Title: Maturity Model (Cultural Spectrum)
1Maturity Model (Cultural Spectrum)
- These slides provide an understanding of one of
the maturity models used in systematic management
the cultural spectrum. - The slides are largely self-explanatory, and can
be used as part of a session for review and
reflection, and for developing plans to make
further progress on systematic management. - Please do not attempt to use these slides as part
of a presentation until you have read and fully
understood the relevant sections of the website,
and you are clear on the points you wish to make
with them
2THE CULTURAL SPECTRUM
The cultural spectrum provides a simple means for
groups to discuss and explore their aspirations
and their perceptions for each aspect of the
management framework
The following pages give an overview of the
spectrum, and how it should be used.
3USING THE SPECTRUM
The cultural spectrum is intended to reflect the
various stages of development a team might pass
through on their way to fully implementing the
six aspects of the management framework.
The statement nearest the bottom of each column
is intended to reflect the least progress toward
implementing the framework, and the statement
nearest the top - the most progress. Individuals
can think through their own views of what their
team should be achieving, and what they see as
the current position. By sharing these views, the
team can discuss and explore the different
viewpoints that exist and the reasons behind
them. Through this they can develop a consensus
on the teams aspirations and its current
strengths and deficiencies. The team can then
begin to reach a common agreement on the nature
of the gaps, and begin to plan how it will
address them. The following pages provide further
definition of what is meant by each step in the
spectrum, and finishes with a form which the team
can use to explore and document its own
intentions with regard to the spectrum.
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Aspiration
Current Perception
4PURPOSE
Ensuring the needs and issues of all your
Customers are clearly defined and understood, and
that your people are systematically finding new
ways to serve them better.
What is meant by the statements ...
- Knowledge and desire to ensure delight The team
have moved beyond the concept of merely
satisfying the customer to one of delighting
them. This means that they know so much about
the customers and their issues that they
anticipate support the customer in ways the
customer hadnt even though of. - Systematic focus on Customer Satisfaction The
team have developed a systematic approach to
ensure that all their customers are satisfied.
They see the weakness in relying on individual
efforts, and have established targets and
measures of customer satisfaction which result in
regular process re-design. - Clear desire to satisfy Customers All the
individuals of the team now understand that
success in their role is about the difference
that they make to their Customers. They have
taken this to heart, and have taken steps to seek
customer feedback and to respond to that feedback
by changing their approach. - Customer awareness is evident Team members are
aware of the concept of customers, and can
identify who their customers actually are. They
can now relate what they do to the reason why
they do it, and the difference that good or poor
quality (in product or service) makes to the
customer. - Largely task rather than role focus Team
members may be aware of who receives the work
that they do, but they do not yet see them to be
valid judges of the quality of that work. People
tend to conform to what they have been instructed
and to do the tasks they have been set, with
little reference to the impact these may have on
the customer.
5PHILOSOPHY
Establishing a common value set, and building
real commitment to clear targets for the
improvement of your process performance.
What is meant by the statements ...
- A clearly designed value set is evident The
team has developed a very clear picture of what
it is trying to achieve, and has determined the
behaviours it requires to make this happen. It
has redesigned the way management operates to
ensure that these behaviours are rewarded, and
the converse are penalised. - Comprehensive standards rigorously prosecuted
The team has standards of performance, based on
business direction, for all aspects of its work.
Progress and performance against these are
regularly monitored and observed deficiencies are
a clear focus of attention until they have been
addressed. - Standards exist and are actively pursued The
team develops standards of performance, based on
the business direction, for the main aspects of
its work. These standards are well understood
within the team, and there is clear evidence that
most people are adjusting their approach to
achieve them. - A direction is evident but goals are unclear
Business direction is now clear, and the team now
understands what it is trying to do to support
this. It may even have determined the actions it
needs to undertake, but it has not as yet
translated this into clear standards of
performance or S.M.A.R.T. objectives. - Value set, if any, largely depends on
individuals There is little evidence that the
overall goals of the business have been
objectively translated into local initiatives and
direction. Where local initiatives exist they
are more likely to be a result of local
management objectives than a clear, coherent
business direction.
6PEOPLE
Developing your peoples abilities and attitudes
in a planned and productive manner, through a
clearly defined programme of challenges,
experiences, team involvement, and training.
What is meant by the statements ...
- Development designed into work patterns The
team has recognised it has a responsibility to
develop both its current performance and its
future potential. Work patterns have therefore
been designed to focus as much on the ongoing
development of competence, as on the use of that
competence in delivery. - System of growth through challenge and coaching
Development of both teams and individuals is
planned and systematic. Roles and projects are
regularly allocated slightly beyond the team or
individuals current competence in order to drive
a practical coaching programme and continuous
development. - Clear effort to involve support and encourage
Individual development of team members is an
ongoing consideration. Annual appraisals are
supplemented by regular and frequent review
sessions, which commonly result in the
development of individual skills through the
provision of planned support. - Effort largely a result of observed deficiencies
Individual development tends to be focused in
formal training courses planned in response to
the appraisal process. Some one-to-one support
does take place, but only in cases where a
problem is evident or someone is new to the task. - No serious attempt to address development The
team does little to identify and act upon
individual development needs. New tasks and
situations are allocated on a largely sink or
swim basis. Appraisals (where they are carried
out) tend to focus on evaluation, resulting
training actions are often forgotten.
7PROCESS
Ensuring all the processes which effect
performance are responsibly developed and
designed , using methods which aid collective
involvement and disciplined thinking.
What is meant by the statements ...
- All processes deliberately designed to perform
There is a regular cycle of re-evaluating the
performance of all processes, redesigning them
to achieve their potential. Design tools are
clearly in evidence and there is frequent
exper-imentation with new concepts and ideas for
improving process performance. - Key/critical processes have been designed The
team identify their key/critical processes in
serving their customers, and explicitly evaluate
the performance of these processes against
customer needs and through bench-marking. They
consciously re-design these processes to fulfil
their potential. - Processes have been mapped and developed Some
key processes have now been mapped to
graphically illustrate the process flow. This
has led to some development of the process
through addressing obvious inefficiencies and
through the use of a problem solving discipline
in tackling known issues. - Some clear documenting and control of processes
There is some clear documenting and control of
processes, probably through written procedures
and inspection routines. This may have arisen as
part of adhering to a quality management system
such as that required by ISO 9000 registration. - Concept of processes is not evident The team is
largely unaware of the concept of processes in
their day-to-day work. Tasks are often seen in
isolation and there is little consideration of
the need to develop sequences of tasks to improve
or control overall performance.
8PREDICT
Ensuring process performance is measured
objectively using trends and gap analysis to
drive a disciplined approach to solving current
or potential performance issues.
What is meant by the statements ...
- All activity consciously analysed and modelled
All aspects of the teams activity is now
measured, and the results fed into a data model
to compare actual against predicted process
performance. The model is used to identify scope
for further process design to improve performance
or reduce variance. - Rigorous prediction and trending invoke PSD
Measurement is seen as the key mechanism for
driving organisational learning. Performance
trends are plotted against predictions based on
forecast impacts of new developments. A
rigorous problem solving discipline (PSD) is used
to reconcile deficiencies. - Measured deviations are clearly analysed
Performance monitoring is an integral part of the
teams regular management cycle. Observed
deficiencies, where performance falls short of
what was expected, are a focus for the team
attention, and are analysed to avoid future
recurrence. - Performance objectively monitored and recorded
Teams have defined the main parameters which
determine their success in serving the business
and its customers. They have developed the means
for measuring their performance against these,
and regularly report current performance and
trends. - No objective performance monitors Except,
perhaps, for financial data, there is no regular
monitoring of the teams overall performance in
fulfilling their role. Financial budgets may be
set and adhered to, but individual and team
review is largely anecdotal and focussed on
events rather than performance.
9PERFECT
Developing plans to monitor and improve all of
the foregoing, and to achieve attainment of the
higher levels of the cultural spectrum.
What is meant by the statements ...
- Systematic improvement of overall fitness The
fitness aspects which develop future team
process competence are now developed
systematically as processes in their own right.
The performance of these fitness processes are
measured against clear targets and improved
through re-design the PSD. - Fitness is understood and steadily improved
The team has fully grasped the concept that
future performance is based on current practice
in the fitness aspects which develop the team
and process competence (e.g. management
training). They have begun to develop their
performance in these areas. - Clear strategy for improving performance The
team has now defined a long term strategy for
developing its processes and performance, and
improving its service to the business and its
customers. The strategy anticipates future needs
developments, sets in place an improvement
programme to meet it. - Improvements take place on an ad-hoc basis
Firefighting has given way to prevention.
Improvements now takes place in the absence of an
immediate problem but they tend to reflect
current local issues based on current practice.
They are not seen as part of a coherent strategy
for continuous improvement. - There is no clear planned improvement There is
no specific plan for improving performance.
Improvement only takes place where problems have
reached a level which is unacceptable to the team
or its customers. The focus is clearly on
fire-fighting, with little in the way of follow
up to prevent future fires.
10ANALYSIS
Encourage members of the team to first complete
this form individually so that they develop their
own arguments for their thinking. These can then
be reconciled into a team view by discussion and
consensus.
- The preferred approach to self-analysis using the
spectrum is to work through it column by column.
Within each column reflect on the bottom-most
statement first and then work up the column until
you find the statement that in some way exceeds
what you consider to be your view. - Them move back to the statement below it and
reconsider whether this statement is the closest
available to reflecting either your aspiration or
your perception, and mark it accordingly. - In arriving at a team view extremes of viewpoint
should be explored first, in order to ensure all
arguments are heard.
11THE CULTURAL SPECTRUMSyndicate Brief
- Individually
- Consider each of the columns of the cultural
spectrum and circle the level at which your
process team needs to operate to achieve lasting
benefit from the QFD, - Reconsider each of the columns and mark with a
tick where you think your process team currently
is. - In your process teams
- Mark on one chart all the views of the process
team members with regard to where the process
needs to be. - Discuss the extremes and explore the reasons
people have for their views. Continue asking for
other views for and against, until all the
arguments have been heard - Agree that all the arguments for each of the
levels have been heard, and then check that the
team will abide by the consensus of the vote - Re-score the levels, take the most popular as
the team-perception - Repeat for each column then for the scores on
current perception - Look at where there are differences between the
required level and current perception and think
of what the team should do to begin to close the
gap - establish these as actions.