A Forthcoming Productivity Boom?

Is Your Company Ready?  Are You?

Picture of Dan Bigman

  • It’s pretty easy to be pessimistic these days.
  • The long run of Black Swan events, the fierce political divides, the fear-mongering and apocalyptic thinking in so many quarters of society — if you’re not feeling pumped about the direction of the country, you’re hardly the only one.
  • But falling into that thinking right now is a huge mistake for executives—and it could cost you dearly.
  • Philip Powell’s read on economic data, especially in the manufacturing sector, has him convinced that we’re in the early innings of a prosperity supercycle driven by the largest surge in corporate productivity since the 1990s.
  • He thinks this is the hidden force that’s driving numbers like the eye-popping 10.1% Q1 growth in corporate profits, even as the Fed raised interest rates.
  • “If your mindset is not in a prosperity mindset, if you’re not planning for 2, 3, 4 years of nice growth like we had between 2016 and 2020, like we had between 2003 and 2007, then you’re really doing a disservice to your stockholders. That’s your biggest risk.”
  • To take advantage of the soon-cresting wave, he advises that you get yourself and your team as focused on growing productivity as they normally are about profits or expenses.
  • Not through cost cutting—that’s not what he’s talking about.
  • He’s talking about taking a more wholistic approach to looking at your work and your workforce so you can end up atop that wave, not under it.
  • He suggests four areas of focus, attacked across all aspects of your business:
    • BETTER TECHNOLOGY – Have you invested in state-of-the-art equipment and automated the most trivial worker tasks?
    • BETTER MANAGEMENT – Have you made your shop the most exciting and fulfilling place to work in your industry?
    • BETTER INFRASTRUCTURE – Have you negotiated the best public support and arrangements with utilities and local government?
    • BETTER TALENT – Have you built talent pipelines and instilled a culture of continuous training and learning?
  • And he offered these six key right-away to-dos for CEOs and management teams to thrive:
    1. Stop thinking myopically – The Covid crisis is over. Prepare for a multiple year boom where new technologies and production methods merge.
    2. Invest in technology, automation, and artificial intelligence until a point that makes you financially and managerially uncomfortable.
    3. Build a robust apprenticeship system that employs 16-year-olds and form deep relationships with local educational and training institutions.
    4. Modernise “old school” approaches to managing workers – You can accommodate a younger generation and still hold them accountable.
    5. Shift energy that used to be focused internationally to creative engagement with local government and community non-profits.
    6. Obsess about productivity instead of sales or expenses.
  • When asked how best to get started in reshaping the team’s—and our own—mindset to the idea of a coming prosperity, instead of the grating, lasting fear that seems to be hanging out there despite the economic data, he (Bigman) loved his response:
  • “At the end of the day, the decisions you make as a CEO are emotional – we’re human – that’s how we’ve evolved – that’s how God made us – and so you have to watch what you feed your emotions”.
  • “A lot of CEOs educate themselves in the economy using popular media channels — whatever the political spectrum is – but we have to remember that social media, media itself, they want you to be addicted to their information – that’s how they make money. So they have no incentive to give you a long-term perspective. So make sure to have the discipline on your executive team that you’re being fed good data —and you’re looking at the right sources.”
  • Good advice anytime.
  • Particularly good right now.

 

QED – And Step 1 to getting ‘good data’ is having the right set of performance/ productivity measures

 

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