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INFLUENCING CHANGE

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Chain of command prevents open communication. Personalities get in the way. Vehicle ... Patrol cars. Reconstruct squads. D.A.R.E. Traffic Unit. TEAM MAKEUP ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: INFLUENCING CHANGE


1
INFLUENCING CHANGE
  • Changing the culture
  • Of the
  • Richland Police Department

2
2001 Feedback
  • What I found at RPD
  • Chain of command prevents open communication
  • Personalities get in the way
  • Vehicle maintenance is poor, vehicles are poor
  • Behavior of some employees backstabbing, lack of
    teamwork
  • Staffing problems
  • Command accountability
  • Role responsibility
  • Equipment damaged or poor

3
2001 Feedback
  • What I found at RPD (continued)
  • When a problem is identified, nothing happens to
    correct it
  • Poor work habits from some squads
  • Morale problems
  • No recognition for a job well done
  • Training is inadequate
  • Appropriation of staffing
  • What is the mission to the community?
  • Lack of direction

4
2001 Feedback
  • What do you want from your Chief?
  • Make decisions
  • Reconstruct the department dont be afraid to
    make changes
  • Leadership
  • Direction
  • Go to bat for us
  • Take an interest in what we do
  • We need more cohesive work groups
  • Trust, accountability, honesty
  • Step up to the plate

5
Summary of 2001 Feedback
  • Staffing needs
  • Training
  • Equipment
  • Leadership/cultural shift in thinking
  • Teamwork

6
Summary of 2001 Feedback
  • What was discovered was systemic it seemed that
    the entire city was bogged down in bureaucracy!
    Council lacks confidence in staff, staff lacks
    confidence in council. We did things because we
    always have done it that way. City management and
    council expected poor results and was satisfied
    with this type of performance, or they did not
    know what a good work product looked like.

7
Starting Change
  • Evaluate operations of the RPD
  • Break the system
  • Identify the core mission, including a new
    mission statement
  • Staff and train to accomplish the core mission
    and eliminate tasks that do not directly
    support the core mission
  • Redefine success for the department
    (introduction)
  • Start a new training system
  • Others as Identified

8
PRODUCT TO OUR COMMUNITY
  • Safety Service

9
We Want Change
Really MeansChange the other guys, dont
change me, I dont need it!
10
WHAT IS BEST FOR THE DEPARTMENT!
11
OPPORTUNITIES
  • Patrol cars
  • Reconstruct squads
  • D.A.R.E.
  • Traffic Unit

12
TEAM MAKEUP
Active Leave Me Fence Good or Top
Performers Saboteurs Alone (LMA) Sitters
10 10 60 20
5 5 25 65
13
LEADERS DELIEMA
  • 90 OF YOUR TIME
  • IS
  • SPENT WITH 10 OF YOUR EMPLOYEES

14
Who should we target?
FENCE SITTERS
15
HOW CAN WE ACCOMPLISH OUR MISSION?
  • What are we DOING now?
  • What are we NOT doing?
  • What we NEED to do to influence our future!

16
  • Constant assessment of the organization
  • Create an organization that gets used to change
  • Give your employees the tools for them to do
    their best
  • Measure the performance of the organization
    this may mean more changes until we get it
    right!
  • It may mean changing personnel to improve the
    teams performance
  • ALWAYS make decisions on what is best for the
    department!

17
WHY?
Why do organizations fail to change? Why do
leaders fail to have an impact?
18
LEADERSHIPCOURAGE
19
EXECUTETHE PLAN
20
VMP3
Strategic Philosophy of Operation
Values
Mission
Product
Priorities
Process
20
21
Values
  • Integrity
  • Will your actions pass the smell test?
  • Would you be embarrassed if your actions were
    described in the media?
  • Teamwork
  • Do your actions build up and strengthen the team?
  • Are you helping or hurting the team?
  • Are you doing your part to accomplish our mission
    and deliver our product?

21
22
Values
  • Excellence
  • Are you doing the best job possible?
  • Would you treat a person that you know and care
    for the same way you are treating or
    investigating an incident for one of our
    citizens?

22
23
Mission
  • Key words
  • Safeguarding, protecting, professional, proactive
  • Highest level of performance, behavior, ethics,
    conduct
  • Innovative solutions, partnership, community
  • Accepting, learning, developing skills, service

23
24
Product
  • Safety Real vs. Perceived
  • How can we provide real safety?
  • How can we provide perceived safety?
  • Service Customer Service vs. Customer
    Satisfaction
  • What is the difference?

24
25
Priorities
  • C T Q
  • Crime Incidents identified by
  • Process (PARSTAT)
  • Pattern of crime episodes
  • Follow up with ongoing crime incidents
  • Traffic
  • Accident locations
  • High violation locations
  • Neighborhood locations
  • Quality of life issues Code enforcement issues

25
26
Priorities
  • TOT and TUT
  • Total Obligated Time Time spent as dictated by
    dispatch received calls
  • Total Un-obligated Time Time left over after
    TOT is used
  • How should this time be used?

26
27
Process
  • PARSTAT
  • Identify a problem (officer/citizen/statistical)
  • Formulate a solution (officer/team/supervisor)
  • Implement a plan of action (officer/team/superviso
    r)
  • Measure results
  • Follow up?
  • Job accomplished?
  • Effort (not numbers) is the key to success!

27
28
Obstacles to Change
  • Leadership was and still is the secret of success
    to ANY new program or operational philosophy
  • When you implement change, you can anticipate
    certain behavior there may be a reluctance from
    some supervisors or subordinates to
  • Accept the change
  • Passively resist the change
  • Actively resist

29
Secret to Success
  • COMMUNICATION
  • Senior commands promise to you
  • All employees have the opportunity to communicate
    with command
  • Senior staff meeting
  • PARSTAT meetings improve our communication
  • Weekly strategy meetings

30
Your communication to your employees
  • YOU WILL SUPPORT THIS PROCESS!
  • YOU WILL NOT ACTIVLEY RESIST
  • YOU WILL NOT PASSIVELY RESIST

31
Leadership is
  • Leadership is a process whereby an individual
    influences a group of individuals to achieve a
    common goal
  • Leadership is the influencing process of leaders
    and followers to achieve organizational
    objectives through change
  • Leadership is the behavior of an
    individualdirecting the activities of a group
    toward a shared goal

32
Leaders in a Values-Based System
  • Must be credible
  • Must believe what they are doing and how they are
    doing it
  • Set the example
  • Practice what they preach

32
33
Leadership Commitment
  • To align values by making changes in work habits,
    practices, and attitudes
  • To earn and sustain leadership credibility over
    time by setting the example
  • To unify constituents around shared values to
  • Focus energies and commitments
  • Result in more positive attitudes
  • Gain higher levels of performance

33
34
Leading today tomorrow
  • Understanding the difference in generations
  • Leadership in different situations with
    different personalities
  • Communicating organizational change
  • Changing organizations and its impact

35
Generations
  • Generation X 1965 1980
  • Ages 42 27 51 Million
  • Generation Y 1981 1995
  • Ages 26 12 75 Million

36
Generation Y
  • Pampered
  • High performance high maintenance
  • Less likely to respond to command control
  • Challenge the status quo
  • 49 say retirement benefits are important

37
Generation Y
  • Dont expect to stay in a job or career long
  • Dont like to stay to long on any one assignment
  • Deprived of social skills dont treat older
    employees as well as they should

38
(No Transcript)
39
10 WAYS TO BECOME STAGNANT
  • DONT REWARD EMPLOYEES
  • REFUSE TO SET GOALS
  • NEVER, EVER CHANGE
  • MAINTAIN CONTROL
  • PUT OFF DECISIONS
  • NEVER DELEGATE RESPONSIBILITY
  • QUASH NEW IDEAS
  • KEEP SECRETS
  • TOLERATE MEDIOCRITY IN THE INTEREST OF
    TRANQUILITY
  • LIMIT TRAINING

40
IT IS EASY TO STEER THE SHIP IN CALM WATERS, THE
TRUE TEST IS TO STEER THE SHIP IN A STORM!
41
2007 City of Richland Employee Survey
  • Supervisors and managers in my work group
    encourage decisions based on values.
  • 44.4 Strongly Agree
  • 44.2 Agree
  • 88.6
  • 11 Disagree

42
Survey continued
  • It is important that the city maintain its
    emphasis on shared values with the next city
    manager.
  • 50 Strongly agree
  • 47.7 Agree
  • 97.7
  • 2.3 Disagree

43
Survey continued
  • I know what my department management considers
    important when evaluating my job performance.
  • 35.6 Strongly Agree
  • 55.6 Agree
  • 91.2
  • 9 Disagree

44
Survey continued
  • My immediate supervisors holds employees
    accountable when we do our jobs poorly
  • 37.8 Strongly agree
  • 46.7 Agree
  • 84.5
  • 15.5 Disagree

45
Survey continued
  • My immediate supervisor leads by example
  • 38.6 Strongly Agree
  • 45.5 Disagree
  • 84.1
  • 15.9 Disagree

46
Survey continued
  • My immediate supervisor follows through on
    problems
  • 33.3 Strongly agree
  • 62.2 Agree
  • 95.5
  • 4.5 Disagree

47
Survey Continued
  • Management holds my supervisor accountable
  • 33.3 Strongly Agree
  • 50 Agree
  • 83.3
  • 16.7 Disagree

48
Survey Continued
  • Management is held accountable for their actions,
    based on our shared values.
  • 24.4 Strongly agree
  • 51.1 Agree
  • 75.5
  • 24.4 Disagree
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