Sight line
Sight line |
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See also |
Line of sight (LoS) refers to the understanding of how the work, roles and responsibilities affect the success of the company[1]. Enables companies to introduce appropriate changes at the right time and in the right way to achieve sustainable and high levels of business performance[2]
Benefits for organizations and employees
LoS increases job satisfaction, attachment to the organization, and employee retention. Positively referred to commitment and loyalty, and negatively to turnover intentions. Employees has a goal and both understands and believes in personal contributions and their role in the organization[3]. Enable managers to identify blockers and goals at risk[4]
The Big Picture
Three bricklayers were asked on one construction site: What are you doing here? The first replied: "I'm laying bricks." The other man replied: "I'm building a wall". But the third, LoS's man, said with enthusiasm and pride: "Who me? Why I am building the most beautiful cathedral in the world.[5]
To increase productivity, organizations need more employees who understand not only that they are building a wall, but that they are building a cathedral.
Assumptions of LoS
Elements of the Line of Sight approach[6][7]:
- Clear definition and explanation of goals and priorities,
- Creation of goal measures, and steps necessary to accomplish these goals,
- Adaptation of the organization to specific and measurable goals and objectives,
- Implementation of tools to monitor compliance with the goals,
- Creating awareness and skills necessary to identify gaps, trends, and deviations from course,
- Providing skills and a system to manage those improvements to completion,
- Feedback system, allowing rapid capture and correction of deviations, available to all mamangers and stakeholders - lessons learned.
Footnotes
References
- Anderson M., (2014), Bottom-Line Organization Development, Routledge, Feb 18, 2004
- Berard J., (2013), Accelerating Leadership Development: Practical Solutions for Building Your Organization's Potential, John Wiley & Sons, Aug 26, 2013
- Boswell R. W., Boudreau w. J., (2001) Boswell Employee Line of Sight to the Organization’sStrategic Objectives – What it is, How it can beEnhanced, and What it Makes Happen" Management Decision, Vol. 39, No. 10, 2001
- Carter N. M., Galinsky E.,(2008), Leaders in a Global Economy: Talent Management in European cultures,Catalyst, Families and Work Institute, Nov 15, 2008
- Covey R. S.,(2013), The 8th Habit: From Effectiveness to Greatness,Simon and Schuster, Jan 8, 2013
- Lawler E. E., Worley G. C., (2011), Built to Change: How to Achieve Sustained Organizational Effectiveness, John Wiley & Sons, Feb 17, 2011
- Longuski J., (2007,) The Seven Secrets of How to Think Like a Rocket Scientist, Springer Science & Business Media, May 26, 2007
- Shalloway A., Beaver G., Trott R. J., (2009) Lean-Agile Software Development: Achieving Enterprise Agility, Pearson Education, Oct 22, 2009
- Wilcox M.,(2018) Effective Talent Management: Aligning Strategy, People and Performance,Routledge, Jun 10, 2016
Author: Agnieszka Katarzyna Sikora
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