Thursday, January 26, 2017

Government and Corporations: Process Is More Than Politics


Many people have been distracted by the ultra-cynosure factor of recent ceremonies. Keeping our minds looking forward, realize that it doesn’t take much analysis to see how aspects of common corporate nomenclature as well as company processes apply to typical government operations across industries, sectors and regions. Recent articles about business apply to the functions of government, too.

As many government employees and those interested in comparative politics are looking at “what comes next,” it may help to consider that these two seemingly disparate private and public organizations have quite a few similarities in certain aspects.
  • Both entities (government and corporations) are focused on progress, though they take different routes to achieve their missions (such as public benefit versus profits). 
  • A large population determines success: democratic governments have voters, corporations have consumers.
  • Jargon of industry experts is typically only understood from the insider’s club (think of acronyms in your own sphere).
  • A well-tuned machine has a routine maintenance schedule, seen in annual reviews for employees and elections for governments, with various levels of “intensity” depending on “miles travelled.”
  • Everyone answers to someone, and it can be changed when it doesn’t work. 
These two groups also have organizational similarities.  In corporations, stockholders/shareholders vote on board recommendations (who may have committees) that select leaders to guide or direct management teams to coordinate resources that create products to resolve a consumer’s complex problems. For government, people vote for an elected leader who serves on committees to lead a democratically formed management team by participatory governance in order to coordinate taxes and resources to resolve the community’s complex problems.

Last week’s article showed the sales funnel’s six stages to convert buyers. Government processes utilize this same stepwise action—public officials are voted into office (or not) by using (or ignoring) the same corporate sales funnel nomenclature and internal promotional opportunities resulting in make-them-or-break-them outcomes.

Read these stages verbatim from last week this time with a government lens in brackets, and consider how internal operations of a government department or program apply the same benchmark principles:
  • Awareness this opportunity [for a candidate or program] may be achieved through organic or paid email marketing, search engine placement or social media messaging where you are identifying prospective consumers out of the entire client opportunity
  • Consideration - once the connection has moved to interest, consumers [voters or civil servants] begin searching for information to evaluate how they can meet their identified needs through website research and eCommerce reviews
  • Preference - this stage cultivates relationships and can influence perceptions on the value of your solution, where informed consumers [voters or supervisors] make a well-timed decision for the best product or service for their [interests or departmental] situation
  • Purchase - once the conversion has been made for the consumer [voter or supervisor], using a systemized follow-up methodology that doesn’t rely on human memory improves opportunities for touch points and increased positive interaction
  • Loyalty - repeat business is essential, though if ‘forced’ or achieved via lack-of-choices, your business [job] is contingent on satisficing needs
  • Advocacy - leading to increased revenue [votes/support], the best funnel is supported by word-of-mouth endorsement
The same word “satisficing” applies in government processes, too.  You aren’t satisfying everyone all of the time (except - again - maybe a short-sighted manager who is short-term), but in many ways working for the good of many.  Undoubtedly, you won’t be listening to your constituency if you are elected or acting on the mission of your department if you are always having budget cuts or hiring freezes or making deals to scratch multiple people’s backs and hitting the Doorway Effect (“forgetting what you came for,” as an old song goes).

This is satisficing — it makes the citizenry pick something they don't 100% want to get an option they don’t necessarily want, where they are not being totally satisfied with the process or prospects even if they voted for a candidate or work as a civil servant for you as a supervisor. 

In the government realm, here is when your government team could be satisficing (again, nearly using the verbatim corporate sales funnel process to apply to the government processes):
  • Awareness satisficing - providing a limited opportunity [i.e. limited time for staff or voters] for learning [and research] about your products [programs] or (perhaps worse) giving the right message on the wrong channel where your future loyal customers don’t listen [not only voters, but those interested and active on a grassroots level in your realm of expertise]
  • Consideration satisficing - having inventory [staff or resources] available immediately, though it doesn’t meet the specifications the future loyal customer [voter] wants (this is a needs-based miss), or having gaps in your communications strategy for web research
  • Preference satisficing - frequently involving delayed or delinquent responses to inquiries [from constituents], or involving a top-heavy sales pitch [campaign] without reliable facts and outside endorsements
  • Purchase satisficing - shoddy packaging, generic (or absent) thank you messaging, or not having the right suggested complementary purchases [additional community steps] that exceed expectation stop your sales funnel [voter recruitment] dead in the water
  • Loyalty satisficing - a one-time customer [voter] will not return to your company [specific candidate] for future needs 
  • Advocacy satisficing - the [largest] impact here is negative if you’ve failed in any previous step [and negative governmental results are heard much louder than supportive ones - just like corporate reviews you can find on Yelp, Glassdoor, Twitter and more]
Even for government personnel as well as corporate programs, strong strategic branding addresses the first three errors. Do not confuse branding with spin factor, though, or you will suffer a whirlwind of your own creation.  Remember that you are your own competition with respect to government process; the quicksand is created by setting your own expectations high and not working hard to follow through on the right steps in the process.  Continue to set your expectations high and keep growing - it’s the way we achieve progress!

As a closing observation and return to the title of this article, you know that politics plays strongly in all realms of work, regardless of the “type” of employment. Merriam-Webster provides a definition of politics as “competition between competing interest groups or individuals for power and leadership.” Emphasis is added because the process of getting the job done still occurs regardless of government, corporation or non-profit organization as the employer; it’s the competition among people and groups that stirs the pot. 

Make a conscious decision to either be someone who stirs the pot or grow as a thoughtful leader that solves complex problems wherever you work every day.



Heather M. Hilliard is Principal and Chief Strategist for R. Roan Enterprises, LLC, a professional services consulting firm supporting businesses in pointed areas of expertise as well as with individuals for targeted projects or career development. For more articles like these, visit her posts on LinkedIn or on G+

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