Posts tagged 'cross-cultural':

The Connection

April 5, 2011

Posted by in Blog, Thought Leadership with no comments

I recall a turning point in my career in Mexico in late 1996 when I decided to search for ways to “connect” with my team.  You see, I was the typical expatriate.  I knew what I was doing.  I represented the corporate headquarters in Montreal, Canada.  It was “our” product that we were moving to a manufacturing facility in Mexico.  I had all the answers.  After all, I was brought in to teach them how to succeed in manufacturing our products faster, better and less costly.  I had to have all the answers, right?  Well, this turning point is when I learned an important lesson about what things the team needed to do to succeed versus how to go about doing them.  It all started with a discussion with a trusted colleague of mine, Hector Guerra.

I asked Hector what it would take the do a better job of getting the employees on my team to do what I wanted them to do.  I just wasn’t sure if they were getting it.  I also wasn’t sure that some of them were trying to get it.  It seemed as if they were waiting me out until the next boss came along.  Sure I was moving fast because that’s always been in my nature to operate this way.  But something was missing and I wasn’t sure what it was.  Hector smiled at my questions and responded, “Throw a party at your place for the team and their spouses”.  “That’s ridiculous”, I said.  “How’s a party going to help gain the trust of the team?”  “Trust me” was all he said, with the sly smile that he’s known for. Read more »

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The Preponderance of Belief

March 23, 2011

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About a year after I began a long term expatriate assignment in Monterrey, Mexico, one of the employees handed me a book by Eva Kras.  She had spent twenty five years in Mexico and documented in an interesting way the fictional story of an expatriate working there.  It was uncanny, as I was flipping through the pages, how I could relate to this guy.  He was about getting results while on assignment and then going back home in two years.  Those around him knew it, too.  He rarely invested the time to get to know the people around him and considered it a waste of time.  After all, US leaders often believe that if we take our eyes off the “ball”, results will suffer.  I’m here to tell you that I was grateful to have read that book when I did.  It represented a turning point for me not only as a leader in Mexico, but also as a person. Read more »

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Leading through a Crisis

March 1, 2011

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Just before arriving in Puerto Rico where I was to start an assignment after closing a factory in Mexico, I learned what I was about to face.  The campus I was going to be responsible for walked out on a non-union strike.  I asked legal counsel in Puerto Rico if this was a normal occurrence on the Island and they told me it was absolutely unique.  No company of this size ever faced this kind of situation.  My boss in Corporate told me he’d completely understand if I no longer wanted to take the job based on recent events and that if I desired, he’d tear up the contract.  I told him that I couldn’t imagine it being any worse and I thought that, given my previous six years of training in the culture in Mexico, I could figure a way to do this – AND that it would be fun in the process.  He thought I was insane!  But I’ve always thought that crisis was opportunity to get a better result and this is an example that proves it.

Not long after starting on the job, I recall a factory worker approaching me on the floor and wanting to meet with me.  He was a polite and sincere.   I told him that now was a good time and to tell me what was on his mind.  He proceeded to tell me that he was a temporary employee and had been so for 4 years.  He added that he had 200 peers in a similar position, telling me that this practice was common.  Bells and whistles starting going off in my head as I knew that labor laws in Puerto Rico were similar to US and that it was not a acceptable to keep temporary workers for more than a year without providing fringe benefits.  We were on shaky legal, and in my opinion, moral grounds.  He asked if I could look into this and help them resolve it. Read more »

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“Balance” is the key

February 24, 2011

Posted by in Blog, Thought Leadership with no comments

When I arrived in Mexico in 1996, I recall the focus on results that the plant manager had at the time. It was 24 X 7 results, results and more results. We had midnight staff meetings. We measured everything from on-time shipments to electricity usage. We took corrective actions at the slightest sign of unfavorable trends in our endless metrics. We spent a lot of time making sure that everyone impacted knew the “score”… not that there’s anything wrong with that. It was critical at the time to focus on results. After all, we had just moved a product line to Mexico from Canada into a plant without resources in place and without an established Enterprise Requirements Planning (ERP) System. It was hard work to say the least getting all the moving parts in place.

Although success was achieved through acceptable results in the first year, the business turned when we also started to find ways to “balance” the approach. We started to celebrate successes. We publicly recognized employees that went above and beyond to get the results we were after. We tied bonuses to productivity. Once the employees saw the leaders as “buena gente” (“good people”), they started to make strides unlike before. They became more willing to get things done, fixed or improved. With this environment, ideas to improve product cost for example tripled year-over-year. Performance metrics improved at a pace twice that of before.

In the end, leaders can find success by driving to the metric and making sure employees are doing what they need to do to obtain results. That success will be short-lived unless the environment to sustain it fosters a partnership between the leaders and the employees. That partnership will ensure that the employees are willing to work to find ways to get the results the organization needs to compete in a tough market.

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