August 27, 2006

So you think you know something about management?

That was to get your attention. I'm really hoping to find a few people who really do know a few things about management...to take over this blog. In order to be effective, a blog should have new posts every few days. I just haven't found the time to do that. Also, I haven't managed associations for a while now, so it would make more sense to have people writing it who are on the front lines every day. If you have some thoughts you'd like to share about the industry, the clients, the trade associations, the governments, here's a soapbox to stand on.

If you would like to give it a shot (the mechanics are very easy), just contact me at webmaster@communityasociations.net

Posted by joewest at 12:30 PM

August 1, 2006

How I Turned Into Donald Duck

I live in suburbia, in a small tri-level in a basically inactive homeowner association. I bought the house as a "fixer-upper" and spent the first summer gutting it and trying to put it back together. I know this house inside and out, having crawled, hammered, wired, plumbed and painted my way around most of it. There is a large creek across the street from my house and a woods nearby, so various critters make their way up and down the creek. Over the years, many have looked on my house as sort of an informal bed and breakfast, or inn along their journey. Right now I have a family of rabbits living alongside at least four bird's nest in the large pines in front of my house. A skunk makes a nightly trip by my lower level windows to see if anything good is on TV. Fortunately, there rarely is, so he continues his travels, leaving only a sight, pungent reminder of his sojourn.

A few years ago, I heard some noises in the attic, and when I popped my head up into it to look around, I found myself facing a rather large, protective mother raccoon, that had decided my attic made a perfect nursery for her new family. It took about two weeks to catch her and move her family to a more rustic setting. But I had not seen where she was getting in and out of my house. It got to the point that I seriously considered changing the locks on the doors, just to make sure. I didn't, of course, and two weeks later a larger and meaner raccoon moved into the now empty nest. This one was much cagier and it took almost a month to lure him into the trap and pay his relocation expenses. But, I had discovered the entrance. They were pushing the vents in my soffits up and climbing in, and then, apparently neatly returning them to their place so as to keep me in the dark. Worse, the roofers I called informed me that the only way I could seal this would be to lift the entire roof section, in order to get to the doorway they were using and close it, and that it would cost me about $1,500. My roof was only a year-old and I figured I could find another way that would be much cheaper. I thought about it, and then in my normal "Tim the Toolman" fashion, jammed some wood up in the area and nailed it in place. Looks terrible, but it did the job. Humans 2 racoons 0.

Peace reigned for the next few years. Oh, the rabbits ate up some of my flowers and the birds crapped all over my deck, but hey, this is suburbia, you expect some annoyances. Things were so quiet I turned my attention to helping out my mother who was battling squirrels over possession rights to certain bird feeders she like to have around her house. 4 years and 18 "squirrel-proof" bird feeders later, I think we're start to actually make the squirrels work for their snack.

Then, "IT" arrived. I call it "Chippendale", not after the dancers, but the Disney characters. A cute little chipmunk began visiting my home two years ago. I would see him sitting out on the lawn chair on my deck, taking a break from whatever it is chipmunks normallly do, or running around the yard. Cute. HAH! He was just reconnoitering.

I started hearing noises in the attic again. But these were very faint, not the scratching around of a raccoon. I once again cautiously popped my head up into the attice and seeing nothing began to look around. Nothing. This continued on throughout the first winter of my discontent. Noise, inspection, nothing. Spring came and it continued. The one summer day I was working outside and had the garage door up. On one of my trips in, I noticed the chipmunk sitting on my porch near the garage door. I was surprised at how close it would let me come. Then I noticed, in a small crack, between the garage wall and the concrete floor, just inside of where the door closed, a nut, jammed into the tiniest of cracks. Eureka. Human intelligence was able to determine that the noises came from the chipmunk and the nut was now blocking his doorway to my (and his) comfortable home. In the few seconds it took me to tell my wife about my Sherlock Holmes moment, the chipmunk got the nut into the hole and disappeared. The battle had begun and my transition into Donald Duck took its first waddling steps.

Traps had worked for the raccoons and traps would work for the chipmunk. Humane traps, of course. I'm an urban creature. I might run over it, but deliberately setting out to kill it, when I had no plans on eating it, was not my style. In any event, all the traps did was provide him with a steady and reliable source of food.

We worked out a routine. In the morning, I would raise the garage door, and back my car out. As the door was closing, he would pop out and head off to whatever day job he held. At night, when I raised the garage door to pull in, he would scurry back in for the night. I was still trying to keep him out, by blocking the hole with various objects, but he managed to get through them all. Then this summer I decided to get serious, I patiently waited until I saw him outside, and then quickly mixed up some fast-setting concrete and filled in the hole. I set paint cans on top to allow it dry before he could start digging. Twenty-four hours later, I removed the paint cans. Twenty-four more hours and a new hole had magically appeared in the concrete. I hadn't even heard the jackhammer he must have used, or maybe he had found an unexploded firecracker that my neighbor's kid had left laying around and blew open the hole. I started muttering to myself.

I waited impatiently to again catch him outside. And eventually I did. Quickly I used an entire bag of concrete, jamming it down the hole until no more would go and then building it up around the entrance, like a small fortress. This time I waited 48 hours before removing the protective cover that allowed the concrete to set. I hit it with a hammer---solid! It looked like hell, and I'd have to remove most of it if I ever hoped to sell this house one day (along with the wood shoved up in the roof), but he wasn't going to get in that hole ever again. And he didn't. Instead, he created a whole new door, right through the drywall in the garage, and 10 inches from his old door. And I lost it. If you remember the old Donald Duck/Chip 'n' Dale cartoons, there always came a point where Donald would completely loose it, jumping up and down and quacking something unitelligible. That was me.

But wait, he just ran past the garage door, he's not in his home. Quickly gathering everything that had accumulated in my garage over the years, I nailed, screwed and glued 2"x4"'s over his new hole. But he's tricky, so a 4' x 8' sheet of plywood was nailed, screwed and glued on the adjacent wall. Not enough. Sheet metal, that'll do it. Cover the wood in case he has a power saw or drill. (Thinking ahead, I moved my power tools to the top shelf of the tool area, you can't be too careful). What else? I tell my wife to guard the garage while I run to the hardware store. She gives me the look she normally reserves for people who drive too slowly in the left lane. I don't care. At the hardware store I buy every kind of animal repellant they sell, each guaranteed to keep some type of animal away from wherever you put it. A roll of steel mesh (let him chew through that), and some silicone spray (might make things too slippery for him to climb over). An hour later and I proudly inspected my work. My garage now smelled like a barnyard (the house did too for the next week), and what I had built now jutted into the garage so far I'm not sure we can still get two cars in it. But the payoff came the next day.

As I came home from work and pulled into the driveway. I could see my little adversary sitting on the sidewalk next to the garage. I stopped the car and got out and faced him. He stood up on his little hind legs and for the next two minutes cursed me up one side and down the other. Yes I know, I don't speak chipmunk, but some things you just intuitively grasp. I know he challenged my background, my parent's marriage state, my physical attributes and I swear, even though no one has believed me, that he extended the middle digit of his paw at me. I took a step toward him (no flips me the bird and gets away with it), but he ran down the sidewalk and stopped, turned around and continued his venting. I grabbed the shovel out of the garage and chased him around the outside of my house turning into Donald Duck again...one lap and I was panting. I parked the car and closed the garage door.

I haven't seen him around for over two weeks, no new holes in the concrete, wood or drywall. The house still smells, but some things you just have to pay the price for. Wonderful peace!

I heard a noise in the attic today.......

Posted by joewest at 8:59 AM

April 28, 2006

Falling through the cracks

Associations change managers or management companies for a variety of reasons. But most of those reasons come down to simply things not getting done the way the board or the owners expect them to. Whether its perception or reality, things are falling through the cracks. The manager may be overloaded, or the board is communicating very well, or there was just more work there than was expected, whatever the reason, it leads to dissatisfaction, and if not corrected, replacement.

Correcting this is important to both parties. For the manager its a job and income. For the board, it means a transition and new learning curve which upsets the process and creates more work for them. So how do you avoid it?

Why do things fall through the cracks? One reason may be personal and another process. Avoidance and systems. Avoidance occurs when one of the items a manager is supposed to accomplish is either personally distasteful, i.e. dealing with an angry owner, or outside of their skills. In both cases, find some help. You may think that your co-workers or supervisor might think less of you because of your seeking help, but that won't come close to what they will think of you if the problem ends up in someone else's lap or creates more problems. It takes practice and time to learn to deal with all of the various issues a manager will face, but that learning will be a lot faster and easier if you can find others to help you work through it. If you're just avoiding it because you know its going to be unpleasant, then you have two choices: Learn to deal with it or find another line of work, because you're always going to bump into unpleasant situations. This is the time to use the manager's network and get some insight into the best ways to deal with the issue. Don't put it off.

Sometimes the problem is the process, or system you use to keep track of things. There are four basic components to a good system to handle tasks: 1) Confirming the task; 2) Scheduling the task; 3) Keeping tabs on it; and 4) Reporting on the task. There may be computer programs out there that can do this, but chances are you don't have it, so let's just look at a simple method:

At the end of every board meeting, or as a result of a phone call, e-mail or talk, you will have a list of tasks the board wants you to perfom. Confirm it back to them. Send the board an action item list and confirm through e-mail or note any item given to you through some other method. Basically say, "Here is what I believe you want me to do, and here is my schedule for doing it." This is also your CYA memo.

Now, punch this into Outlooks Tasks or Calendar, or put it on you daily "to-do" list, but find something that reminds you constantly of the items you have to do and the schedule you promised. I use Outlook's Calendar and Tasks and set reminders to pop up in my face well in advance of when the project is due. Simple, but effective for me. It doesn't get deleted until its done. Use whatever you have to, but keep these items in your face.

Use the same method to report on the completion or status of an item that you used to confirm it. At the next board meeting have your "Action Item" or "To-do" list as part of your report, along with any of the items that were added in between meetings. Make sure the board understands the reason any item wasn't completed and agrees with a new completion time frame. Keep it on the list until done.

A manager handles so many different items that its easy to lose track of some things if you don't find a way to keep them from falling through the cracks. Find what works for you.

Posted by joewest at 11:38 AM

September 29, 2005

Where Did The Time Go?

BusinessWeek recently had a cover story on "The Real Reasons You Are Working So Hard....and What You Can Do About It". Both the story and the comments following it are interesting. Any manager I've ever talked to speaks of "not enough time" both to do their job and in their personal life. Cell phones and networked computers have just about removed the last vestiges of privacy and families don't even have the time to talk about their lack of time. The article pins the main problem on organizations that haven't re-structured to utilize new technologies to their best advantage. While that's probably the major item, I've often run into another major cause. The company CEO who likes to talk to their staff at their own convenience and ignores the same intrusions that come from board members.

In my first job as a manager, my boss was having continual family problems and so, would hide himself in his home office and talk to employees for half the night. Phone call would come in at all hours and last anywhere from 30 minutes to 3 hours. This was before caller ID and as a new employee, I didn't feel comfortable hanging up on him. Job security and all. When I started not answering the phone at home, or returning calls at night, he took it personally and things were never the same. Since then I've worked with others who have similar penchants. A lot of company owners are Type A personalities who work 16 hour days and can't understand why you don't want to or can't.

Unless it's an emergency there is absolutely no reason to bother your employees or your manager (if you're a board member), while they are off the clock and at home. If you don't have a policy to let your staff know that they are entitled to some sort of privacy, it's past time to put one in place. The jobs tough enough without pushing it into their home.

Posted by joewest at 3:50 PM