{"id":4090,"date":"1970-10-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1970-10-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/october-1970-vol-51-no-10-from-paper-plans-to-action\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T00:51:28","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T00:51:28","slug":"october-1970-vol-51-no-10-from-paper-plans-to-action","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/october-1970-vol-51-no-10-from-paper-plans-to-action\/","title":{"rendered":"October 1970 &#8211; VOL. 51, No. 10 &#8211; From Paper Plans to Action"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">Like a sheet of music, paper plans                     are ineffectual unless performed. The conductors who bring                     business plans into action and conduct their performance are                     the middle-management people, supervisors, foremen and department                     overseers.<\/p>\n<p> The committee stage has been passed; the shuffling of papers                     has ended; the big picture has been drawn: now we get down                     to the bolts and nuts of production.<\/p>\n<p>The man charged with bridging the gap between the laboratory                     or the draughting room and the shipping door still has planning                     to do, but of a different sort. He has a written description                     of what the finished product is to be; the outlay of money                     and time and energy has been computed; now he must take the                     podium and direct his department&#8217;s performance with skill                     and sensitivity so as to interpret the planners&#8217; score successfully                     and with some felicity.<\/p>\n<p>The three persistent problems of middle-management are:                     the efficient application of technical skill; the systematic                     ordering of operations; and the organization of sustained                     co-operation, called teamwork. If these are out of balance                     no other virtues will compensate and the operation as a whole                     will not be successful.<\/p>\n<p>This is the place where middle-management ability shows                     itself. One of the chief skills is understanding the plan                     to the point of accepting it as being workable. Some men may                     greet a plan with the hoary statement: &#8220;it is all very well                     in theory but it won&#8217;t do in practice&#8221;. That is false reasoning                     which gets one nowhere. If a thing will not work in practice                     then there is a mistake in the theory. Something has been                     overlooked and not allowed for. The plan had better go back                     for revision.<\/p>\n<p>There is need to interpret the plans in accord with their                     purpose. Sometimes this requires modification of them, but                     with care. We do not know precisely how he carried out his                     orders, but obviously Noah did not do his job exactly in accordance                     with the plan given him. If the story of the Great Flood be                     taken literally, it is pointed out by Mark Twain in <em>Letters                     from the Earth<\/em>, he would have had to collect 146,000 kinds                     of birds and beasts and freshwater creatures, and more than                     two million species of insect in his 550-foot long ark. Obviously,                     as a middle-management man he used his head in achieving the                     purpose of preserving animal life upon the earth.<\/p>\n<h3>Adopting and adapting<\/h3>\n<p>Methods which cannot be adopted and used &#8220;as is&#8221; can be                     adapted with surprising ease by adding a personal twist. But                     if a vital change has to be made in the plan for a major operation,                     then the whole plan must be re-examined from start to finish.<\/p>\n<p>Field Marshal Montgomery stated this principle like this:                     The master plan must never be so rigid that the Commander-in-Chief                     cannot vary it to suit the changing tactical situation; but                     nobody else may be allowed to change it at will.<\/p>\n<p>The start of activity on a plan is not the time to be timid,                     but to face up to difficulties and get all the help needed.                     This does not indicate distrust of one&#8217;s self, but common                     sense. Churchill sent a memo to the Home Secretary about expediting                     a bit of business. He added: &#8220;inviting me to assist you in                     suppressing obstruction.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Plans are subject to change in detail, sometimes because                     a customer has changed his mind about the pattern or size;                     sometimes because of executive second thoughts; and sometimes                     because of difficulties met in execution. Part of nearly every                     plan has to be re-edited in the light of events as action                     proceeds.<\/p>\n<p>You may have been over the same drill a dozen times, but                     it does no harm to review it once in a while. If you learn                     that you have made progress and are headed in the right direction                     that is heartening. If, on the other hand, your review reveals                     that you have deviated from the straight path, or that your                     time schedule is lagging, such a discovery saves you from                     the mortification of ending up at the wrong place or at the                     wrong time.<\/p>\n<h3>About getting going<\/h3>\n<p>You cannot begin a task effectively by coasting. Start with                     energy. Initial inertia is a law of all life. It takes more                     effort to get going than to keep going.<\/p>\n<p>Fortune does not smile on those who, having prepared to                     do a job, hesitate. Dr. Donald A. Laird wrote in his book                     <em>The Technique of Getting Things Done <\/em>(McGraw-Hill Book                     Co., 1947): &#8220;Don&#8217;t look at a thing: start it. Don&#8217;t put it                     off a day: start it. Don&#8217;t pretend you must think it over:                     start it. Don&#8217;t start halfheartedly: put everything you can                     muster into your start.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>When taking up a task that is mainly a series of acts all                     of which you have previously handled well, you ought to strike                     your pace in a few seconds or minutes. If you spend five minutes                     in warming up to a job easily performed and thoroughly mastered,                     the chances are that there is something wrong with you, the                     job, or the environment.<\/p>\n<p>Closely akin to procrastinating, or putting off, is dithering.                     Some people habitually putter around instead of getting down                     to work. They should copy and paste on the wall a saying of                     King Claudius in <em>Hamlet<\/em>: &#8220;that we would do we should                     do when we would.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>There is no enjoyment in putting things off. We get no pleasure                     out of postponing our chores. The undone things nag at us.                     We risk losing our self-respect. Moreover, when an accumulation                     of things to be done descends inescapably upon us we encounter                     unending ills.<\/p>\n<p>Theodore Roosevelt is remembered because he preached the                     strenuous life. But his own energetic handling of his many                     duties was not a matter of temperament and muscle only: he                     had a systematic organization of his working day.<\/p>\n<p>There are two hints that may be useful in overcoming the                     common fault of procrastination. The first is: commit yourself.                     Having promised performance by a set date, you find yourself                     in honour bound to fulfil it. The second is: do not tackle                     an accumulation of work like a bulldozer. Break the pile down                     into small, accessible units, and grapple with them one by                     one. It has been said that the best way to peel a sack of                     potatoes is to start on the first one.<\/p>\n<p>Having defined your goals you may or you may not need to                     write plans for your part of the job. Taking pains at this                     stage, checking even small details in the blue-print, helps                     toward efficient work. At least make a note of the things                     to be accomplished and indicate priorities.<\/p>\n<p>Every part of every job lends itself to listing in two columns                     on a sheet of paper: steps in the job, and, opposite each                     step, the key points about which to be careful.<\/p>\n<p>It is not necessary to write minute instructions for every                     job. Avoid needless work in the transition from plans to accomplishment.                     But if there is some part of the job that is specially intricate                     or carries particular danger of error, make a detailed description                     of that piece of work.<\/p>\n<h3>Making a schedule<\/h3>\n<p>When a plan reaches the action stage there is likely to                     be a convulsive scene. It is necessary to assign proportions                     and priorities as far as possible. Unless progress is planned                     reasonably well, confusion is likely to occur.<\/p>\n<p>The major schedule will be set in the master planning: completion                     by such-and-such a date. There remains the subsidiary scheduling                     so that all parts fit into the ultimate result. This divides                     the job into individual operations which some foremen call                     &#8220;subjobs.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>When you provide yourself with a complete picture of the                     work to be done you will not feel under compulsion to press                     all subjobs with equal vigour. You can pick the parts that                     need to be hurried along. Some will run in parallel: others                     must follow one another.<\/p>\n<p>Distribute the functions involved in the jobs according                     to time. Dating back from the target completion date, what                     must be done today, tomorrow? Sequence is vital. If the nature                     of the job does not dictate in what order operations are to                     be done, perform the most essential things first.<\/p>\n<p>Write down the five or six essential segments of the job.                     Then number them in order of their importance. This will take                     about five minutes of your time. Now tackle the subjobs one                     by one.<\/p>\n<p>What is the advantage? You are always sure that you are                     working on the most important things; your mind is not cluttered                     up with worry about whether you are doing the right thing.<\/p>\n<p>If the job has several sub-divisions, keep a memo on every                     one. Memory is not a substitute for a memorandum.<\/p>\n<p>Sometimes a chart is the proper sort of schedule. A chart                     shows everyone where the action is and what progress has been                     made.<\/p>\n<p>Some managers and foremen use what they call the Critical                     Path method. This shows by arrows how the project activities                     relate to one another, the time they must start, and the completion                     dead-line for each. This reduces idle manpower to a minimum                     and reveals in advance where there are possible trouble spots.<\/p>\n<p>Elaborate control boards are used in some offices and factories                     to keep track of progress. Every individual can have his own                     very simple control system. All he may need are three spikes                     marked: &#8220;to be done, doing, done.&#8221; He will move assignment                     sheets or memos from one to another so that he is not carrying                     in his head all that he has on his hands.<\/p>\n<h3>Staying on the beam<\/h3>\n<p>Airplane navigators used to have a system they called &#8220;deduced                     reckoning&#8221;. This, which is still at the base of navigational                     science used on steamers, submarines and air liners, is described                     in a technical dictionary as &#8220;calculation of the position                     of the ship from the speed and time from its last known position.&#8221;                     It means laying out your work and then keeping track of how                     fast you are going, in what direction, and of when you slow                     down, speed up, or change course.<\/p>\n<p>Such a system contributes to orderliness. When you work                     in an efficient way, you solve more problems, make fewer experiments,                     incur fewer incorrect reactions, use less time and expend                     less energy.<\/p>\n<p>Everyone, whether in factory or executive office, will study                     the efficiency of his environment and tools. Do they save                     time and steps and prevent fumbling? O. J. Greenway, Management                     Consultant of Honeywell Inc., St. Petersburg, handling the                     production of inertial guidance systems for missiles and rockets,                     described the benefits neatly: &#8220;The quality of orderliness                     and cleanliness is an indication of the efficiency and effectiveness                     of operations.&#8221; And 2,500 years earlier Confucius declared:                     &#8220;Order is Heaven&#8217;s only law.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The workshop arrangements are important in doing the job.                     A well-arranged office, desk, work-bench or tool board contributes                     to efficiency. The best magic for the supervisor is to put                     useful tools where they can be easily and quickly found. Streamline                     your work with as few hindrances to its flow as possible.                     Photographs and bric-a-brac on a desk may add to its picturesqueness,                     but they are obstacles and distractions.<\/p>\n<p>To do a job competently, seek simplicity of layout. The                     day of the massive roll-top desk has gone, but many an office                     is crowded with needless files full of records, books in inconvenient                     corners, and trays of letters, trade papers and documents                     either awaiting action or put there for storage. Some people,                     even those with important managerial jobs, seem to think that                     an office strewn with magazines and papers waiting to be read                     adds to the impression of busyness and importance they wish                     to give callers.<\/p>\n<h3>As a supervisor<\/h3>\n<p>You stand at the point where planning and theory terminate                     in the cutting-edge of direct action. The executives have                     prepared a statement of what they want done, or the customers                     have ordered the goods they desire: these are the objectives.                     Now the thing to do is to outline the steps to be taken and                     to take the first step. Set up milestones to tell you how                     far you have progressed and how far you still have to go.                     Be alert to foresee bottle-necks and be ready to move around                     them.<\/p>\n<p>From here on, you must interpret and direct. Business is                     not run on the old town meeting basis, with everyone having                     a say about what is to be done and how the project is to be                     carried out. As the First Murderer said to the Duke of Gloucester                     in <em>The Tragedy of King Richard III<\/em>: &#8220;We will not stand                     to prate, talkers are no good doers: be assur&#8217;d we come to                     use our hands, and not our tongues.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Brief everyone who is concerned in the project as far as                     is necessary to assure integration of effort. This is particularly                     necessary when several departments or sections are affected.                     As in a play, give the actors cues so that everyone knows                     when to come on stage and start doing his bit.<\/p>\n<p>You will have assured yourself before this point is reached                     that you have all the factual information you need in order                     to do a professional job. It is not wise for the supervisor                     to have to go back for additional information after he has                     started the job. By that time the planners have other things                     on their minds.<\/p>\n<p>You will have checked to see that the necessary equipment                     is available and in good condition and that the needed supplies                     are on hand or on the way. You cannot afford to sit back waiting                     for a dilatory supplier to act.<\/p>\n<p>Share your work. You already know the strengths and weaknesses                     of your organization. Now you need to delegate to others,                     those who will do the work; and co-operate with people in                     other departments.<\/p>\n<p>It is good practice to deliberate with caution but act with                     decision and promptness. It is wise also to develop the habit                     of precision, which helps toward getting things done correctly                     so that they do not have to be done over.<\/p>\n<p>Organized and disciplined working habits will contribute                     mightily toward your success. Persistence, sometimes called                     picturesquely &#8220;sticktoitiveness&#8221;, sees the job through to                     completion. The tendency to persist in spite of all hindrances,                     discouragements and &#8220;impossibilities&#8221; is the sterling mark                     of the best supervisors.<\/p>\n<h3>Are plans working out&nbsp;?<\/h3>\n<p>Hitherto you have considered operations on the paper plane                     where things behave as you wish them to behave. Now you will                     find out whether the laws of behaviour you ascribed to them                     in your schedule hold good in practice. Timing a job, for                     example, is not always as simple as paperwork makes it seem.                     Is the time being spent on subjobs in proportion to their                     importance? Are there unrelated duties stealing time from                     this project? Are daily routine or casual tasks distracting                     your mind?<\/p>\n<p>Make it a matter of custom to analyze your actions, to pare                     them down to the bones. Consider paperwork: that bane of many                     a supervisor&#8217;s life. It is a good rule to dispose of a piece                     of paper when you first pick it up. Put it in the same place                     as similar items; write a name or &#8220;file&#8221; on it and put it                     in the &#8220;out&#8221; tray; or write on it &#8220;date file&#8221; and a date,                     and leave it to your secretary or filing clerk to lay it on                     your desk on the designated day.<\/p>\n<p>Getting things done in this way must not be confused with                     petty bustling movement. Some people become addicted to the                     opium of activity, and lose themselves in it. Others confuse                     accomplishment with busyness, and think that if they be ever                     moving they must needs advance and achieve. Activity is not                     always the opposite of idleness. A man is idle when he is                     doing something less useful than he could be doing.<\/p>\n<p>Having a pattern of orderliness helps you when difficulties                     arise. Life would be very dull if it presented no problems.                     But instead of waiting for them apprehensively try to prepare                     for them by advance thinking. Methodical anticipation is just                     as important as, and in many ways better than, the capability                     to handle crises.<\/p>\n<p>When a job does not move toward completion as on greased                     skids, there is no advantage in panic and no benefit in melancholy                     mumblings. Dig through all the reasons for the slow-down until                     you pin down the one that counts.<\/p>\n<p>When your work is interrupted or interfered with by outside                     influences, size up the situation and analyze it; act decisively                     to get back on the beam and get your job running smoothly                     again; learn by the incident and take steps to prevent a recurrence.                     Draw upon all available resources. Use your own talent to                     the full, but do not be so high and mighty that you think                     you can do everything yourself.<\/p>\n<p>When you have had a job in process for a reasonable length                     of time, take a look at it to learn if there is an easier                     or more efficient way of doing it. This perceptive look is                     what creates the remarkable insight a manager displays, a                     new look at things that produces improvements in layout, work                     ways and techniques that seem like wizardry to the unenlightened.<\/p>\n<h3>The operational level<\/h3>\n<p>On the top planning level there is room for imagination,                     invention and the spirit of adventure: when the plan reaches                     the desk or the work-bench there is room for ingenuity and                     skill of the old-fashioned artisan sort. Get a fix on what                     is required, then go to work on the details that affect your                     part of the job.<\/p>\n<p>Group the activities so that one follows the other with                     least disruption and effort. If you have a letter to write,                     dig up the necessary facts before dictating &#8220;Dear Sir&#8221;. If                     you have a carpentry job to do, think it through from beginning                     to completion and collect what is needed on the site of the                     job. The best mechanic will be the one able to organize his                     jobs, know where to find necessary information, and know when                     to ask for guidance.<\/p>\n<p>Perform the work in the most efficient and economical way                     possible. Set your speed to suit the job and the conditions                     under which you are working. An even pace, rather than a series                     of spurts, makes the best use of your energy so that you effect                     most with the least effort.<\/p>\n<p>Whether on the middle-management level or at the desk or                     work-bench, develop professionalism. No matter what your job                     may be you can develop some form of art or achieve pride in                     craftsmanship. Resolve to put the stamp of your own spirit                     upon the work and to be above the mediocrity that satisfies                     a man who is not a real pro. Even in the Stone Age there were                     masters of their craft who were proud of the hatchet heads                     they chipped from flints.<\/p>\n<p>A professional enjoys what he is working at. He knows its                     value and meaning and he experiences that perennial nobleness                     in work that gets things done. The word &#8220;efficiency&#8221; comes                     from the Latin &#8220;efficio&#8221;, meaning &#8220;I do thoroughly, completely,                     triumphantly.&#8221; The highest efficiency is attained when a given                     amount of energy is so wisely directed that a task is completed                     in the least possible space and after the lapse of the least                     possible time.<\/p>\n<p>All the precepts in the systems manuals are worthless unless                     a man has the spirit to make them work. This is a law of life                     as old as the first caveman&#8217;s fire. Emerson put it into a                     line: &#8220;Nothing great was ever achieved without enthusiasm.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Enthusiasm means having real interest, and everyone knows                     what having a real interest in an endeavour can accomplish.                     One&#8217;s spirits rise when action starts, and there is an enlivening                     feeling of zest. Enthusiasm is interest plus energy, a wish                     to do something and the spirit to get on with it. It is doing                     things: not talking about them. As Theseus, King of Athens,                     said in one of Sophocles&#8217; plays: &#8220;Nor am I careful to adorn                     my life with words of praise, but with the light of deeds.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>A great satisfaction<\/h3>\n<p>The satisfaction to be derived from completing a constructive                     enterprise is one of the most massive that life has to offer.<\/p>\n<p>The tests are: (1) Does the piece of work please the person                     who did it? (2) Does it satisfy the person for whom it was                     done? (3) Does it accomplish the purpose for which it was                     designed? If it has these three merits it is good. If, in                     addition, it has virtue in itself, then it is excellent, thereby                     adding grace to the doer, the recipient, and the work.<\/p>\n<p>Men and women who can do things in that spirit are in great                     demand. They have the quality of concentrating upon goals                     attainable in the given situation and solving immediate problems                     as they arise.<\/p>\n<p>In every walk of scholarly or practical life, and at every                     level of work, those who get things done are preferred by                     society to those who do not. The prizes of life go to those                     who erect buildings, decipher ancient inscriptions, solve                     equations, build machines, improve farm production, discover                     a health-giving drug, or govern a province or the nation,                     rather than to those who convince themselves that these tasks                     cannot be done because of inevitable difficulties.<\/p>\n<p>In the Olympic Games it is not the most beautiful or the                     strongest or the most imaginative or the most talkative people                     who win the crowns, but those who actually enter the lists                     as combatants and do things. To get from paper plans to action                     one must commit oneself. It is unjust and unreasonable to                     be unwilling to pay this price.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[50],"class_list":["post-4090","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-50"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>October 1970 - VOL. 51, No. 10 - From Paper Plans to Action - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/october-1970-vol-51-no-10-from-paper-plans-to-action\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"October 1970 - VOL. 51, No. 10 - From Paper Plans to Action - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Like a sheet of music, paper plans are ineffectual unless performed. 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The conductors who bring business plans into action and conduct their performance are the middle-management people, supervisors, foremen and department overseers. 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