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Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Examples on Increasing Productivity: Part 2 (For Managers)

A reader asked me a good question: "Would you provide concrete examples on how to increase the productivity of my Production Support team?" Although I'll answer with points that would be important for any team, not just Support, I'll provide examples that apply more directly to Production Support groups.


This is Part 2 of this article. Click on the link to go to Part 1.

The first thing you can do as a manager is to set high expectations for yourself and your team. This means two things set expectations and make sure they're challenging enough. One thing that has worked great for me is doing strategic planning at the beginning of every year with all my directs. We keep it simple. We identify things we'd like to improve about the applications we support (The Challenges). Then we come up with Action Items. Action Items define three things (Where we are, Where we want to be, and what we're going to do to get there). Incidentally, there's a technical name for just talking about the challenges and not coming up with what you're going to do to fix them...It's called complaining.

Make sure the action items achievable (yes, you can use SMART goals), but make sure they'll also challenge your team to do their best. Having clear guidelines and defined projects has worked wonders for the amount of work that my groups achieve. People don't come into work wondering what they're going to do. If the BAU work (incidents, service requests, etc.) is low, then it's time to pull out the plan and work on those strategic objectives. I review plan progress on a weekly basis and provide quarterly updates to senior management to ensure my directs' work is being highlighted and they're getting the right visibility level.

Keep a constant eye for ways to maximize the productivity of your team. Just because you have a plan doesn't mean you can't include important items on the go. Also, if something that was previously identified as important, no longer is, then remove it from the plan. Work only on those things that will add value to your group.

As I've said in prior posts, take time to reward and reinforce productive behaviors. Production Support teams go through a lot of stress and team members need to know that their work is not going unnoticed.

Finally, use your metrics to determine areas for improvement and to track how Productive your teams are being. If all the work you've planned to do is not having a positive impact on your Availability metrics, Support effort, Time tracking, etc., then you're not focusing on the right things. Keep the Purpose of Production Support in mind in everything that you do.

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