All Posts Tagged With: "vision"
What Path Is Your Organization Taking?
In the day-to-day effort make an organization work, it’s easy to lose sight of the path your organization is on and the direction that path is taking you. The Baldrige model helps you see the big picture and how the work you are doing supports—or ignores—your mission and vision.
The question leaders of organizations, business units, divisions, departments, and teams need to continually ask is: What is truly important? Baldrige can help you answer that.
20Jun2011 | Steve George | 0 comments | ContinuedBaldrige.com on Culture
With more than 400 articles, Baldrige.com has repeatedly addressed the critical elements of a world-class management system. One of those elements is your organizational culture. Click on the “links” below to read more about how to create and sustain a culture that supports your vision and mission.
Your culture dictates how your organization will behave (link). Disconnects such layoffs, excessive executive compensation, and environmental or safety violations are evidence of why so many organizations—and so many organizational cultures—fail (link).
USAA has developed one of the most successful cultures in the business world by treating its employees well (link), which then extends to exceptional treatment of its customers (link) (link). One of the ways organizations like USAA develops such compelling cultures is by creating a shared vision for what the company is and what it wants to become (link). Creating a shared vision is one of the most important jobs of senior leadership (link), as is the development of an achievable mission and vision (link)
Sustainability is a key characteristic of a robust culture. The goal is to build a sustainable organization that can survive change in whatever form it takes (link), which means addressing the four parts of true sustainability: social, economic, environmental, and cultural…
19Oct2010 | Steve George | 0 comments | ContinuedAligning with Strategies & Measures
The Veterans Affairs Cooperative Studies Program Clinical Research Pharmacy Coordinating Center (VACSP Center) won the Baldrige Award in 2009. It has four key strategic goals and 13 key performance indicators, which are listed on its balanced scorecard
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Start Aligning Now!
One of the distinguishing characteristics of Baldrige Award winners is the alignment they achieve of processes, individual performance, measurement systems, strategic plans, and results with the mission, vision, and goals of the organization. When everything and everyone is pulling in the same direction, an organization can produce and sustain performance excellence.
According to the Monfort College of Business at the University of Northern Colorado, organizations that decide to systematically improve their management systems can and should work on alignment right from the start. In a presentation at the twelfth Quest for Excellence this year, Monfort emphasized four dimensions that need to be aligned right away:
- Stakeholder needs and relationships
- Organization structures and systems to address those needs
- Performance measures to track performance and progress
- Strategic goals and objectives
You can view the slides in the presentation by visiting Monfort’s Web site here. The presentation is relevant to any type of organization because the concepts, like the Baldrige model, are applicable to all organizations.
The sixth slide in the PDF presentation shows how Montfort defined a student-centered process framework, identifying key stakeholders and their needs and relationships on one slide. The next two slides overlay Monfort’s management control system to show who is responsible for meeting these needs.
Like…
5Aug2010 | Steve George | 0 comments | ContinuedWhat Differentiates Baldrige Award Winners (Part 2)
In the first article in this series, I described two of the seven characteristics of organizations with sound management systems: (1) they think process and (2) they act on data. By winning the Baldrige Award, organizations demonstrate the effectiveness of their management systems through world-class results, a sampling of which you will find in the links at the end of this article.
Here, then, are the next three characteristics of these role-model organizations:
3. They know where they’re going. Yeah, I know, you’ve got a vision and a mission. Do you measure progress on them? Great companies know that what they’re doing today takes them further along the path to what they wish to become, and they don’t know it intuitively, they know it measurably. Today’s actions meet objectives that support strategies that realize the vision.
This interlinked structure is the product of careful research, thoughtful analyses, and ambitious goals. Dozens of people—sometimes hundreds of people—participate in the process of discovering what their company is, where it must go, how it can get there, and what will obstruct its progress. They repeat this process annually. When they’re done, they know individually and collectively where they are going. Even better, they know what they must…
27Jul2010 | Steve George | 0 comments | ContinuedWhat Drives You?
Daniel Pink wrote a book about what motivates us to do what we do called Drive: The Surprising Truth about What Motivates Us. I have the book in my hand but I haven’t read it yet, but this video has inspired me to dig into it.
It turns out that study after study has shown that money works if you want people to perform simple, rudimentary tasks, but if you want them to do something more complex, you need the three elements of true motivation: autonomy, mastery, and purpose.
To learn more, watch the video — and then join me in reading the book.
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6Jul2010 | Steve George | 0 comments | ContinuedHeartland Health’s Grand Unifying System
As a student of the Baldrige model, I am always attracted to a diagram, a “grand unifying system,” that shows how an organization aligns and integrates everything it does with its vision and mission. The latest example of such a diagram is Heartland Health’s Organizational Architecture (HH OA), which is shown below.
Heartland Health received the Baldrige Award in 2009. You can read its entire award application summary here. It is based in St. Joseph, Missouri, and employs more than 3,200 caregivers. Heartland Health is ranked in the top 15% of hospitals nationally for patient safety and is a leader in patient satisfaction. Using Six Sigma methods, it has saved more than $25 million as a result of process improvements.
The HH OA shows how many of the key elements in the Baldrige model work together to help Heartland Health achieve its vision and mission. Information from the Voice of the Customer (Category 3 in the Baldrige Criteria) feeds the strategic planning process (Category 2), as do strategic business assessments based on performance results (Category 7) and senior leadership reviews (“Manage and Improve,” Category 1). The strategic plan is deployed through the management model, which is aligned with the first six categories…
10May2010 | Steve George | 0 comments | Continued



