realisedevelopment.net

Just another WordPress site

Progress School in Leeds

July 13, 2010 by admin

Just about to embark on a new venture in Leeds called Progress School, providing pay what you can professional and personal development.  Progress School offers:

  • A confidential and supportive environment in which to plan your personal and professional development
  • Time to develop a vision for the ‘ideal you’ and to learn more about the ‘real you’ – how you are perceived by others
  • Recognition of strengths and gaps – those potentials that you have not yet fully realised
  • A learning agenda – identify what you need to learn and how you are going to learn it to bridge the gap between ‘real’ and ‘ideal’
  • Access to a network of fellow Progress School members who will commit to helping you learn
  • A chance to experiment – to try out new behaviours and skills – to see if they work for you
  • Develop new practices that help you make progress

Progress School is designed to offer you a flexible process to support your development.  The more you attend the more you are likely to get from it – but there is no curriculum to follow – just a process of reflection and action to engage with.

Interested?  Book Your Place…Now

Prices start from free….

Filed Under: Leadership, management Tagged With: change, feedback, inspiration, learning, management, performance improvement, performance management

How to Depress an Enterprise Culture

June 14, 2010 by admin

Enterprise is a dangerous thing.

In the wrong hands it can re-distribute wealth from the wealthy and put it in the hands of the poor.  If this happens of course vast swathes of public services could be cut back.  Job Centres could be closed down, demand for health services might plummet and swathes of middle class ‘helping’ professionals could be laid off.  So, ensuring that enterprise culture remains depressed and marginalised  in some of our poorer communities is essential to social progress and economic recovery.

Here is your quick guide on how to do it…

  • Build a Public/Private Sector Partnership with the Mission of ‘Promoting Enterprise’

Counter intuitive I know.  But if it just looks like a government/council/housing association led initiative it may lack credibility.  Getting a few (even one) local business person on board will really increase credibility and increase the chances of winning investment.  Be very careful though.  Private sector people will actually want to see enterprise encouraged.  As soon as they see the real effects of the programme they are likely to flee like proverbial rats on a sinking ship.

  • Get your hands on a large sum of money

People are inherently enterprising.  They show all sorts of creative and innovative ways to make life better or at least more bearable.  Fortunately for us many of these (in fact the vast majority) don’t show up in our measures of enterprise so we simply deny them and state that communities with low start-up and VAT registration rates are ‘lacking in enterprise’. However, the point remains, people are inherently enterprising and if we wish to discourage enterprise it can be expensive.  A few million should do it to sustain a 2 or 3 year campaign.

  • Invest substantial sums in prolonged marketing campaigns encouraging enterprise and claiming that anyone can do it

I know this seems counter-intuitive.  If we want to discourage enterprise, then surely we shouldn’t be promoting it?  But bear with me – this works.  If we can get a message out there that says

‘You can be your own boss, running your dream business: All it takes is a bright idea and the determination to succeed’

…our battle is practically won.  Leaflets, posters, websites, adverts on commercial radio stations and buses.  Just flood the target areas of deprivation with marketing collateral.  Ideally also recruit some enterprise champions to attend local community centres and summer fairs handing out leaflets and letting everyone know just how much support is available to the would be entrepreneur.  And if you want to blow a few tens of thousands on a website too – well it will do no harm.

People will come forward in reasonable numbers especially if we help them out with bus fares, offer free lunches, crèches and hint at the possibility of funding to listen to our messages.  Enterprise for all, Anyone can do it, All it takes is hard work, You don’t even need a bright idea – we can give you one of those…

  • Procure Your Own MBA Enterprise (Lite)

Now all we need to do is feed them into an Enterprise MBA (anorexically) Lite.  Perhaps three half day workshops with a decent consultant who can make it all seem so very simple.  Half a day to work up the idea, half a day to develop a marketing plan and half a day to look at financials should do it.  Perhaps supported by a week-end Enterprise Show that offers ‘All you need to know about business in one day’.

Whatever you do please do not encourage team based start ups.  These are far too likely to succeed.  Encourage the myth of the ‘lone entrepreneur’ at every opportunity.

Now we can just sit back and wait.

If we work really hard at this within a year or two we can have perhaps 1000 bright shiny new businesses – most of them run by the gullible who really believe that with all the support available this should be easy.  And the magic starts.  They suddenly find that this is hard work, and it is relentless.  The business becomes like a cuckoo, requiring constant attention, dragging them away from family and friends, requiring time, money and lots of hard work.

NB be very careful not to provide any form of ‘relationship’ with your wannabe entrepreneurs other than the poorly transactional/technical.  You must never employ competent coaches who might help them to balance these tensions and maintain their motivation to succeed.  Instead employ people who have never run a business nor have been trained as coaches and use them as recruitment sergeants for the MBA Lite.  You can call them Enterprise Coaches.  Just make sure that their enterprise experience is limited and their room to coach negligible.  As our wannabe entrepreneurs start to feel and show the strain of running their own businesses we can start to blame their struggles on them.  ‘Perhaps you are just not cut out to be an entrepreneur’. Again avoid telling them the true stories of many successful entrepreneurs who often cut their teeth in failing businesses before finally finding a recipe for success.  Luckily there is a whole industry of motivational speakers and ex Apprentices who will help you to re-tell and re-enforce the Enterprise Fairy tale.  (NB don’t underestimate the budget you will need to procure their services.  This seems to be one area where the vast supply available has not resulted in driving down prices…)

  • Run a ‘Modest’ Grants and Loans Programme

Lending people money or even giving small grants to get their businesses started provides a wonderful mechanism to ensure that painful lessons about enterprise have a long-lasting and practical impact.  It also helps us to short-cut the most commonly raised objection to starting a business which is ‘I don’t have the cash’.  This is a vital step.  In its absence they may go and speak to lenders who will explain to them that their business is unlikely to work and that they will not be able to pay for any investment they seek.  THIS IS DISASTER!  We should do all we can to avoid exposing our wannabe entrepreneurs to such doses of reality.

By running our own grants and loan schemes we also help to lay the seeds for decades of resentment in the community.  Firstly we will have the chance to refuse many who apply for loans.  This really ticks them off, wastes their time, puts them off the enterprise process and makes them deeply suspicious of anyone who offers to invest in entrepreneurs.  And for those that we do make loans there is a good chance they will default – but even if they don’t they will see us as money lenders – and no-one really likes their lenders, do they?  And if we give them a grant, because no one else will lend them money – well we are almost certainly setting them up to fail.  If their business idea was inherently profitable they would not need to come to us for a grant.

NB actually setting up a grant or loan service can be hard.  Instead, do a deal with a local credit union and get them to work ‘under your brand’.   This way you get all of the upsides without having to actually do any of the dirty work.  Never signpost people to independent sources of finance and investment.  This risks your client seeing you as the good guys and them, the evil moneylenders, as the bad guys.  Of course if your long-term goal of depressing enterprise culture is to be achieved then you need to be perceived as the bad guys – so bring the finance guys under your brand.

  • Now be patient

That’s it.  Now sit back and watch the results of your labour come to fruition.  You have encouraged perhaps a thousand people to start businesses.  Of course, some of these would have started their businesses anyway.  And some will expect to work all hours to get things working well.  But many, if we are lucky a majority, will be anticipating some sort of cake walk to entrepreneurial success.

And so the magic starts.

The demand for many hours of hard work kicks in.  The money flows out, and our trap is sprung.  We may have had to put up with a short-term spike in the start-up rates (it is unlikely that many VAT registrations will occur as a result of our MBA Lite) but now we can expect the start-up rate to quickly fall away again.

We now have a small army of failed and failing entrepreneurs in our community, with neighbours and friends talking about their latest entrepreneurial failure, trying to service their debts and walk away from their ‘dream business’ turned nightmare.  If you have done your work well perhaps loan default rates could be significantly above 50%.  We do not need to promote these failures.  Indeed we can be portraying them as successes to ensure that we recruit another tranche to our MBA.  The entrepreneurs will collude with us in portraying their success – but the community will recognise and spread the truth.  That enterprise is hard and inherently risky, and that in spite of all the support available the decks are stacked and success often remains elusive.

But what, I hear you say, of those that ‘succeed’.  Aren’t they walking adverts for the entrepreneurial dream?  Well, actually, No.  Most of them will be in the ‘working like a dog for not much money’ phase.  Even those on the road to entrepreneurial success (typically by way of a start-up failure or two) will be like government sponsored health warnings against the dangers of an entrepreneurial life style.

  • Commission a Mid Term Evaluation

It must be glossy and full of warm words and smiling faces.  Don’t worry, even your most miserable and hate filled entrepreneurs will be prepared to smile for your cameras as you explain to them that many potential customers will read this report.  If possible get an evaluator with a double barrelled name and a decent reputation to undertake the evaluation.  They will understand the politics of the situation and can be relied upon to be sympathetic.

  • Avoid producing lists of the entrepreneurs you have helped and the businesses you have started

Such lists can be problematic.  People who are interested in enterprise in their communities might ring up some of your clients and find out whether they are living the dream or not.  If you are wise each of the clients will have been helped by several of your partners and will have been counted more than once.  Such double counting can easily be hidden away in a database.  Indeed we can blame it on the IT system.  A published list is much less forgiving.

  • Get Out Early

Ideally after a 2-4 year campaign such as this you should now withdraw your sources of advice and support.  If you are lucky you will be able to blame this on central government cuts and ‘The Recession’.  Don’t worry the long-standing enterprise support organisations such as the Enterprise Agencies or Business Link won’t be able to pick up the slack – they are already stacked out.

FAQs

Q: We have spent several millions refurbishing old buildings in deprived areas as ‘enterprise centres’ and have helped establish Development Trusts and CICs to run them.  Is there any danger that these might serve to promote enterprise in areas of deprivation?

A: Relax!  It is true that you have spent millions that you could have held onto – but it is unlikely that you will have done any real harm to our mission of depressing enterprise in deprived areas.   As long as you have built in lots of overheads (Victorian listed buildings that are inherently energy inefficient, combined with generous staffing and ‘architectural’ use of atria and ‘overpriced shared working space’ should suffice).  Unless you make the mistake of offering really competitive prices for decent office space with easy terms you are not going to fill up with local sustainable businesses capable of paying their rents consistently.  This mistake is almost impossible to make as if you should, no doubt unwittingly, provide any meaningful competition to the private sector there will be howls of complaints about anti-competitiveness.

NB leave the buildings with a legacy investment so that they can sustain themselves for a year or two after you have gone.  This way you may avoid some of the blame for commissioning a white elephant.

As the poor CIC or Development Trust pursues ‘break even’ it will have to forget its social mission and, at worst, the car park will fill up with BMWs, Audis and 4x4s as entrepreneurs from  out of town recognise that their are deals to be done on some sexy workspaces.   Or they may shift their focus from ‘enterprise centre’ to ‘conference centre’.  Or the car parks (and bicycle sheds) will remain stubbornly empty and after many months or years of support the centre will die a long and lingering death.  In most of our communities this trajectory can still be seen playing out in versions of ‘enterprise centres’ from the 70s, 80s, and 90s.

You may find that some claim the Enterprise Centre gives local people something to aspire too and that this will somehow lead to an entrepreneurial revolution.  Again Relax.  Go and talk to the operations manager in any of the older incarnations of the enterprise centres.  They, their low occupancy rates, and their key tenants running government programmes, will testify that no such enterprise revolution is likely to occur.

Q: We have executed the plan perfectly.  Does this mean that we can take the foot of the gas?

A: No!  People are inherently enterprising.  As soon as you stop, the recovery starts.  They start to make progress again.  Luckily it tends to be slow and pain staking but it happens.  You must be prepared to re-brand and relaunch the whole project again at least every 10 years.

Q: Hang on a minute!  We have done some or all of the above in the name of encouraging enterprise in deprived communities.  Are you saying that we have got it wrong?

A:…Well of course only time will tell.  But in short, Yes.

Filed Under: enterprise, entrepreneurship, management Tagged With: community development, development, enterprise, enterprise coaching, entrepreneurship, evaluation, management, operations, strategy

The Boss’s Lie

June 7, 2010 by admin

“What I want is someone who will do what I tell them to.”
“What I want is someone who works cheap.”
“What I want is someone who shows up on time and doesn’t give me a hard time.”

So if this is what the boss really wants, how come the stars in the company don’t follow these three rules?

From Seth Godin’s Linchpin

Filed Under: Leadership, management Tagged With: coaching, Culture, culture, Leadership, management, Motivation, performance improvement, performance management, progressive, strategy, talent management

Big Questions for Enterprise Coaching?

June 4, 2010 by admin

Is enterprise to be interpreted narrowly or broadly?

  • A narrow interpretation would equate enterprise with movement towards self employment or entrepreneurship.
  • A broad interpretation would equate enterprise with efficacy, agency and an increased sense of influence and power in shaping one’s own future.  With the pursuit of wellbeing and happiness through the exercise of personal responsibility and the skills of association, collaboration and mutuality.

Is the role of the coach to be limited or expansive?

  • The limited role of the enterprise coach is as an outreach enterprise evangelist selling the enterprise fairytale and encouraging people into workshops and mainstream services….
  • The expansive role of the coach is as a provider of person centred transformational relationships, harnessing the potential of people and the community to encourage personal and community development

We seem to be heading towards a position which takes a narrow definition of enterprise and limited role for the coach.  I believe this will result in communities that are actually much less enterprising  and entrepreneurial.

If we were to have the courage and ambition to shift to a broad definition of enterprise and an expansive role for the coach then I think we may actually have a foundation for the development of Big Society.  And funnily enough it wouldn’t cost very much….

Filed Under: enterprise, management Tagged With: community development, community engagement, enterprise coaching, inspiration, management, operations, professional development, strategy

Where is Your Enterprise Service At….?

May 21, 2010 by admin

I love 2×2 matrices.  But there are worse crimes I suppose. Of course they oversimplify things, deny shades of grey, limit ‘nuancing’ and so on.

But they work for me.

They help to clarify where we are, where we need to be and can generate ideas about how we get there.  Take this 2×2 for example which maps the credibility/utility of the service we offer versus its visibility/accessibility.

Visibility versus Credibility

High/High – ‘The Real Deal’ or ‘The Hen’s Teeth’

This is the goal.  Credible services that work and are visible and accessible to the people they are intended to serve.  Likely to have  a low marketing overhead as word of mouth and the power of attraction will keep the clients coming.  Well evidenced, high value for money services mean that funders cannot afford to withdraw from it.

High Accessibility/Visibility but Low Credibility – ‘All Mouth and No Trousers’ or ‘The Emperor…has no clothes’

This is the norm.  Sadly.  PR companies on large retainers to buy square inches in the local press.  Social media strategies, web sites, leaflets, posters and inspirational strap lines and branding guidelines abound.  Every one knows it’s there – but most of us know it doesn’t do ‘what it says on the tin’…The service relies on heavy self promotion to find a continual source of new referrals.  Word of mouth strategies including introductions and referrals don’t work.  They often have to rely on ‘inducements’ such as soft loans, grants and free lunches to get people to ‘sort of’ engage.  They can have plenty of clients on the books but few of them do anything very interesting.  Failure rates are high.  Many new entrepreneurs soon fall out of love with their ‘dream’ businesses and loan default rates are high.  Often have lots of front line staff on the ground all looking for ‘good’ clients.  Added value is low.  Management strategies involve efforts to ‘bluster our way through’ until the funding stream ends.

High Credibility/Utility but Low Visibility – ‘The Hidden Gem’

So we have a great product and service that does the job – but people don’t know we are here.  Don’t worry about it – this situation won’t last for long – perhaps 6 months?   If you have a product/service that reliably and consistently does what it says it will do – transforms lives, starts dream businesses and contributes to economic and community development the word will get out.  In fact you will soon be winning prizes and if you are smart making serious money.  Perhaps give a little thought to promoting a word of mouth strategy – learn how to ask for referrals, and introductions and you will soon have them beating a path to your door.  Make sure you can evidence your effectiveness and trademark/copyright your service.  It is worth a bomb.  This is a great place to be….

Low Credibility and Low Visibility – ‘No Style – No Substance’

Actually not as bad as it sounds.  Perhaps most new enterprise services should recognise that this is the starting point and where we might spend most of the first year or two of a new project.  Learning about what works in a particular community, about which partners are the ‘real deal’ and which are ‘all mouth but no trousers’.  Sniffing out the hidden gems to work with.  By deliberately keeping a low profile, but working on the long term impact of our products and services with a modest volume of clients we can gradually build a great service.  Once we have moved into the ‘hidden gem’ category we can then make the transition to become the ‘real deal’.

Working with Stakeholders

Of course when we use this in our own services we tend to have a bias towards the ‘real deal’ and ‘hidden gem’ quadrants.  But if we ask our clients, our funders, our experienced advisers, or an informed outsider to place us in the matrix then the results can be enlightening and provide powerful clues about the way forward – if we are smart enough and honest enough to listen.

  • Is this matrix useful?
  • Are you in the quadrant that you want to be in?
  • Do you have a clear strategy for getting to be the real deal?


Filed Under: enterprise, entrepreneurship, management Tagged With: enterprise coaching, enterprise education, evaluation, inspiration, management, operations, strategy, training, transformation

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • …
  • 83
  • Next Page »

Recent Posts

  • Hello world!
  • The Challenges of ‘Engaging Community Leaders’
  • Are rich people less honest?
  • 121s – The single most effective tool for improving performance at work?
  • Wendell Berry’s Plan to Save the World

Recent Comments

  • Mike on Some thoughts on Best City outcomes
  • Andy Bagley on Some thoughts on Best City outcomes
  • Mike on Strengthening Bottom Up
  • Jeff Mowatt on Strengthening Bottom Up
  • Jeff Mowatt on Top Down: Bottom Up

Archives

  • November 2018
  • March 2014
  • November 2013
  • October 2013
  • August 2013
  • March 2013
  • February 2013
  • January 2013
  • December 2012
  • September 2012
  • August 2012
  • July 2012
  • June 2012
  • May 2012
  • April 2012
  • March 2012
  • February 2012
  • January 2012
  • December 2011
  • November 2011
  • October 2011
  • September 2011
  • August 2011
  • July 2011
  • June 2011
  • May 2011
  • April 2011
  • March 2011
  • February 2011
  • January 2011
  • December 2010
  • November 2010
  • October 2010
  • September 2010
  • August 2010
  • July 2010
  • June 2010
  • May 2010
  • April 2010
  • March 2010
  • February 2010
  • January 2010
  • December 2009
  • November 2009
  • October 2009
  • September 2009
  • August 2009
  • July 2009
  • June 2009
  • May 2009
  • April 2009
  • March 2009
  • February 2009
  • January 2009
  • December 2008
  • November 2008
  • October 2008
  • September 2008
  • August 2008
  • July 2008
  • June 2008
  • May 2008
  • April 2008
  • March 2008
  • February 2008
  • January 2008
  • December 2007
  • November 2007
  • October 2007
  • September 2007
  • August 2007
  • July 2007
  • June 2007
  • May 2007
  • April 2007

Categories

  • Community
  • Development
  • enterprise
  • entrepreneurship
  • Leadership
  • management
  • Progress School
  • Results Factory
  • Training
  • Uncategorized

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org

Copyright © 2025 · Enterprise Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in