mick's leadership blog ...

"A beginner's mind takes you where you need to go" (traditional Zen saying)

Sunday, February 18, 2007

Leadership: Pareto's Principle

From the Pharmaceutical Executive, by Sander Flaum

"Back in 1906, economist Vilfredo Pareto noted a striking fact in his native Italy: Twenty percent of the people owned 80 percent of the wealth. As Pareto looked about, he discovered that the "80/20 Principle," as it came to be known, applied in many realms of life. He was particularly fascinated to find that 20 percent of the peapods in his garden yielded 80 percent of his harvest!

Over time, the 80/20 formula has been found to apply to criminals and the number of crimes committed; to accident-prone motorists and the number of car accidents; even to the most-trodden parts of carpets as a proportion of total wear and tear. Less than 20 percent of the world's land yields more than 80 percent of all food; fewer than 20 percent of clouds produce 80 percent of rain; in business services, 20 percent of clients typically account for 80 percent of profits.

In the 1930s, a pioneering quality-management specialist named Joseph Juran extended the 80/20 Principle to what he termed the "vital few and trivial many." Among hordes of middle and senior managers on organizational charts, most are "trivial." The wise business leader knows how to find the "vital few" who have an impact on performance.

Juran's observation was reconfirmed in a recent study of 25,000 salespeople in 160 industries, which concluded that 55 percent of them were ill-suited to salesmanship; half of the remainder sold "the wrong thing in the wrong place." Conclusion: 20 percent produced 80 percent of the sales. That study wound down at the end of the Jack Welch era at General Electric. During his more than 20 years of dynamic leadership, GE increased in value more than 30 times to become the world's richest corporation—and the world's second biggest in market value.

Welch had his own version of 80/20, designed to weed out the trivial many and focus on the vital few. He broke staffing down to a "vitality curve" of three segments. The top tier (20 percent) performed best and earned the biggest bonuses. The B list (60 percent) included managers with a potential to rise to the top. Those destined to sink to the bottom were ultimately dismissed (20 percent).

Welch was blunt and courageous, unconcerned about being popular. Results mattered most. Here's what he said about downsizing: "Strong managers who make tough decisions to cut jobs provide the only true job security in today's world. Weak managers are the problem. Weak managers destroy jobs."


Read the rest of the article ...

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