Taking a Long Term Perspective
Having spent over half of my post college working career
working in the industrial distribution business, I found the prevailing culture
among the rank and file employees to be one of survival. From my experience and conversations with
people in other industries this experience is not radically different.
In economically perfectly competitive businesses such as
distribution, there are normally multiple outlets for essentially the same
products. This makes it very difficult
to differentiate yourself. And now in
the age of internet commerce and increased information availability, it is even
more difficult for providers of similar products to separate themselves from
the pack.
The short term perspective driven by the competitive
nature of industry causes many daily mistakes.
However, there have been some benefits to the customer in the form of
rapid responses to requests for quotes, more rapid technical responses, prompt
deliveries, product innovations and more efficient supply programs.
The felt need for instant responses from the suppliers
causes people burnout, lost profit margins, lost business, inaccurate
responses, compromised integrity and strife inside the company and outside the
firm with all levels of stakeholders.
There are several ways to combat the pressure you may feel
from the need to compress as much activity into as short amount of time as
possible. Number one is to do the most
thorough, quality job possible in the time allowed and trust God to provide for
your well being. This type of attitude
and conduct will honor God and significantly help in reducing time pressured
errors.
Another way to combat the stress and errors driven by a
short term viewpoint is to get a firm grasp on the long term impact of your
decisions. You must ask yourself if the
value of delivering an unqualified technical response, a poorly researched bid,
a partially developed product, a poorly written report or unprepared sales call
is worth the risk.
These are just a few examples of rushing through a process
in business that demands a quality effort.
I’m sure you can think of many others in your area of expertise. Simply stated, the risk of losing your integrity,
reputation, concern for others and business opportunities is in no way
compensated for by the time gained by cutting corners.
Try this proof of short term versus a long term
perspective by grabbing a calculator and performing some simple math.
Fifty two weeks a year yield 260 working days. Subtract 9 paid holidays and 10 days of
vacation to yield 241 days. Then begin
to determine what percentage a week, a day, four hours and one hour represent
as a percentage of that working year.
One Week = (5/241)
|
.02074 %
|
Or 2.1% year.
|
One Day =
(1/241)
|
.00414 %
|
Or .004 % year
|
4 Hours = (4/1928)
|
.00207 %
|
Or .002 % year
|
1 Hour = (1/1928)
|
.0005186 %
|
Or .0005% year
|
Then begin to determine the time required to get the job
done properly versus the rushed job that was perceived as necessary. Look at the chart or perform the calculation
your self. What appeared to be a true
crisis of time is in effect just a small fraction of the time available to
accomplish the task. This exercise will
help you get a perspective on time when you are bogged down in a tedious but
necessary task. In addition, the proper
amount of time can be allocated to truly important tasks.
Finally,
step back and look at the importance of the task as if it took place one year
ago. With that perspective, what impact
will the completion of the task have on the bottom line? I am not recommending that workers ignore any
task that does not make their personal priority list, but rather that tasks are
given a level of importance commensurate with their long term importance.
Yes, haste truly does make waste. From poor designs, scrapped products, wasted
time, and damaged reputations, the consequences run the gamut of tangible and
intangible costs.
Application:
Are
you finding yourself or your organization being pressured into the mistakes
generated by haste? Reflect on the
quality of your work and how it honors God, look at the relative amount of time
required versus the time available and take a long term perspective on the way you
use your time.
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