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LEADERSHIP: AVOIDING BLACK-SWAN DISEASE

published:2010-07-26 01:00:00

Nassim Nicholas Taleb, the best-selling economist and author of The Black Swan, is famous for his arresting insights. His recent postscript to The Black Swan is no exception: presenting ten lessons from the Global Financial Crisis. Above all, he recommends learning from “Mother Nature” – by making our

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LEADERSHIP: FOR SUCCESS – AND HAPPINESS

published:2010-07-19 01:00:00

Like Professor Clayton Christensen, I’ve faced a life threatening cancer and found it a crucible for clarifying my thinking about what’s important. The day

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LEADERSHIP: TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT - BUT HOW?

published:2010-07-13 01:00:00

Due to a backlog of new registrations to work through this Potshot has been delayed by a day. Our apology to our regular readers

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LEADERSHIP: THAT ONE KEY LESSON

published:2010-07-07 01:00:00

How do you rate yourself on the following five actions? Showing self-awareness?. Demonstrating authenticity, integrity and compassion? Understanding and engaging people as

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LEADERSHIP: STAND TALL AS THE BEST MANUFACTURER

Maximise quality, productivity, margins - as well as customer and staff loyalty
Eradicate shoddiness, wastage, returns, delays; and, staff and customer turnover

My father had an engineering business - making furnaces and other products.  And, I worked summers in factories, while studying engineering.  So, I love that hot, noisy world of clanging metal as it's formed and worked with presses and punches.

Even then, people talked about the decline of manufacturing.  And, still do.  But, we still need bricks and bikes, pots and pans, cars and baby carriages.  Yes, more are now made elsewhere - but equally, things are produced here, which weren't then.

A friend of mine manufactures high quality chocolate.  Another, digital kiosks (to help customers find their way around shopping centres).  Another, fashion wear.

But one thing is certain.  Manufacturers face tough (often global) competition: across multiple dimensions of quality, cost, delivery and so on.  And, internally, each has to manage costs and productivity.  And, control their supply chain to avoid stock-outs and stoppages; and, avoid tying up capital in excess raw materials, work in progress or finished product.  And, there's all those machines to be kept busy as many hours a day as possible.  It's not a game for the faint-hearted.

So, if you don't want to go broke, leadership is probably more critical in manufacturing than in most businesses.  Understanding your market and the drivers of competitive advantage.  Defining strategy and goals.  Choosing the right business model.  Attending to customers.  And, employing and developing staff.

But, how do you do all of this – and bring it together in one place?

Here's how!

Categories for this Potshot:

Understand your marketplace, Build competitive advantage, Develop plans and actions lists, Attend to customers, Develop staff and succession,



Dr. Timothy Pascoe AM
PhD (Cambridge), MBA (Harvard), BE & BEc (Adelaide)
Creator, V|E|C|T|O|R Leadership®

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