do things the new way, while going about things the old way?” I smiled. “How long have they been doing things the old way and how long have they pretended to do things the new way?”
Millie pretended to think, but her answer was quick, nodding, “The old way, as far as I can remember. The new way, three days since the meeting.”
“And, so, what is your insight?” I asked.
“I can presume they haven’t had the time to assimilate the new way with the old way. But this change is so different, it’s not a matter of folding in a new method. They have to literally stop doing some old things and start doing some new things.”
“And I assume,” I continued to smile, “that three days is not quick enough for you?”
“Look,” she stared directly, “the new method will be slower at first before it picks up. Once they get used to the new method, it should double throughput. I want to get through the slow part as fast as we can.”
“I appreciate your impatience,” I said calmly. “Sometimes, you have to go slow, so you can go fast.”
This podcast just dropped yesterday, all about Elliott (53:00).
KPI Fireside Chat, hosted by Keith Norris, with guest Tom Foster.