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Making Your Suggestion Scheme Make Sense
by Ron Kaufman
Harness the power of your in-house creative ideas.
Markets today demand greater innovation. Changes are coming
faster than ever before. Your competitors are ever more nimble.
Customers have rising expectations. You need new ideas, better
processes, more innovative products and services, and more
effective ways to build strong futures with those customers.
Companies can no longer survive with staff members who expect
management to provide "all the right answers". Today, companies
require a steady flow of ideas and solutions from those who are
closest to the processes and the customers, those with their
"ears to the ground".
To maintain an adaptable and responsive organization, you must
develop a culture that actively solicits input and
recommendations from every level of your staff.
Fortunately, senior managers are more receptive to this approach
than ever before. But how can you transform the mindset of staff,
who, for years or even generations, were trained to "keep your
mouths shut, lay low, just follow orders"? How can you encourage
your frontline staff to open their minds, explore new ideas and
share their best recommendations?
One technique is the "Staff Suggestion Scheme"; a time honored
process of wooden boxes and pre-printed forms for staff to write
out their ideas and submit them for management consideration.
Many companies have tried this approach, but few can report real
satisfaction with the number, consistency, or quality of staff
contributions. Even fewer can report widespread enthusiasm for
their "Suggestion Schemes" at all.
Here are six ideas you can implement right away to make your
suggestion scheme more effective:
- Respond to all written staff suggestions immediately (within
one week) and in writing.
Be candid. If the answer is no, say so. If the answer is
yes, state when staff will see implementation. If the answer
is maybe, explain the issues involved and give a date for
further reply. And stick to it. Nothing builds trust and
credibility faster than making new promises... and keeping
them.
One exception: do not reply to obscene or abusive
suggestions. A strong company culture has no place for such
destructive "input". Your best response is not to reply.
- Respond to suggestions publicly, for all to see.
Usually, when one staff member writes, she speaks what is on
the mind of many. Reply openly on a designated bulletin
board, in a weekly printed update, or by electronic mail.
Thank the writer(s) for their query or contribution. Include
staff names on suggestions to be implemented.
- Give an award, prize or monetary incentive for best
suggestions, and give it right away.
Many Suggestion Schemes invoke a multi-step process for
evaluation and eventual granting of an award. First, the
suggestion boxes are emptied (sometimes only once a month).
Second, a Committee sifts and sorts for "realistic"
submissions. Third, a Management Committee appraises the
freshness, viability, cost savings or increased revenue from
each suggestion. Fourth, someone in "Senior Management"
decides upon the amount of reward to be given to the
appropriate staff members. And finally, an actual awarding
of the "prize" is conducted.
The cycle time for this process is usually four weeks or
more. In some cases the senior management review is only
conducted once a quarter. What is your company's cycle time
for awarding prizes to a staff suggestions? Would you be
inspired if you had to wait that long?
Try this approach: Dedicate $1200 to the project. Give the
money away in $100 increments every month for one year. Each
month, give $50 to the best idea, $20 for the second best
idea, and $10 each to the 3rd, 4th and 5th best suggestions.
In the first months, few may believe that you will give out
the money in a timely manner, and possibly only a handful of
staff will participate. But no matter how small or meagre
the suggestions, give out the money anyway! As soon as staff
realize you are serious, the boxes will be filled with
suggestions.
- Establish categories for regular awards.
Categories can help staff focus and generate new ideas. Here
are examples of categories that you can use: Ideas that can
be implemented immediately, ideas for getting closer to our
customers, suggestions for cost savings or increasing
revenue, new ideas focusing on a chosen theme for the month,
ideas that most dramatically challenge the current paradigm
of our thinking, recommendations for the future direction of
our business.
- Make a big event out of awarding your suggestion scheme
prizes.
Some companies use lunches, staff teas or monthly meetings
to award prizes. One company makes up large, special "dollar
bills" for each winning suggestion. In the center is the
face of the staff member who contributed. In the corners is
the amount of money his or her suggestion earned. And
surrounding the portrait is a description of the suggestion
itself. These "dollar bills" line the wall of the staff
lounge and company cafeteria. The result is popular group
recognition for winners and a "culture building" impact that
keeps the suggestion scheme going strong.
At the end of the year, give recognition to the volume of
suggestions received, the winners who have been rewarded,
and the changes enacted as a result. Then, pose a challenge
to everyone to double the volume of suggestions in the
coming year.
And, if the quality of ideas warrant, double your cash
prizes, too. Four winners a month last year? Increase it to
eight winners per month next year.
- Most of all, implement.
Act upon what your staff suggests. Nothing demonstrates your
commitment to this approach better than a staff suggestion
recognized, rewarded and immediately put to work.
Are there even more practical ways to improve your company's
suggestion scheme? Sure there are. Got a suggestion?
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