As a friction fixer, to dampen coordination troubles, your job is to find and test new solutions, teach them to others, and keep updating your tool kit. Here are six solutions that might work for you.
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But David still reminds folks at IDEO and elsewhere to treat organizations as imperfect and unfinished prototypes. When some policy or practice annoys or drives people crazy, friction fixers need the courage and sway to try something different. And if that doesnât work, to change it, or toss it out, and try something else.
3. How Friction Fixers Do Their Work: The Help Pyramid
âOur Help Pyramid has five levels, which are based on the amount of influence you need to help people in your cone of friction. The bottom three levels focus on ways you can dampen the wallop packed by symptoms: reframing, navigating, and shielding. The top two levels are about preventing and curing friction troubles: neighborhood design and repair and system design and repair.
6. Broken Connections: On Preventing Coordination Snafus
âCoordination troubles, like other kinds of destructive friction, are often orphan problems that everyone knows about, but no one feels accountable for fixing.
Friction fixers energize people by turning such goals into emotionally âhot causes,â especially goals that crank up shared anger and pride, which they use to fuel the creation and implementation of âcool solutionsââconcrete and coordinated actions. Thatâs what happened with the cancer tax. Once patient activists convinced Cancer Center leaders that they were heaping debilitating burdens on the people they wanted to help, the upset and determined hospital staffers began working with patients and their families to fix such problems.
1. Onboard People to the Organization, Not Just the Job
Friction fixers who are intent on building a culture of coordination go beyond training newcomers to perform their narrow job responsibilities. They teach newbies how their work meshes with that of others, how the organization functions, and how to use the system to help them do their work. This saves a lot of trouble down the road....
2. Get Up Close and Personal with People Who Make the System Tick..
Yet, as Wired reported, they developed grudging respect for one another. Together, they patched HealthCare.gov by bringing âorder to the site through careful monitoring, automated testing, and a collaborative, methodical, commonsense approach to bug fixing.â There is nothing sacred about L6. Elsewhere, traveling down three or four levels is plenty. The key is locating the peopleâsuch as employees, customers, or vendorsâwho understand how a system works and why it doesnât...
3. Good Stories Stoke Coordination
Hubert believes the stories that he told strengthened connections between Best Buy employees and customers, and employees and management. Like the one about Jordan, a three-year-old in Florida who loved his T. rex toy and called it his âdino baby.â When dinoâs head snapped off, Jordan was heartbroken. Jordanâs mother found the same T. rex at Best Buy, ordered it online, and drove Jordan to a store to pick it up. She told the Best Buy associate that they needed a âdinosaur doctor.â The associate, T, recruited a colleague, Stephanie, and they took Jordanâs headless dinosaur to âsurgeryâ behind the counter out of Jordanâs view. âJust a few more stitches,â the pair said as they replaced the broken T. rex with the new one. When they handed Jordan the âcuredâ dinosaur, he squealed with joy...
4. Build Roles and Teams Dedicated to Integration...
5. Fix Handoffs...
One rule is ânever hand over a fire in the heat of the day.â Firefighters learned this lesson from the Dude Fire in Payson, Arizona, in 1990. Six firefighters were burned to death after a botched handoff, which occurred at â1:00 P.M. on a hot, windy day with temperatures in the high nineties while the fire was making spectacular runs.â Crews now do handoffs at night, when it is easier to see fires and âlow winds, high humidity, and cool temperatures stabilize the fire.
Crew chiefs use a briefing for such handoffs to help pass along the âbig story,â steps that could by adopted by friction fixers in other settings. During a forest fire, the outgoing chief goes through five steps during a conversation with the incoming chief:
- Hereâs what I think we face.
- Hereâs what I think we should do.
- Hereâs why.
- Hereâs what I think we should keep an eye on.
- Now talk to me (i.e., tell me if you (a) donât understand, (b) cannot do it, (c) see something that I do not).
That last step places responsibility on both chiefs to assure that messages are received and to resolve clashing perceptions...
6. Coordinate on the Fly...
Friction fixers are of two minds. First, they labor to prevent unpleasant surprises. To build workplaces where people arenât exhausted by one emergency after another and donât live in fear of system failure. Second, they know, as Beatle John Lennon put it, that âlife is what happens to you while youâre busy making other plans...
These teams started with a provisional plan, the âsheet music.â Film crews had a detailed daily schedule. The SWAT team outlined a plan for each missionâwhich specified, for example, who would cover the exits of a house, where snipers would be stationed, and when officers would bust down the door. But when things didnât go as expected, because people understood one anotherâs roles so well and how their roles fit together, teams were adept at revising their plan on the spot....
Role shifting helped them make such rapid adjustments. It happens when a surprise leaves a critical role empty and someone else fills in...
Reorganizing routines is another improvisational practice. Itâs triggered when a surprise reveals that the planned sequence or methods arenât working and something different ought to be done.