Tag Archives: call center

Does it make you paranoid if your calls are being monitored?

Categories: Call Center | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Some BPO call center workers feel paranoid when their calls are being monitored. It is a fact of life in the call center industry that your higher ups will listen in on a regular basis. Some do this in order to find fault with you while others use it to coach you into being a better worker. It is a proven fact that a call center agent will act differently if they think they are being listened to.

It is also a proven fact that bad call centers typically have no system for monitoring calls. Good call centers monitor lots of calls and give feedback right away. If you are doing something wrong, it is better to find out fast so you can correct the behavior right away! Additionally, your performance can be easily measured on a regular basis if management is listening in.

It is normal to be paranoid, but don’t. Being listened to is important for the quality of your work. Someone is always listening to you in any case when you are on the phone. And even if you are alone, God is listening to you, or at least might be if he is not having his lunch break in heaven!

What is it really like inside an Indian Call Center?

Categories: Call Center, Semi-Popular | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

What is it really like inside an Indian Call Center?

During my trips to India, I visited many outsourcing operations. I visited programming houses, call centers, medical transcription companies, and more.

Typically, Indian outsourcing companies will have a bunch of people crammed into very small spaces with small desks. But, the call centers I saw were operating on a larger scale. The programming houses typically had 5-50 people present, while the call centers occupied entire floors of buildings and had room for hundreds of employees.

A Call Center in Mumbai
I was just doing my homework. I was staying at an ashram in Navi Mumbai. I wanted to see a real Indian Call Center. I had a call project to do. 2000 calls. To big for me to do, but too small for them to do. I got off the train in Belapur, or one of the stops near there. It was in 2007 and I don’t remember all of the details. I found the building. Finding anything in India is a miracle and reaffirms my belief in a supreme power. I’m not sure if it was Krishna, Vishnu, or God himself that helped me find this huge building, but its location right next to the train track made it easier. So, I went around this monstrosity of a building, and up the stairs. I had to ask multiple people for help finding the back entrance. Then, I was confronted with a bored looking security guard. He asked a few questions and then let me in to the next room. The manager was not there, but I met a guy in his mid-twenties who started asking me about the “strength” of my company. I told him that my company was not very strong because it didn’t go to the gym, but that he could feel my biceps to test me personally for strength. In America, companies don’t have strength, they have number of employees, and yearly revenues instead — a different use of language! I never made it into their high-security call center to see more.

A Call Center in Bangalore
I arranged an interview with the sales manager of a call center in Bangalore. We talked for a while, and he tried to get me to sign a very constrictive contract. My gut feeling was that signing my life away would not be advantageous. So, I didn’t! I met some of the staff there. There was a nice lady who was a mother working part-time.

She spoke too quietly. I didn’t think she would be a good match for my impatient clients who need to be able to hear what you are saying. But, there were rows and rows of cubicles at this nice office that was situated on a main artery in a prosperous part of Northern Bangalore. So, many people were there — it seemed endless. There was “motorcycle guy” who seemed very Americanized and was a smooth talker. He put on his flashy red and black leather jacket because his shift was over. There were some fast talking ladies who were on a project for a large corporation. There was a floor manager who was walking around seeing if everyone was doing their job. And then there was the shrewd looking salesman who wanted to twist my arm into an undesirable contract — well, undesirable for me, but very desirable for him!

A Call Center in Chennai
My favorite call center so far was a Call Center in Chennai. I met the manager who was very nice. He told me about all of the flexible options that I could have. Fluidity is high on my list of desirable attributes. I could rent a spot by the month and work there myself or hire one of his workers by the month. I got to choose who I liked, and it was all very reasonable sounding.

A Call Center in Noida or Delhi
I haven’t visited there yet. But, I will keep you informed if I ever go to a call center in Delhi. Noida is the Call Center capital of India just as Manila or Makati City is the call center capital of the Philippines (or perhaps the world). If your computer breaks, chances are you will be talking to someone named, “John Smith” who has a fake British accent who is in Noida — but, who can’t disclose his actual location.

You might also like:

Have your sales staff work American hours
http://bpo.123outsource.net/2013/10/12/how-to-get-clients-for-your-call-center-have-your-sales-staff-work-american-hours/

Better training at call centers
http://bpo.123outsource.net/2013/10/05/how-to-get-more-business-for-your-call-center-better-training/

Don’t expect to get paid more due to your GPS coordinates

Categories: America, Of Interest | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment

Don’t expect to get paid more because you were born in a particular country. Americans feel that they intrinsically deserve more money for doing certain tasks. Americans also feel that because the cost of living is higher in the United States, that therefor, they should get paid more.The truth is actually very interesting. America is actually one of the most efficient countries on earth. You get more land per dollar than almost anywhere else on the planet. It is cheaper to purchase a house in Oregon than it is to buy an equally sized house in Pune. A laptop in America costs less than the same laptop in Mumbai. America is not more expensive, except for labor and healthcare. Additionally, an apartment in an expensive part of Los Angeles is $2000 per month for what you might be able to get in Tennessee for $350. Costs in America really vary, so we can’t generalize about what “costs” are in America.

Moreover, American workers typically produce a lot more output per hour than people do in most other countries. Countries like Norway, Japan, Korea, Singapore, and the United States produce a lot of output per-capita. People at Indian BPO companies typically get less done per hour and make more mistakes that require redoing the same task multiple times.

My findings are that many Americans merit more money for particular tasks than overseas counterparts because of better skills, more efficient output, and better communication skills. The fact that it is more expensive here has nothing to do with anything.

On the other hand, Filipino call center workers are nicer and smoother than their American counterparts and can get done roughly as much work as well. Over time, the Philippines has been gaining market share for call center business and their wages have not been going down. You are worth what you are worth, so leave your GPS coordinates out of it!

Your GPS doesn’t determine what our BPO is worth!

Tweets:
(1) Just because you live in America, it doesn’t mean you deserve to get paid more.
(2) Americans get paid MORE per hour AND the cost of land and food are LESS in the US too!

You might also like:

Outsourcing Obamacare
http://bpo.123outsource.net/2014/01/14/outsourcing-obama-care/

Rates for Office Space around the world compared
http://bpo.123outsource.net/2013/12/19/rates-for-office-space-around-the-world-compared/

Creating an online museum for your company

Categories: Of Interest | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

I wrote about a sort of a show and tell idea in another blog entry. I was inspired after seeing how Ford Motor Company built its cars. Suddently, I thought that outsourcing companies could do the same on a smaller scale. They could show the inner mechanics of how things got done at their company.

The #1 reason why people don’t hire you is TRUST. Rather than having fast talking salespeople, brightly decorated websites, and great promotional materials, try to gain trust. The fastest way to evoke trust is to share knowledge — and customized knowledge that particular prospects want to hear. Telling people all about your company and having FAQ’s about your industry is great. The more information the better, especially if it is well organized and well written. But, what about an online presentation of what your company is really like?

Some people have slide shows, others have sales literature, a few even have a museum. If you had an online museum about how your company works, don’t you think that people would want to do business with you? It would be really cool, and fun, and draw people in. You might even attract people who are not even interested in your industry who think it is really nifty that you created such an intruiging production!

Imagine that you have a call center (call centre). Imagine that your museum starts with a huge photo of your call center and some text explaining that this is a museum of the XYZ call center in Gurgaon, India. Explain that you are a real call center that is accepting new clients today. You are not just a museum, but a real live functioning call center. Have an ENTER link on the page somewhere. Or have a web site with a smaller section that introduces the call center museum.

Show pictures of your staff doing what they do. Explain what you do for various clients and how you fulfill their orders. Have a slide show for explaining what you do in the new customer acquisition process step by step. Show how you train your people step by step. Explain the hiring and firing process, including surge hiring when you get a new large client on board. You could even show your employees carpooling to work in rick-shaws or cabs.

You could joke about how you require each employee to ingest exactly the right amount of pollution on Ganapati Blvd. East as a job requirement, and show them breathing in the air — fulfilling their job requirements to a tee.

Next, it is time for a break, so show your gruntled employees having their samosa break in the lunch room, or at their desks. Next, it is time for personal get-to-know-you sessions with your staff. Each selected member could have a one-minute introduction, and maybe a longer one with your CEO.

Then, have a summary about what the company does, and sum yourself up.
Good luck and have fun

How to acquire clients for your call center: long term goals!

Categories: Call Center | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Any motivational speaker will talk about long term goals. It is common knowledge that if you write your long terms down, you are 41 times as likely to reach your goal. I made up that number, but statistically, there is documentation that proves that you are much much much more likely to achieve your goal if you write your goals down. If you strive daily to attain a goal, that helps too. If you change your goals daily, that is a deal breaker in the goal game.

But, what are your goals? What I have learned is that call center professionals know their game, and know what to do. They have been in the call center game for years, and keep doing what they are doing and might keep growing. Sometimes they might move their operation from Bangalore to Noida to save on costs. Or they might abandon India and move operations to Cebu in the Philippines. Perhaps they might try a place with high unemployment like Assam in the Northeast Corner of India. But, the game is the same. Find good clients, find good workers, have a good facility, put it all together and make it work.

Young Indians who want to start call centers typically do not have the business skills to pull off having a full fledged call center. They might have managerial experience at a call center (or not), but it takes a lot more than that to have a real call center. To those guys I suggest starting small, and getting your experience while small so you don’t lose any large sum of money or ruin your reputation too much.

But, what should your long term goals be in a call center? To have a 100-seater overnight? That is insanity, not a goal. How about to think small and have a 20-seater? That is still small. You have to choose your workers, find contracts, train people, monitor people. It is a lot of work unless you have a manager. Plus, how do you even select a good manager if you have no experience owning a business? It is not that easy. That is why you start small.

If I were mentoring you — and I sort of am — many young Indians read my blog for inspiration, and I hope they get lots of inspiration without feeling too discouraged by me — I would give you this long term goal chopped up into smaller goals.

(1) Start your business in a tiny office or at home. Get top notch equipment so that people can hear you properly.
(2) Acquire small clients. They are easier to get, and easier to keep if you treat them right. Your goal should be to see if you can RETAIN your clients for a long time and get referrals from them. If you give them really good service at a reasonable price you might achieve this goal.
(3) Only hire a few people. Train them well, and keep an eye on them. If you are not experienced, you will not know how to train others. If you are so busy you can not see straight, you won’t have time to train others. To keep clients, you need good service, and there is no good service without well manicured employees.
(4) Once you have been maintaining a very stable client base, and have retrained your employees, then it is time to expand. Slowly. Remember, that having new clients is more work. The new ones are uncertain and need more time negotiating deals. Existing clients might need a little more or a little less at certain times, but they are more stable. Hiring new workers is also time consuming. You have to interview many to find one acceptable worker, and then you have to train them and watch them to make sure they are reliable. If your people quit often, you have to repeat this process which gets in the way of what your real business is — doing call center work for your clients.

Your philosophical long term goal should not be about money. Money comes on it’s own (or it doesn’t). Focus on finding out what your clients want (or think they want) and giving that to them as masterfully as you can. If you get a reputation of taking care of people better than anyone else, then your business will grow on its own. You might not even need to advertise. I have heard stories of people with huge businesses who never spent a penny on advertising in your life. Expecting not to need to advertise is not realistic, but keep the thought of its possibility alive. Focus on helping others and then they will help you with money. The world works like this.

Don’t think big… think small, and grow as fast as the forces of nature let you grow.
You can become a millionaire — just don’t try to do it overnight. let it happen naturally over time as you provide great value to the universe!!!

When you hire call center workers: have an overseas friend evalutate them

Categories: Philippines, Semi-Popular | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Are you in the Philippines or India? Do you hire call center workers who seem great by your standards. Well, guess what? Your standards don’t matter! It is the standards of the people wherever you are calling or receiving calls from that matter.

Are you doing incoming calls from Canada? You better have a friend in Canada who puts in his 2 Canadian Cents worth telling you what he thinks of your new call center employee. Getting calls from Delhi? Well, you had better ask some Delhi-ites what they think. After all, their standards are a bit different than standards in other parts of India, right?

Get workers who are attractive to your audience. This is not rocket science, but you do have to ask around and keep your eyes open. In the long run, the call centers that win are the ones that go overboard to please their clients. Do you try to please your clients? If so, how much do you try to please your clients? Are there a few MORE things you could do to please your clients? How often do you talk to your clients to ask them if there is anything else that you can do?

If it were me, I would run my call center workers one by one through a set of demanding people in various parts of the world. I would write down all opinions from all of my “judges”. It is so funny, because these days there are reality shows throughout the world where people will get up and sing before judges, or cook before judges. Each judge has something to say.

The sauce was too strong, and the cucumbers didn’t seem like they were “part” of the dish — they seemed like something you just threw in.

You can put your call center workers before judges and get critiques… That is easier than having your client tell you that you are fired because HIS customers didn’t like your new guy or your new girl. Think ahead and scrutinize your people — or someone else will.

You might also like:

Call centers who don’t answer their phone!
http://bpo.123outsource.net/2013/10/08/call-centers-who-dont-answer-their-phone/

Professional web sites for call centers
http://bpo.123outsource.net/2013/09/22/how-to-get-clients-for-your-call-center-professional-web-sites/

Assessing the value of the quality you receive in #callcenter work is hard

Categories: Call Center, Management | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Assessing the value of the quality you receive in #callcenter work is hard

Imagine that you are hiring call centers to do work for you. How do you assess the workers? How do you assess the company as a whole? Each person has unique skills and will be put through different situations. One person might be more efficient at their work (more calls / hour) while another person might be better at calming down complicated situations! Some people are just pleasant to talk to — efficient or not, and might gain your company popularity. A few workers might
give wrong answers to questions, or just make things up — imagine what that can do to your reputation. Everyone is different and it is not always to easy to figure out who is ideal for your needs.

There are factors that I am thinking of that you might not be thinking of. How fast will the worker quit? If you train someone to do your work, and you invested a lot of time in them, it is expensive if they quit. Imagine investing $1000 of your time in someone just to have them quit three weeks later. How can you predict who will quit and who won’t?

When you tally up the scores of all of the people you are comparing, give points for efficiency, and points for how they make people feel. Subtract points for unreliable behaviors. If you are picky, one small goof and you are fired. Most employers have a longer string than that, but you have to figure out how much incompetency you can handle, because there is a lot of it out there!

When assessing the value of the company as a whole, after going through five or more workers, you will get a sense of the quality standards of the company. In my opinion, you are as good as your worst employee. But, on the other hand if you have a few great ones to make up for the bad ones, it somewhat compensates!

Tweets
(1) If you have a few star employees to make up for the duds, it somewhat compensates!
(2) Imagine that you are hiring call centers to do work for you. How do you assess the workers?
(3) One #callcenter employee might be more efficient while another might be more pleasant to talk with!
(4) Imagine investing $1000 of your time training someone who quits 3 weeks later?
(5) When you tally up the score, give points for efficiency, pleasantness & deduct for mistakes!
(6) When assessing the value of a company as a whole, try out 5 or more workers; get an average score!

You might also like:

Training and assessing your workers
http://bpo.123outsource.net/2013/06/04/training-and-assessing-your-workers/

Does your team function as a team?
http://bpo.123outsource.net/2014/01/18/does-your-team-function-as-a-team/

Call Center Mumbai in the news!

Categories: Call Center, India | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Call Center Mumbai in the news
 
Call Centers in Mumbai vs. Rat Catchers
The Chicago Sun Times stated in November 2010 that a rat killer in Mumbai makes $271 while a Mumbai Call Center employee makes $338 as an entry level employee and claims that the competition for rat killing jobs is tough.  Indian call center jobs are now being outsourced to the Philippines, but there is no way to outsource rat catching jobs.  So, unless there is an influx of foreign born cats coming to Mumbai, the rat catchers are safe… for now.
 
“Outsourced” and real Mumbai Call Centers
The TV show Outsourced is really funny.  I watch each episode at least four times on hulu.com and love each and ever character.  Each persona is loveable, interesting, and hillarious.  But a real life Mumbai Call Center would be dull and boring in comparison.  I remember visiting a Vashi call center in Navi Mumbai (over the bridge from the Bombay peninsula). There would be the bored looking security guard in a dull uniform, the gray concrete buildings, the endless honking, unhappy people in a hurry to come to work.  I wish that real call center employees could be as delightful as on Outsourced!  The one call center employee I remember from real life was a girl in the Philippines who was entralled by the fact that I “Flew over her” on my way to India.  She asked me to wave hi next time I fly over the Philippines. I promised that I would!  I think this sort of charm should be integrated into the job.  Adding humor and personality makes a wonderful bridge between far away people.
 
Spiegel online’s article about India by day America by night discusses issues inside a Mumbai Call Center.  Call Center employees are encouraged to develop American accents and personalities. These employees live as Indians by day, and Americans by night.  The article claims that eligible English speaking call center call center employees are in shorter and shorter supply and that Mumbai call centers and Delhi Call Centers are trying to attract Europeans who are recent college grads to work overseas with them for a year. 
 
In the film “John & Jane”, a lady named Naomi is in her final state of Westernization.  She had bleached hair and bleached skin and spoke with an accent that somewhat resembled a Texan accent.  My point is that if you don’t live in a particular culture, then you are not part of it.  I can fake an accent from any part of the world, but I am only part of the cultures that I spend time in, and I spend more time in some and less time in others.  
 
What disturbed me is on domestic flights in India, I am always bumping into these falsely Westernized girls.  There is the fake sounding British accent, and the unwillingness to acknowledge Indian tradition.  Real Westerners who go to India know Indian tradition. We don’t always relate to it or like it, but we don’t pretend not to know what Chai is, and we don’t bleach our skin if we have a dark complexion — except for certain pop singer(s) who recently passed away who do the moon walk. We don’t pretend that no Indians have arranged marriages anymore.  There is a subculture of Indians with foreign samskaras who feel they are “too good to be Indian.” They love the airline, film, and bar industry. Their attitude is completely un-Indian, but equally un-Western and is often stuck-up.  They are in a neither here neither there sort of a cultural niche — the antithesis of being bi-cultural.  If they really want to be American, they should live with us, and become Westernerized in a real way, and stop pretending.

You might also like:

Visit us on Twitter!

Egypt and its Issues!

Finding a lucky vaastu spot for your office!

Human beings or human capital?

Categories: Call Center | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose.
French Proverb

Twenty years ago when I had my first formal job at a call center, the industry was still young. Everyone knew the idea was to get people to buy or contribute as much as po$$ible over the phone, but no one really twisted any arms. Callers used their natural charms and genuine attitudes about life to convince people to do something, and it had to be something they wanted to call about. Of course, this was before the general erosion of trust had destroyed 80% of Americans’ feelings about people and their motives, before telemarketing became a common daily occurrence, before 9/11, before the mortgage crisis, before the poisonous BP oil disaster, before gas prices rose to $4 a gallon in the U.S., before the rich versus poor gap widened so much that it resembled the fault at the border of the Pacific Plate, before the tsunami of 2004 that released energy the magnitude of 23,000 Hiroshima-style atomic bombs, before Hurricane Katrina and the earthquake and tsunami in Japan, several presidents ago…before the continuing stockmarket crashes that parallel these natural and unnatural disasters.

There is no longer much trust in each other, and young people of all nations do not have a secure future to look forward to. They have seen their parents struggle, and some have seen their parents fail. Many people are willing to learn to say anything at all on the phone to earn a living.

Thus, in 2012, the dilemma: how to run a call center? And how to run a call center so you get lots of work and can still face yourself in the mirror?

The latest ideas have revolved around what software to use to “manage” the calls and the call center and thus keep callers on their toes; how to keep training callers due to the constant turnover–formerly known to create business failure but now considered par for the course; and now, finally, where to outsource calls to–India or the Philippines–since U.S. workers demand to be paid “too much.” Note that all of this is about volume and turnover and bottom line, as if people really were dollar bills being spewed out on an assembly line and there will always be an endless supply of them…and thus, they are expendable…anything but human. This is the way companies and workers in the U.S. have been living. In fact, it has been shown to be the case that training good English-speaking callers and keeping them will, in the long run, make your call center more profitable to high-end companies. By the way, it is also better for all the people involved.

It seems that our current ideas of how to run a call center demonstrate all of the problems and cycles of thinking and management theory we have flipped through in the past twenty or thirty years, including the idea of “human capital.” I’m talking about human management; remember, what management originally meant was the way to get people to do their best. But now management has become an ugly word, and in practice often means the best way to manipulate people, lie to them, herd them in one direction and then another, and then, finally, when they least expect it, let them go.

Education and health are now termed “investments” in human capital; in other words, it is good for people to be healthy and smart. Why can’t we simply say that? In a time when the value of real investments is questionable, does the comparison of human benefits to capital–or people to money–inspire us? Is it sincere? After what we have seen of our investments, such a comparison seems blind and heartless. For if our human capital is to be managed by the same reckless forces that managed our major companies, stocks, banks, and governments– why would we want to use the term human capital? It has an eerie, Orwellian feel to it; ask any of the shareholders who collectively lost $11 billion when Enron collapsed, taking their retirement pensions, hopes, and dreams with it.

Here is my memory of working part-time in a prominent U.S. call center in 1993, right after I moved and was suddenly teaching not full-time but only part-time at a college.

The call center manager was a guy about 45, which in those days meant that he had some education and, given that he had lived through the 1960’s, had people-centered and earth-friendly values. He wasn’t rich, but he had a simple house and was generally happy in his life. He also made everyone at work happy: he complimented us when we did well, explained why something we said was or wasn’t effective, and sincerely believed in the companies we called on behalf of. Technology? We had the latest equipment, and it was adequate for what we did, and no new expensive software will help the bottom line if your people are not with you in spirit. Trainings? We had lots of them, but the core of the thing was that we all worked together well as a team, and we all tried our hardest without lying or creating false names….because nothing we were saying on the phone was a lie. It wasn’t tacky or scummy; we weren’t trying to fool anyone into doing anything. Of course, we also weren’t doing customer support or explaining technical manuals on the phone…but if we had been asked to, we would have managed to do it with a smile. All the callers were well-educated, and worked at the call center part-time or full-time because it supplemented their income, and all of them did it with a genuine feel for people. The term “human capital” would have been absurd.

Tom, the manager, was liked by everyone. He was known to be fair and approachable, and although he was not a softy or a pushover, you could ask him for a special schedule if you needed one. The clients who hired the call center also loved what we did. We had great rankings, and could get anyone to buy anything on the phone. Of course, the company only signed up with companies it genuinely developed a relationship with. And that is the secret of managing and developing any business at all: develop a real relationship by calling your clients and dealing honestly with them.

It was great while it lasted.

Like most things in that time of change, it didn’t last. The call center was bought out in 1994 by a bigger company, and went the way many companies have gone in the U.S. and elsewhere: the management became big and impersonal, giving lip service to the values of human decency and individuality that the smaller company really lived by. And that’s what companies do these days: they have a people-centered company mission statement that sounds good, and then they often do just the opposite in practice. And people know it.

Bigger is not better. Bigger cars take more gas and make the earth poor once more; bigger bombs destroy our future, bigger debates waste our time, bigger egos prevent us from communicating with one another. And if you are not big enough to lose, you are too small to win.

Covering our fears and our lies with impressive company names and more lies will not help the peoples of this world. Using the clever term “human capital” will not make us feel human. Admitting we are all human and then treating us as such, and forging on with a positive attitude, was always the best policy: as George Bernard Shaw put it, “If you can’t get rid of the skeleton in your closet, you’d best teach it to dance.”

What’s the best way to run a call center? How can you run a call center so you get lots of work and can still face yourself in the mirror?

If you’ve been reading this page, I think you have the answer.

Giving employees the right to make decisions

Categories: Management | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Now there is a risky topic. Most managers are terrified to let their underlings do anything without supervision. But, imagine the management savings if employees could make some of their own decisions. If you run a call center, it takes time to wait for a call center manager. But, what if your call center clerks can make a few last minute decisions to benefit your clients’ callers?

You really need to do a cost analysis. What is the cost if your employee is too generous and lets the customer get too much compensation for a corporate mistake? What is the benefit of the time saved by allowing them to make such decisions. If they are too generous, the customers will not complain — there — another benefit.

One boss liked to go on vacation a lot. He told his people that any decision that was $100 or less they could make themselves. In the worst case scenario he would lose a few hundred per month, but then he wouldn’t need to be bothered. Now, there is a solution! Set a cap on how much they can give out without permission. You just saved management hours per week and saved your callers from being on hold endlessly.

Another approach is to let your call center employees make arbitrary decisions how to handle cases, but document the decisions in a file. Every week or month those decisions could be reviewed with management to “fine tune” the employees decision making skills. Good idea or bad idea? An idea is only as good as your ability to make it work beneficially! Letting employees be their own manager might work for some, but not for all. Or, it might work on a limited basis for a few, but on a more extensive basis with others. You can try it and see what happens. Write a blog about it if it goes well.

Tweets:
(1) Give your employees the right to make decisions. But, what if they make a wrong decision?
(2) If you give your employees the right to make certain types of decisions = easier to manage

You might also like:

Having a foundation in business for long term growth
http://bpo.123outsource.net/2014/03/27/having-a-foundation-in-business-for-long-term-growth/

Do you overanalyze or do you trust your instincts?
http://bpo.123outsource.net/2014/03/18/do-you-over-analyze-or-trust-your-instincts/