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Columnists: Pat Townsend & Joan Gebhardt

Photo: Pat Townsend

  

Photo: Joan Gebhardt

    
         

Why Not Just Have Someone Do a
Baldrige Evaluation?

Pat Townsend & Joan Gebhardt
ptownsend@qualitydigest.com

 

 

Often, when a company has someone on its payroll who has done all the work (usually on company time and at company expense) to become a Baldrige Examiner, the question is raised, “Why don’t we just have our person do a Baldrige evaluation of the company?”

It’s a valid question because that’s the approach that most all other management systems have employed over the years. Usually, the sequence is that someone publishes a book proposing a new approach, forms a consulting company and offers appraisals of any company that wants to try this “bold new approach.” The results of the appraisal are inevitably that the company is pretty good, but if they want to become “world class,” they need to hire the author/consultant’s company.

That’s not how the Baldrige criteria work. The first step is the self-assessment that makes it possible to complete the application. Note the use of the word “self”: This can only be done by the leadership of the organization. The common model has the senior leadership team dissecting the Baldrige (or, perhaps a state quality award if it’s a Baldrige clone) line-by-line and sketching an outline filled with lots of “things we need to know for sure.” Each member of the senior leadership team then works with a team made up of his or her immediate subordinates to spell out detailed answers.

The role of the company’s quality folks in all this? It’s to take part in the conversations, help everyone understand what’s being asked, identify answers and coordinate the writing of the actual application—in other words, to facilitate.

The overwhelming majority of the companies that attempt such a self-assessment never submit an application. Why not? Because they so quickly compile lists of things to do that those efforts become the focus of their improvement endeavors.

Of those that actually do submit applications, the large majority never win--but that’s fine because the feedback reports are agreed to be the most valuable result gained from submitting an application. When Pat (one of the authors of this column) was a Baldrige Examiner, he scored one applicant who, in answer to some points, wrote, “We don’t do this yet.” They knew they didn’t have a chance at winning; they simply wanted the feedback report.

The feedback report is, quite simply, the least expensive high-impact consulting available. Between the “things to do” list generated during the self-assessment effort and the feedback report, a company has at its fingertips the means for extensive improvement.

How is this better than having someone else do an appraisal? All company executives come complete with at least moderately strong egos. If someone else says, “You should fix this, this and that,” it is easy to say to yourself, “The consultant doesn’t actually understand what we do or, at the least, he or she didn’t do a very good job of studying my department,” and then file the report under “things to do someday… maybe.”

If, however, we’re partners in the assessment--if, in fact, we’re in charge of it--it’s tougher to blow off the results. It’s the same with the feedback report because that assessment is based solely on what the company leadership chose to say.

The trick is making the commitment up front to invest the time needed to conduct the self-assessment and complete the application. The paradox is that the best time to conduct a Baldrige self-assessment is when a company is doing well, and the toughest time to do a Baldrige self-assessment is when a company is really busy… which is normally the case when the company is doing well.

If the Baldrige examiner on the payroll can’t conduct a Baldrige evaluation while senior management gets on with real work, why invest the time and money to send her or him off to training, fill out an application critique and possibly even go on a site visit? There are two good reasons: one immediately pragmatic and one theoretical and idealistic. The theoretical/idealistic reason is that it helps to keep alive a system that has been a major reason why America’s economy remains the strongest in the world.

The pragmatic reason for wanting to have a Baldrige examiner--or an examiner for any of the state awards that are Baldrige clones--on your payroll is to have the expertise in-house to help the leadership team understand the criteria and to suggest alternative ways to tackle the many challenges that will be identified.

Once the company decides to submit an application, the in-house examiner will be invaluable in helping the application authors explain the company’s achievements in ways that are true while presenting the organizational case to the examiners assigned to read the application.

Dale Crownover, president and CEO of Baldrige winner Texas Nameplate Company--and a Baldrige examiner--says that his company is already preparing to apply again as soon as it can (the rules require five years between winning an award and re-applying). Does he want another trophy? No, he wants a feedback report.

About the authors

Pat Townsend and Joan Gebhardt have written more than 200 articles and six books, including Commit to Quality (John Wiley & Sons, 1986); Quality in Action: 93 Lessons in Leadership, Participation, and Measurement (John Wiley & Sons, 1992); Five-Star Leadership: The Art and Strategy of Creating Leaders at Every Level (John Wiley & Sons, 1997); Recognition, Gratitude & Celebration (Crisp Publications, 1997); How Organizations Learn: Investigate, Identify, Institutionalize (Crisp Publications, 1999); and Quality Is Everybody's Business (CRC Press, 1999). Pat Townsend has recently re-entered the corporate world and is now dealing with “leadership.com” issues as a practitioner as well as an observer, writer and speaker. He is now chief quality officer for UICI, a diverse financial services corporation headquartered in the Dallas area. Letters to the editor regarding this column can be sent to letters@qualitydigest.com.