1. Problem-solve your way to success!
By Evans Munyuki â June 26th 2011
Part 1 - The Idea:
Whether you aim to become a truly successful manager, a truly successful executive, or a truly
successful business owner, one important principle for you to embrace is the principle of
problem solving.
The world of commerce revolves around the reality of problem solving.
The reality of life is that it is full of problems. Some people donât know how to solve their
problems, or they donât have the time, energy, resources, expertise, or desire to solve their own
problems â so they often choose to pay someone else to solve problems for them.
Examples include the following:
1. A pedestrian who gets tired of walking may choose to catch a taxi cab. The taxicab
driver exists in that role because he knows that pedestrians have problems which he can
solve.
2. A hungry person may choose to buy food from a restaurant. The restaurant owner exists
in that role because she knows that hungry people have problems which she can solve.
3. An employer may choose to hire the skills and expertise of an employee. The smart
employee exists in that role because she knows that employers have problems which she
can solve.
4. A customer may choose to purchase a product (e.g. a car). The smart sales person exists
in that role because he knows that customers have problems (car purchase decisions)
which she can help solve.
The sooner you tap into this universal principle of problem solving, the sooner you can reach
your career goals.
Managers have pain and they have monkeys on their shoulders. They are always looking for that
trusted person who is willing to make their pain go away. Executives have pain, and they are
always looking for that manager or self-driven employee who is willing to work the extra 30
minutes and help them solve the problems and make their pain go away. That becomes one
less thing for the manager or executive to worry about it.
Do you want to fast-path your way into a leadership, management, senior management, or
executive role? Well, I suggest one of the secret recipes which can make a huge difference:
Be the person who is willing to take on the projects no one else wants!
2. Be the person who has a strong bias for execution. Yes, analysis is good, but analysis paralysis is
not â so get on with it. Understand the mission, do your homework (analysis), then Just Do It!
(execution) ï
Be the person who is willing to understand those issues which keep your boss awake at night,
and problem-solve your way to success.
Work on projects which matter most to your boss. As you do this, you will get visibility, you will
make a meaningful impact on your managerâs results, and you will inevitably make a
meaningful impact on your bossâs bossâs results, and your companyâs results.
If you ârepeatedlyâ and âconsistentlyâ demonstrate this behavior, your manager or executive will
notice you for this, and he or she will learn to turn to you when she has problems that need
solving or projects that need to be completed. You will become a trusted partner.
The inverse of this principle is also true. The best way to NOT grow your career is achieved by
doing the reverse of this⊠i.e. If you always bring your boss problems with no suggested
solutions, your boss is NOT going to think of you as the next management or executive
candidate. If your boss always suggests ideas for you to try and if you always knock her ideas
down without suggesting alternative ideas for execution, that is also just as bad.
Taking on special projects for your manager or executive (and doing them well) is one of the
best ways of adding true value and positioning yourself for career growth.
Problem-solve your way to success! â Part 2
Take on any project, no matter how small, as long as it is meaningful to your manager or
executive. However, I am not suggesting that you do things which are totally out of character
with your role. This is not about making your boss coffee â this is about delivering results which
matter â results which impact your companyâs output and performance through small projects.
Quite naturally, as you do well with the small projects, you will be asked to work on bigger
projects, and eventually you will be asked to manage a small team, then a small department,
then a small business... If management is not your cup of tea, no problem, you can excel into
your vertical areas of skill and expertise while growing your contribution and ultimately your
earnings without necessarily having to worry about managing people.
Please note that this principle is not about kissing up, this has nothing to do with office politics, or
playing the system - this is about âgenuinelyâ adding value, gaining credibility, and getting
known as a person who serves, a person who delivers the goods; the person who goes the extra
mile consistently serving and makes a material difference.
3. This is not a âget-promoted-quickâ approach, but is rather a âdeliver-value-quickâ approach
which will inevitably lead to acknowledgement and rewards over time.
When everyone else is complaining and raising the 10 reasons why your managerâs request
cannot be done, be the one person who says, âGot it boss â consider it done.â And then
proceed and deliver the goods.
Problem solving is all about adding real value. It is about âvalue creation.â As you add real value,
real rewards will be sure to find you (either in your current company, or in your future company).
This is a law of nature which works so well youâll soon be smiling as your responsibility profile
begins to change and as your manager or executive begins to notice you as an up-and-comer.
A key requirement for this principle to work well is that you must do your normal job well. In
addition to that, you then accept or look for existing problems you can help solve using small
projects. Notice that I said âlook for existing problems,â and I did NOT say âcreate problems!!!â ï
If you keep creating problems, solving them is hardly going to position you as a candidate for
promotion â in-fact, it may qualify you as a candidate for performance management with
negative potential outcomes.
If you do your normal job well and then you accept small projects (problems to be solved) and
you do them well, you are sending a key message: you are actually saying that your normal job
is too small and you can take on more. So your boss gives you more. You do it well, and you
position yourself well for greater responsibility a.k.a promotion!
Promotion does not go to the person who is swamped, overwhelmed, missing deadlines, making
commitments she doesnât keep, and is not satisfying his customers. Promotion goes to the person
who figures out how to turn his overwhelming turbulent storm of work requests into a gentle
breeze of delivery.
Problem-solve your way to success! â Part 3
Let go so you can grow! Delegate
Promotion goes to the manager who quickly learns the power of letting go and allowing others
to take on small projects themselves so they can also have an opportunity to do well and so
they can also have the opportunity to shine while taking some load off the manager â In
management theory, this is known as delegation.
For the empowering smart manager, this is known as giving your teams an opportunity to also
work on small projects so they too can grow. Do you see the beauty of this principle and how it
works? It gives everyone the opportunity to grow their contributions â gently building an
ecosystem of high-performance â a high-performing team.
4. You might say, âBut I donât have anyone reporting to me, so I have no one to delegate to.â No
problem⊠Find efficiency improvement opportunities, productivity improvement opportunities,
and process improvement opportunities which will allow you to turn your overwhelming turbulent
storm of work requests into a gentle breeze of delivery. Innovate. Create productivity-enhancing
process optimization and use technology to automate repetitive tasks. If you do things manually
on paper, find ways of using technology to automate and streamline.
Firstly, this will become the first project you solve (small project) which will gain your managerâs
attention and it will free you up so you can take on the problems which matter most to your
manager as you build your pathway to success.
So the next time you want a promotion, try a different approach. Instead of going to your boss
and asking for more money or a fancy job title, go to your boss and tell her you have your job
under control and tell her that you want to make a greater contribution to her organization and
her success. Then ask her to give you âany additional workâ which allows you to address one of
the areas that is keeping her awake at night. Solve problems. Make her look good. Be the wind
beneath her wings. As she does well and rises, so will you.
This totally goes against the natural tendency of criticizing bosses because they are not solving
certain problems â instead of spending your energy in criticism over coffee and smoke breaks,
take that knowledge of the areas where your boss or company is weak and offer to drive a small
project to resolve it. You will make the world better for your boss, you will make the world better
for his critics, and you will make the world better for yourself as you build your pathway to
promotion.
When others see problems, you see the opportunity to make a contribution. The road to
promotion is paved by your ability to spot problems, to put on a refreshing positive attitude, and
to solve them for your boss and clients.
Problem-solve your way to success! Many people will reject this principle â no worries, thatâs their
loss and your gain! And besides, if everybody does it, it wonât be as much of a differentiator.
So, before everyone else catches onto this, go on â identify problems, drive small projects which
will give you quick wins. Problem-solve your way to success!
Yours in the trenches,
Evans Munyuki, MPM, Cert.Dir, ICEPM
CIO, ABSA Business Bank
Email: emunyuki@gmail.com