| |
|
|
Technology innovation: Scoring Goals
by Joe Morray

Published on this site: November 20th, 2006 - See
more articles from this month
It is interesting to note and analyze that a substantial number of European
organizations have traditionally been leading their North American and
Asian counterparts in the implementation and benefits from advanced data
systems.
The question of how a company can organize and plan within the engineering-construction
industry to maximize innovation and benefits is always a worthy focus.
From our work with global companies, the following best practices seem
to emerge:
Companies continually define measures of work effectiveness, which lend
themselves to critical analysis and the push for more effective tools
and work methods. Whether these measures are industry-based, such as that
supported by Independent Project Analysis (IPA) or CII, or in-house metrics,
is not critical, but that there is a way to measure the value of change
and innovation.
Innovative ideas are rapidly rewarded with some funding, but then must
support rigorous financial and organizational analysis as more expenditures
are requested. Our best practice companies involve senior management in
this process and it is viewed as a seminal part of their job. During this
process,
both financial and management buy-in is achieved.
A project success is measured not only on the ability to deliver a fit-for-purpose
facility, and within the financial expectations, but also whether it is
continually upgrading the methods and tools employed. Best practice companies
do not
tolerate a project or a functional manager having a flat "not on
my project" philosophy.
Innovation is performed in small steps, typically six months in calendar
duration, during which time a set of predefined objectives need to be
met. Key here is the establishment of the value producing chunks, with
predefined success criteria. Companies take large projects and divide
them into phases. It
produces urgency and deliverables continually.
With this short leash, innovators are provided the full organizations
support to succeed. accomplishments are celebrated, missed expectations
are quickly rectified or the project is rapidly reevaluated and stopped.
Innovative companies clearly establish expectations and success criteria,
freeing the champions to concentrate on achieving those objectives.
As in so many parts of business, the need to communicate to the greater
organization is paramount. at Trinity we focus on four different constituents:
senior management, the project team, those who are going to receive the
implementation, and lastly, the general company population. Communicate
at all phases of the process, allowing the company to be aware as the
innovations mature.
So why do some companies perform innovation so well, and others are hit-or-miss?
Check your playbook and whether you have a "game plan" that
is part of the company infrastructure. The goal production will go up
dramatically!

Joe Morray - is president of Trinity Technologies Corp. See http://www.trinitytechnologies.com
to learn how we help owner/operators and EPC firms succeed in the use
of information systems.


|
|