“It’s just how we do things around here.”
I still recall the conversation
between the Hewlett-Packard worker and the Tellabs manufacturing VP. It was 1993, and we were on trip to HP’s
Loveland Manufacturing Center, a key production facility in northern Colorado.
Back then I sold HP test equipment in Illinois, and we were hosting a group of
Tellabs executives on a benchmarking visit. My sales colleagues and I were building
relationships and sharing manufacturing “best practices” with the hopes it
would motivate them to buy more HP gear.
We were touring the
production area and one of my customers pulled aside a passing worker, asking
him about some charts hanging on the wall. The guy stopped for a few minutes and
pointed to the diagrams, describing what each meant. “This one shows the count
of defects by type. It looks like they were having a problem with the solder
application. And over here, it looks like the adjustment dropped the defect
rate by about 30%.”
A bulletin board labeled
“PDCA Storyboard” prompted the interaction. A management presentation
earlier in the day talked about the division’s Total Quality Management
journey. HP used “Plan-Do-Check-Act” as its corporate improvement method, and
the PDCA Storyboard showed the step-by-step progression. The presenter had made
the bold statement that the quality practice was everywhere. It had become entrenched
in the division’s operating system.
The Tellabs VP smiled and
said, “So you’re saying you don’t work here but you can tell what this operation
is doing?”
“Yeah. I’m on one of these quality
teams in my area. We use PDCA to increase our yields, too.”
“Come on. You’re not just a ‘plant’ walking
by, an expert trying to impress us?” the executive chided him.
His response was working-man
authentic. “No,” he said, shrugging. “It’s just how we do things around here.”
I could tell my customer was
satisfied. He shook hands with the worker and thanked him. Without saying a word,
I knew what he was thinking: It’s true. HP
really is this good.
As a company HP was well
respected, but it wasn’t because it was the most inventive. It didn’t come up
with SPC or kanban or anything else the Tellabs executive hadn’t heard of. It
wasn’t because HP only used the most advanced technology. The tour showcased
some shiny, new equipment, but most was conventional and well used. It wasn’t
because the company didn’t make mistakes. Over the years, the exec had dealt
with the occasional HP hiccup. But where Tellabs and others would talk about fundamental
change, HP would do it. And do it well.
HP had great people and
great discipline. The company had a knack for studying something interesting,
trying it on a small scale, refining it, rolling it out consistently, and
making it all natural. Author Jim Collins calls this empirical creativity matched with fanatic discipline; direct engagement and practical experimentation
followed up with utterly relentless execution in accordance with consistent
aims, performance standards, and methods.1 HP’s behavior, like other dynasty companies Collins studied, allowed it to dominate the test equipment industry
for nearly seventy years.
Things have changed since
1993. The HP division became part of the Agilent Technologies spin-off, the
manufacturing unit was offshored, and the HP brand has lost some of its luster
since the time of “Bill and Dave.” Tellabs also changed. After heady growth,
the company suffered from the telecom bubble burst; painful cutbacks,
management changes, and eventual renewal as a networking products company.
I’ve changed, too. A career
in sales led to marketing and operations, eventually leaving HP to start three
companies and work for two more. Sparked by my time at HP, I spent many years exploring
why some organizations performed consistently better than others. I learned and
applied lessons in my own companies and others through the Baldrige program and
the occasional consulting gig.
I’m convinced high
performance boils down to simple, disciplined management systems that make people,
planning, execution, and learning all more effective. It's true for organizations large and small, no matter the sector. But success always
depends on great leadership and the tenacity to see it through. When excellence
becomes a matter of organizational habit, long-term success is assured.
And that’s what reminded me lately
of the wisdom and discipline of a great company. Years ago they made it all happen,
captured in one simple remark:
“It’s just how we do things around here.”
Footnote:
1. Collins, J. and Hansen, M. Great by Choice: Uncertainty, Chaos, and Luck--Why Some Thrive Despite
Them All. Harper Business, 2011. ISBN 0062120999.
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