Profit
Based Management Environment
Explanation
Many
firms suffer from a management environment that has been
shaped more by client demand than by careful planning. Ultimately
client demands are an inevitable force in shaping the delivery
of services, but even clients are not well served with lack
of planning, in spite of the appearance (and sometimes reality)
that the client is running the firm from the outside.
The
management environment at most firms is deadline-based rather
than profit-based (or budget-based). In other words, more
attention is paid to when something is due than to keeping
the project on budget (internally) so that it yields a profit.
As
the components of the project move through the firm, what
pushes it is an upcoming meeting, deadline, or delivery
date. For example, an employee is handed a job and said:
"I need this for a meeting at 9:30am tomorrow."
In a profit-based environment the same hand-off would be
phrased: "I need this for a meeting at 9:30am tomorrow.
By the way, we've estimated about 3.5 hours for this section.
Keep track of your time and we'll look at it once this project
is done. I want to make sure we are estimating correctly,
you have the training and tools you need, and I'm not over-
promising to the client."Having a profit-based management
environment relates directly to quality of life issues,
too.Without one, a) details will frequently slip through
the cracks, disappointing clients; b) no one will be able
to do a "mind dump" of those details that are
slipping through the cracks; and c) your firm will not achieve
the level of profitability it could.
Does
your firm suffer from this malady? There are two ways to
quickly gauge the extent to which your firm is suffering
from the lack of a PBME. The first is to check your billable
efficiency (choose the appropriate test at www.recourses.com)
by answering six simple questions. The second is to hand
everyone in your shop a slip of paper with one question:
"Who is responsible for keeping projects on budget"
If the answer is not consistent (and preferably a production
traffic manager). you have a problem.
The Basis for a Project Based Management Environment
If
you want to transition your firm to a PBME, there are several
components that will be critical to making that transition
successful.
First,
and most important, you will need a strong motivator. This
is usually anger at the fact that you have been "subsidizing"
clients at personal expense to your quality of life. It's
accompanied by overwork, underpay, and the realization that
client loyalty is thin indeed. Clients are not the enemies,
but they are also not friends.
Second,
you will need confidence that you are worth every penny
of the hourly rate you have set. Though everyone agrees
with this verbally, in reality they don't believe it. How
else can we explain our charging practices? Confident people
get paid for what they do.
Third,
you will need to move from denial of the problem to actual
measurement of your progress (see the appropriate test at
www.recourses.com ).
Fourth,
you will need to create a common language --a common vision
to keep this quest a corporate priority. Without involvement
from all quarters, change will not be as deep or lasting
as it could be. For example, communicate the purpose/program
very clearly. Build consensus. And consider offering incentives
to the entire staff, or at least those most in a position
to affect the outcome.
Components of a Project Based Management Environment
A
PBME is woven through the fabric of any particular management
environment. None of the individual threads are critical,
but together they form a strong, flexible, lasting system
that brings profit to your company:
"
The parameters of every project need to be described in
writing. The client should see this description and agree
to it (even if by default).
"
Determine a budget that addresses all the components that
will factor into the project. Do this by asking those involved
how long they think their portion will take. Then adjust
this based on how accurate their input has been in the past.
"
After you've arrived at a total figure, step back and look
at the big picture. The component parts may add up to 400
hours, but you know it won't take that long. Usually you'll
need to adjust the time back down.
"
Compare this figure with historical figures from your timekeeping
archives. Additionally, compare it with trade industry surveys
for similar projects.
"
After arriving at a final number, provide the client with
a budget in which most of the categories have been collapsed
into a few general categories. Include, of course, theparameters
that have been agreed to.
"
Once the client signs off on a project (whether it's part
of a retainer or not), use the expanded budget to allocate
time to specific components of the project.
"
After the project is complete, bill the client "to
estimate," using the same few categories. If they have
asked for (and agreed to) additional work outside the parameters
of the project, list those charges separately.
Those
are the basics of estimating, though each step is important.
Without an estimate that will compensate your firm for the
real hours expended, there is no hope of creating a profit-based
management environment. It starts here.
But
assume, then, that the client has accepted your price. How
do you ensure that the project is indeed done within the
budget and contributes profit to the bottom line?
"
Make sure that your definition of "billable" time
is sufficiently broad. I.e., any time specifically tied
to a project is billable. That includes travel time, meeting
time, planning time, and coordination time.
"
All employee time should be entered, whether billable or
not. In other words, (in broad categories) employees should
account for their time. The total time entered should roughly
match the total time they are in the office.
"
This time must be recorded as it happens, preferably in
15 minute increments, in some fashion that is easy for the
employee. Time is either entered into a database directly
or turned in on paper before they leave the office. The
goal is daily compliance, not weekly reconstruction.
"
Yes, principals must comply in the same fashion. No one
will take the process seriously unless everyone participates.
For those employees who resist, try positive or negative
reinforcement. For example, you might buy pizza once a week
if everyone turns in their sheets. Those that don't might
get penalized for every day they miss the deadline.
"
All timekeeping entries should truly reflect the time spent,
even if it seems inordinate by the person who records the
time. In other words, there should be no discounting of
time at the entry stage. If discounting is to take place,
it should be a management decision, and should take place
at the invoicing stage. If a computer crashes, record that
time with a note of explanation.
"
After all, computers typically slow up every project. On
the other hand, they also speed up most projects. Consider
it a cost of doing business. If there are unusual slowdowns,
then still record the time with a more complete definition.
But if employees discount their time at the entry stage,
you will never know how long projects are taking. They discount
it then (without telling you), and then you discount it
again when the project is invoiced. We have found that most
principals think this isn't taking place...when in fact
it is.
"
The data should be managed in a software application specifically
designed for this purpose (see other article on management
software at www.recourses.com).
"
Responsibility for monitoring project budgets on a daily
basis should be centralized, even if it is not a full-time
job. This is usually done through a production manager or
traffic coordinator.
"
Responsibility should not be distributed among several individuals
who "traffic their own jobs."
"
At each hand-off, as much attention is given to budget for
that segment as the impending deadline.
"
Don't allow the person interfacing with the client to make
on-site promises. For one thing, they have no way of knowing
how to balance capacity as different people make promises
for a larger labor pool. For another thing, promises made
on-site, in front of the client, are more likely to be in
the client's favor, at the expense of your firm. Finally,
the very same promise is more readily accepted if everyone
has a part in making it. Employees rightfully don't appreciate
commitments being made on their behalf, particularly if
it impinges on their personal life.
"
If the client strays outside the original parameters of
the budget say: "I think we can do that, but before
I can say for sure I need to check with the office. As soon
as I know how much longer it will take and how much more
it will cost, I'II call you." Document their acceptance,
and then have those doing the work note the time spent as
a "change order" that will be invoiced beyond
the estimate.
"
Always invoice promptly. The only thing worse than a late
invoice is a late invoice with unexplained charges. The
best time to acquire client approval is when they desperately
need something, and then again when they are thrilled to
have received it in time.
"
If you don't think you can ask the client for all the time
you spent on a project, show it on the invoice anyway to
begin informing them of the true cost - they'll be prepared
to see a higher cost next time around. Plus, if you've done
the work, you need to get the credit for "contributing"
it to the project.
"
After every project, have a 5 minute debrief with everyone
who worked on the project. Explain what was estimated, how
much time it actually took, and ask for suggestions to improve
the project next time.
"
This may seem like the antithesis of an environment conducive
to creativity. In our experience, though, good management
contributes to creativity. It also allows you to do better
work, achieve consistent profitability, and generate respect
for the creative process.
This
article was written by ReCourses. For more information check
out www.recourses.com