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The Missing Link Supplement

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"There is nothing more frightful than ignorance in action." -Johann von Goethe



"Remember, people will judge you by your actions, not your intentions. You may have a heart of gold -- but so does a hard-boiled egg." -Anon.

The missing link between inactivity and achievement is initiative. I believe the missing quality in the homogenized society that we live in is initiative. Ask any employer who is building a business and the number one quality they seek in new recruits is initiative. Having the ability to think and act.

I recall years ago having to address the off duty phone calls I received from my staff of the Hotel I managed, that were not essential. Missing lemons, staff not turning in, an individuals phone number, the list was endless. The first week-end following my staff address was free of calls but not without event. On my return to the hotel the following Monday, I discovered there had been three fire appliances called to the scene and the hotel kitchen had burnt down. Apparently my request consideration towards my free time had not enhanced my desire to build initiative in problem solving.

In order to be a visionary one must show initiative in our educational development. Ignorance is intelligence gone to seed, as is a vision without initiative. We must seek to develop a consistent plan of personal growth, which includes our educational needs. Read when sat and listen when on the move. Redeem time by making the best use of it. Motivational tapes, inspirational biographies and documentaries are great ways of enhancing our education and so is networking with fellow visionaries.

Serving someone else's vision is a great way to develop your own.

As a coach, I am as committed to building my practice, as I am someone else's. I provide coaching on life issues, strategic planning, vision and values along with support on a friendship level. We don't have to have all the answers to be successful in a given field, but we do need to have a positive mental attitude and a teachable spirit.

Successful business people are generally motivated people. The prime reason for this is they have learned time is the main resource that cannot be squandered without good intent. Being successful in business generally allows us to use our time as we choose. This can provide greater leisure opportunities and more quality resources.

A great way to appreciate an improved quality of life is to spend time with those who are doing so. More resources, faster cars and bigger houses are not everyone's idea of success. These may well follow as a result of careful planning and our responsible attitude towards initiative, however most visionaries are not driven by success they are motivated by purpose.

Here are some ways of defining where to focus your activities:

? Ask yourself the question ?What stirs your emotions?? ? What would cause you to move country in order to participate in? ? Who would I like to be mentored by if time or history allowed? ? If all the resources were at my disposal, what would I do right now?

"Write the bad things that are done to you in sand, but write the good things that happen to you on a piece of marble." -Arabic Parable

"Do to others what you would have them do to you" -Bible, Matthew 7:12

There is an old Chinese proverb that says, ?The hardest step of a long march is the first?

Identifying what we have does not come easy to an individual who can only focus on what they need. This paralyzes us into inactivity unless we start at the point of which we can. Excuses for Starting are based in procrastination and procrastination is brought about by too many options. When we reduce the options our focus becomes sharper.

I was in Africa recently doing a little shopping at a local shed in the middle of two townships. I had a raging thirst and the intense heat drove me to this drinks shed. There were cases of coke in the old-fashioned style glass bottles stacked in the shade. It was not chilled, and cherry flavoured. There were two options. Drink it or leave it! Back home in my local supermarket recently, I became intensely agitated and rather sad when I had to stand amongst the huge aisles of soft drink as my children debated as to the flavour of drink we should buy. Too many options are not always a good thing, and especially when our future depends on the outcome.

If you are faithful with a little you will never lack

Building a life out of vision requires an unselfish motive. Being mean spirited with your vision and resources will only lead to isolation and lack. I have watched individuals over the years with so many resources but no vision to make use of them. They eventually lose them or even worse have them rot before their eyes.

I friend of mine in England started a club where young disadvantaged people could attend and have fun and food. So popular was this activity that they decided to bus the kids in from the surrounding city. I met a businessman who had bought a custom bus on a whim to use in the future. I suggested he may wish to give it to this organization to help them achieve their objective of giving support to their community. He declined for all sorts of reasons. Today the businessman's bus is rotting and my friends community programme owns twelve double-decker buses (London type), local bus mechanics give their time free to maintain them and all the resources to run them have been provided.

Vision attracts resources whether we support it or not. We can be generous in helping others succeed or we can be selfish and focus on our own needs. A generous attitude is always a great place to start. Interestingly, most genuine visionaries have started out supporting in some way or another someone else's vision whilst defining their own.

Responsibility or ownership

The difference between taking our responsibility within the vision and ownership of it is motive. One can never own something that has been entrusted to us, just as one can never give away something that we are responsible for. When defining our vision, we must accept responsibility for the leading of it, yet recognize we cannot treat those drawn to it as if we have exclusive ownership of it. One sure way to kill vision is to hold onto it as if we were the sole owners of it.

In our awareness of growing vision, we must treat those resources that are added to it from a perspective of being responsible leaders, whilst letting go and letting growth take its course.

This is a fundamental principle we must observe along the journey to fulfilling vision. Those that join this vision will also need a sense of ownership or partnership within its operation. The motive by which we serve this vision will determine whether we understand our responsibility without declaring ownership of it.

If we become confused in the midst of this vision, re-visit the point of conception

Vision is in a sense alive. It requires our attention in the same way that a baby would. We never own our children we are entrusted with them. This shows our responsibility towards their growth, nurture and eventual maturity. The end result is an individual that we have invested boundaries, values and behavioral skills into. The day will come all too soon when we have to open the door to the world and let them take their place in it, hoping and praying that they will live by the values that we invested into them and so complete the cycle of life.

When in the midst of the kinetic like activities that vision attracts, it is all too easy to lose sight of its humble beginnings. Many an individual and organization has learned to its own demise, that moving into other opportunities that we are neither skilled nor gifted in will often result in something that we never intended to take place. It is at such a point we need to ask the questions before we continue down the pathway presented to us.

a) Is this consistent with my personal values and boundaries?

b) Will this direction achieve my overall objectives?

c) Will this new direction strengthen or weaken what we / I, do well?

d) What is my motive for considering such a path?

Remember what builds vision is pertinent to growth. We should not ask the question what will cause vision to grow, but rather what will stop it. We don't spend time looking for things to make a child grow, but we instinctively know what will hider its growth. By applying the same principle, we will give vision the life it needs to grow.
The Missing Link Supplement
There is a role that is needed within the IT Management Structure that is missing. In my opinion, this role could save large corporations many millions of dollars per year while contributing greatly to the overall health of all IT departments, and their personnel. While working on muti-month projects that report to senior management for corporations in many countries, I have never see anyone holding this position or performing this role.

THE PROBLEM:

In order to explain the role and where it fits in, we have to do a very fast review of a typical IT Management Hierarchical Structure. Please keep in mind that your organization may have a variation of this design and it may not reflect your structure exactly--but I bet it's pretty close.
 


Silos: (A concept, not a role.)

This is a term I first heard used by a colleague that was COO for a major insurance organization. Silos are usually an agricultural term for tall cylindrical storage structures holding stores of grain. Basically, giant vertical cylinders. This makes them a wonderful description of how many IT organization's various departments work. Self-contained vertical structures. They report up - but not sideways. Communication with the other Silos happens via an entity or role that sits above them. This is not helpful--but it is very common.

Non-Technical Manager. Responsible for the business management of the entire IT Department. Probably an MBA. Sometimes they have had some technical training. They may have started their career as an Engineer, but that was long ago and what they once knew is long since obsolete. How could it be otherwise? Technology changes so rapidly that as soon as an Engineer takes on budgetary responsibilities--they will very quickly be mostly dependent on the technical skills of their direct reports. This would lead to an assumption that their direct reports have technical skills--which is usually not the case.

Vice President:

VP and Director may perform the same role depending on the size of the organization. (In Europe, Vice President is often a title more equivalent to the "Lead" role in the United States.) Often there are different VP's for different areas of the IT world such as a VP of Infrastructure or Support--or some other “silo.” It is most often a non-technical role.

Director (or other Senior Manager):

Possibly Technical--but typically not. May have once had a departmental “silo” skill set. However, may never have been technical at all. Still essentially managing people, projects and possibly budgets. It should be pointed out that this particular role has the widest range of technical to non-technical people. Some are highly technical, but it is not the norm.

Middle Manager:

Runs a department like the Network Team, Server Team, Development Team, etc.. A Technical Manager--but usually only in a specific area of expertise. Ironically, since the career path for such a person is moving into the more senior management roles--which are non-technical--this individual is probably working more on gaining business oriented skills than technological skills. You may see them, for example, running a technical department from a technical perspective, but going to night-school for an MBA.

Engineer:

Highly technical. Works in a department like the Network Team, Server Team, etc.. These are the people performing the technical tasks. There are different levels here as well and what is commonly referred as "The Lead" is usually the last technical word within the Silo.

So, here are my questions:

Who is there in this management structure that has the authority to task the Technical Managers and also understands what those Technical Managers are doing? Often, no one.

Who is looking at the big picture from a purely technological perspective? By this I mean, who is seeing how the processes of one Silo affect the processes of another Silo--or Silos? Often, no one.

Here is a very simple example. If the Network Team has placed a small server that only serves one or two applications, into a smaller switch--who is aware of the requirements of those applications AND the fact that such a move is taking (has taken) place? Would the Network Team know that this small server is running at 80% utilization and is responsible for moving enormous amounts of data? Maybe, maybe not. What would be the effect of such a move? It wouldn't be pretty. Who would discover the problem? Probably a business user...ouch!

Here is where change control comes into place but it is usually a troubled process and designed with far too many holes. Few organizations have meetings where all Senior Managers or their Agents really sit down and review all changes for negative impact on their area of responsibility, and discuss the cross-over effects of such changes--horizontally. If they did have such a discussion would it be candid? Would they be in a political position to say, “hey, here is a much better way for YOUR Silo to do that work.” Most commonly such an act would be political suicide and against most corporate cultures. So, the concern usually ends up being, “does what you are doing hurt me?” If so, speak up. If not, keep silent.

Does anyone in your organization have the technical skills AND authority to provide that form of technical integration?

There is a commercial in the United States where a man stands in a room of his home in a suburban neighborhood. We see him flicker a light switch on and off. He then asks his wife, “Honey, what does this switch do?” She shrugs. The next view in the commercial is of his neighbor's garage door opening and closing--again and again--on the hood of his neighbor's car. Literally chewing it up! Unfortunately, this analogy works very well for large enterprise networks.

The Middle Manager is often the highest level of Manager that understands the technology from the technical perspective (as apposed to the business perspective), and they are themselves working in a Silo. They are responsible for their Team, their people and their budget. They are only one of many such Managers reporting up to the higher levels of management that, typically, do not really understand the technical details of the problem and can offer little to no help.


 
Senior IT Management receives different points of view coated in techno-speak and usually will be adverse to challenge their subordinates on any technical details of the problem. They can say, “not good enough; here is more budget; here are more resources." Those things are helpful and needed—but it is not a role of technical integration. No real technical assistance can be offered.


 
Middle management reports to Senior Management explaining that they are actively working the problem. Senior Management reports to Executive Management saying that they are on top of it and have tasked their staff with the resolution of the problem.
 
Ok--so--whose hands are on the wheel?

Who is there in this chain of command that is capable of receiving input from the various Technical (Silo) Middle Managers--that has the technical skills to fully understand the details as well as the authority and mandate to task all IT departments? No one.

Is there anyone that understands, in a technical way, the actions and issues being worked by the Middle Managers in their individual silos? Yes, but minimally.

Is there anyone that can see where the issues overlap? This is the key--so I will repeat it. Is there anyone that can see where the issues overlap--technically? No.

The role of Chief Technology Officer or Chief Scientist is the closest, but they tend to be far removed from the day to day deploying and troubleshooting life of IT departments. They may be planning the overall path that the corporation will take with regards to IT, but they are usually in the dark with regards to the reality of daily IT work.

So, who is in authority to task Middle Managers from any IT department (Silo) to provide tests, logs, diagrams, or to perform specific actions--who is actually in a position to see ALL Silos and understand the technical aspects of ALL Silos? No one. That is the problem. That is the missing link.

THE SOLUTION:

Imagine that within Executive Management there was another role. Let's call it the Vice President of Technology Coordination, or some other such thing. This individual is highly skilled technically, in all areas of enterprise information technology. They are also an experienced people and project manager. They are NOT a Business Manager and do not have budgetary responsibilities. Their job is to sit at the side of the CIO and provide that top level TECHNICAL MANAGEMENT that is not currently in place. Such an individual would maintain the 20,000 foot view technically--but be able to drill down with any Middle Manager, (or direct that drilling), and get into the details technically as well.

There are not many individuals that can fill this role--but they exist. Seek them out. If you find someone with these skills--create that position and invite them to fill it.
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Both Leedavidhcz & Barry Koplowitz are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.

Leedavidhcz has sinced written about articles on various topics from Web Development, Self Improvement and Motivation and Web Development. Visit Eruptingmind for Submitted by:. Leedavidhcz's top article generates over 49500 views. to your Favourites.

Barry Koplowitz has sinced written about articles on various topics from Computers and The Internet, Gardening and Cars. Barry Koplowitz founded in 1999. He was an instructor for Network General and NAI traveling around the USA teaching for Sniffer Unive. Barry Koplowitz's top article generates over 18100 views. to your Favourites.
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