Never Say “Do More With Less” Again
This is a guest post from Michael Kanazawa.
When things get stressful, we often throw out phrases automatically to try and get beyond the issues for the moment without really doing what is right. But often these phrases don’t do much to help in the moment and don’t’ solve the true issues either. There are a few sayings that we hear in business all of the time that are about as ineffective as parents yelling at their children, “do it because I said so.” Even worse, these sayings in business cause people to make poor decisions and undermine their own leadership potential by repeating these phrases without really thinking about what they mean.
One of the most popular and most damaging of these sayings is demanding that people need to do “more with less.” This one is being used a lot these days because of the tough economic cycle. The most common use is to try to motivate employees to stretch further when budget and headcount cuts have reduced resource levels. The problem this causes is that people won’t have an ability to get it all done. But without a focus on priorities, each person may select different priorities across different parts of the organization. People are spread too thin and can’t finish any single project or task with quality and diligence. The result is what we refer to as corporate A.D.D. and it is a root cause of poor execution.
In our book, BIG Ideas to BIG Results, we suggest a replacement to this old and favored saying of doing “more with less.” We suggest that when budget or headcount reductions are necessary to first say, “we need to do more ON less,” meaning more resources, more staffing, and more focus on fewer initiatives. The result of this approach is a prioritization of the most important and high impact initiatives and getting the new levels of resources focused for delivering results on those top priorities.
Mark Hurd at HP is currently showing how this is done. A recently announced adjustment to their R&D programs is going to reduce a portfolio of 150 projects down to some “big bets” that number just 20-30 at the most. Their goal is to continue at similar resource levels but reduce the number and scope of the projects to for greater market impact. Rather than spreading resources thin, the idea is to concentrate resources on selective projects. In our book we outline another example of an entire company that was struggling to grow after reaching a few hundred million in sales through three business units. After reducing to just one business unit and delivering more depth of solutions to customers in just that one market segment, they were able to grow to multiple billions in revenues.
So next time you are on the spot and are asked to reduce staffing and budget levels, don’t fall into the automatic excuse and mentality of simply demanding “more with less” from your team. Take the responsibility to step up as a leader, determine the top priorities, and realign resources at the right levels that will ensure success and the ability to get from Big Ideas to Big Results and let’s get rid of an outdated and ineffective business phrase for good.
Michael Kanazawa is co-author of the book BIG Ideas to BIG Results, and has a blog by the same name.
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POSTED IN: guest posts, leadership, teamwork
7 opinions for Never Say “Do More With Less” Again
David Zinger
Mar 26, 2008 at 6:40 am
Michael,
I love the reframing of doing more with less to doing more on less. It is not just a meaning shift but a focus and effort shift. I will focus on doing more on less in the coming months.
David
Mike DeWitt
Mar 26, 2008 at 9:48 am
Michael,
Nice turn of phrase. Having spent lots of time figuring out how to “do more”, it’s vital early on to figure out what we’re going to STOP doing.
Mike
Do More With Less? | Cube Rules
Mar 26, 2008 at 1:07 pm
[…] Slacker Manager offered up this same idea with a great tag line: “we need to do more ON less,” meaning more resources, more staffing, and more focus on fewer […]
Scott
Mar 27, 2008 at 2:53 am
Where I work management LOVES using the ‘ol business “phrase de jour” without knowing the meaning behind it! So when we have our quarterly meeting I bring chest-waders and BS Deflectors for ear protection.
Mark Stover
Mar 28, 2008 at 9:12 am
Doing more on less is a very clever way of restating the old quality maxim from the late Joseph Juran - “focus on the vital few, not the trivial many.” Toyota uses strategy deployment to help people focus on the vital few so they can do more on less. Thanks for the fresh perspective, Michael.
David Zinger
Mar 29, 2008 at 8:40 am
These are very helpful reminders about focus and efforts.
Michael Kanazawa
Mar 29, 2008 at 4:12 pm
Thanks for the perspectives and the reference to Juran. Next time you hear that phrase, see if you can help give the person this replacement as a better alternative.
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