39
Anatomy of a Successful Agency (Autopsy of a Failed Agency) Ron Brown, CEO Rock Solid Foundation, LLC www.rocksolidfoundation.net

Anatomy of a Successful Agency (Autopsy of a Failed Agency) Ron Brown, CEO Rock Solid Foundation, LLC

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Anatomy of a Successful Agency(Autopsy of a Failed Agency)

Ron Brown, CEORock Solid Foundation, LLC

www.rocksolidfoundation.net

1. Learn principles of management and leadership that will prevent agency malfunction

2. Challenge participants to apply lessons learned where applicable

3. Affirm participants in areas of agency strengths

Stated Learning Objectives

Rock Solid Foundation

We enable human service agencies to integrate license, contract, and accreditation standards requirements into a streamlined workflow

As a CI company, we develop foundational resources upon which to build your agency.

Ron Brown - CEOMark Glenn - COO

Introduction

Highlights:

Integration of all requirements into a single workflow is critical

CI = continuous improvement

Combining industry experience with technology

Participant Survey

Location?

Agency Mission?

Role?

What do you want out of the session?

GOOD NEWS: Everything works together for good . . .

Introduction

Assumptions Being Made:

Degree of relevance to your situation

• State budget shortfalls

• Political pressure to hold agencies accountable

• Large, visible agency with eight offices directed by relatively “green” supervision

• Founded a for-profit “management company” with a contract with the non-profit agency

• The agency had weaknesses (below)

The Perfect Storm

Assumptions Being Made:

We don’t know what we don’t know

Question: Who else has failed this way before, and how can that

person help me?

Lesson:Party(s) responsible for dysfunction is (are) the least

able to assess the dysfunction

Questions Asked – Lessons Learned

Assumptions Being Made:

Safety in multitude of counselors

Question: Did I fall short of an unrealistically high standard or

goal?

Lesson:Desire to grow without detailed knowledge of

requirements leads to growth without strong foundation and infrastructure

Questions Asked – Lessons Learned

Assumptions Being Made:

Minimum standards must be met first

16 Principles

Lessons Learned

Submission to Authority

Test: Do you view regulatory entities as adversaries?

Implication: They will dig deeper

Application: What is the “buyer” telling me?

Principle #1

“Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure” (Ben Franklin)

Test: Do you see non-compliances or serious incidents as isolated events?

Implication: Non-compliances (or serious incidents) will likely recur

Application: What/Who has caused each citation (or incident)?

Principle #2

“Things hidden shouted from rooftops” (Luke 12:2-3)

Test: Are you relieved when authorities don’t discover known, unaddressed problems, or do you attempt to hide or camouflage errors and omissions?

Implication: Non-disclosure leads to mistrust and intensified external monitoring

Application: Guidelines of self-reporting

Principle #3

Call to Excellence

Test: Is a certain number of non-compliances, investigations, incidents or outcomes shortfalls expected or accepted?

Implication: Culture of Complacency

Application: Benchmarks for outcomes

Principle #4

Enforce Healthy Boundaries

Test: Do Related Party transactions (if any) not comply with policies and procedures?

Implication: Lack of accountability

Application: CEO/BOD Performance Review process

Principle #5

“Trust but Verify” (Old Russian proverb; Ronald Reagan)

Test: Do you depend on a single, non-integrated point of failure?

Implication: “Garbage in; garbage out”

Application: Where is the weak link in monitoring?

Principle #6

Delegate Authority, NOT Responsibility

Test: Does anyone have little or no accountability?

Implication: Pay the price for lack of performance

Application: What can happen unbeknownst to me?

Principle #7

“What’s in it for me?” (everyone)

Test: Do you believe that your staff is motivated primarily by your vision?

Implication: Fragmentation into individual visions

Application: Ensure right priorities are rewarded (and others are not)

Principle #8

“Tower of Babel” (Gen. chapter 11)

Test: Does hard work impress you?

Implication: Results will reflect nature of the effort, not necessarily desired outcomes

Application: Ensure activities positively affect right (desired) outcomes

Principle #9

“Count the Cost” (Luke 14:28)

Test: Have you [not] identified the agency’s requirements for desired outcomes?

Implication: Insufficient resources and/or counterproductive outcomes

Application: A [monitored/integrated] strategic plan

Principle #10

Strength in Unity

Test: Do any key stakeholders not support your mission?

Implication: Sabotage will erode the foundation

Application: Whom do I need to confront?

Principle #11

“A sound heart is life . . . “ (Prov. 14:30)

Test: Are you more interested in your success than others’?

Implication: Dispassionate and/or disloyal team members

Application: How can I provide opportunities for others?

Principle #12

“For such is the Kingdom of Heaven“ (Matt. 19:14)

Test: Do you believe that moving children to a lesser restrictive permanent outcome is:

a) not an option for some childrenb) financial burden on the agency

Implication: Undesirable outcomes

Application: What belief(s) assuage(s) the most desirable outcome(s)?

Principle #13

Proficient Leadership

Test: Are the people that helped get you there unwilling/unable to go to the next level?

Implication: Responsibilities outpace capabilities

Application: Viable plan of succession

Principle #14

Humility: No more or less than reality

Test: Do you believe that your agency is unique/indispensable?

Implication: Arrogance and complacency

Application: What would be missed if we quit/failed?

Principle #15

“. . . Greater things than these” (John 1:50)(Leaders beget [better] leaders)

Test: Does the agency have full and total confidence in the Executive Director/CEO?

Implication: The weak link is the ED; when (s)he fails, the agency fails

Application: How would my agency do if I left?

Principle #16

Questions Asked – Lessons Learned

Did I fail because of:

Another person?A situation?Myself?A ‘sacred cow’?

Application:Who/What is the weakest link in my agency?

Questions Asked – Lessons Learned

Am I grateful?

Lesson:One cannot see clearly until (s)he has reached the point of gratefulness

Application:What experience(s) do I need to grieve? (What hurts when I recall it?)

Questions Asked – Lessons Learned

Where did I succeed?

Lesson:“Failing forward” requires both knowing what to do as well as what not to

do

Applications:• What strengths can I bring to bear in order to overcome my challenges?•How can I create and/or cultivate an environment in which it is safe to fail?

Questions Asked – Lessons Learned

How can I turn this failure into success?

Lesson:I help myself by helping others

Applications:• How can I help others?• Whom can I help?

Questions Asked – Lessons Learned

Where do I go from here?

Lesson:If grieving process is successful and [above] questions are answered,

life’s path will become visible

Application:Which question(s) remain unanswered?

Questions Asked – Lessons Learned

Do only what you do best

Lesson:Concentrate best resources on opportunities (not problems)Find the right people

Applications:• Where am I investing my energy foolishly?• Where should I increase my investment?

Recommendations

Do only what you are passionate about (because one does what one wants to do)

Lesson:•Sustain the agency despite barriers•Attracts the right people•Keeps focus on the right outcomes despite temptations to compromise

Application:Does my passion match the obligations of my agency?

Recommendations

Cultivate a culture of discipline

Lesson:•Face the facts

• “Facts are better than dreams” – Winston Churchill•Manage the system, not people

• Because they are the right people, right?•Take prompt, disciplined action, no matter how painful

• Pruning promotes fruitful growth

Applications:What am I afraid to acknowledge?What am I afraid to do?

Recommendations

Build on timeless principles

Lesson:•Focus on outcomes, not growth•Focus on process, not events•Commit to core values•Create a climate in which truth prevailso Build the “red flag” mechanism for critical informationo Conduct autopsies without blame

Application:What way of thinking do I need to change?

Recommendations

Build a legacy with tenacity and humility

Lesson:Personal Humility:•Unwavering resolve•Sets uncompromised standards•Accepts responsibility

Application:What standard(s) have I compromised?

Recommendations

Great Leadership builds a legacy via personal humility and professional will

Lesson:Tenacity:

• Acts on inspired standards, not charisma• Channels ambition into agency, not self• Sets up successors for even greater success• Attributes success to external factors, not self

Applications:To whom or what goes the credit (and discredit) in my agency?To what standards do we adhere?Who’s up next?

Recommendations

• Agency placed a third of the children placed for adoption in the state

• None of the work went to waste—foster-adopt families, staff and clients transferred to other agencies

• Thousands of children were served successfully

• We had the time of our lives

Celebration of Successes

1. Learn principles of management and leadership that will prevent agency malfunction

2. Challenge participants to apply lessons learned where applicable

3. Affirm participants in areas of agency strengths

Stated Learning Objectives

Rock Solid Foundation1460 E. Whitestone Blvd., Suite 120Cedar Park, Texas 78613512.524.3001

Ron Brown, [email protected]

Mark Glenn, [email protected]

www.rocksolidfoundation.net

Contact Us: