I was able to catch several of the keynote addresses, and I offer here the nuggets that I took away from each of their presentations (Let me apologize in advance for any unintentional misrepresentations of the speakers' presentations):
Adm. Thad Allen, USCG (Ret.) -
Admiral Thad Allen served as the National Incident Commander for the unified response to the Deepwater Horizon oil spill (2010), was designated the principal federal official for Hurricane Katrina (2005), and coordinated the USCG assistance following Haiti's catastrophic earthquake and tsunami.
Allen employed many of the Baldrige Criteria in formulating his National Incident Response, and offered his perspectives of three recent catastrophic events. Below are my notes from his presentation.
Katrina -
- Post-Katrina we got the problem wrong - all solutions were addressing the wrong problem... we were no longer battling a hurricane; rather, its after-affects. We needed to treat Katrina's aftermath equivalent to a weapon of mass destruction having been inflicted on an innocent population unable to respond. Similar to a terrorist action - but with no criminality.
- "No plan survives first contact with the enemy" - Eisenhower. Lesson: Don't get stuck on stupid.
- A major challenge was the temporary loss of government and lack of continuity. Everyone, every agency, was working independently. Lesson: We need teamwork, coordination and clear objectives.
- Again, affects of the earthquake and tsunami were similar to having a weapon of mass destruction inflicted on an unsuspecting population without the means to respond.
- Lack of processes to align all of the international support coming in.
- Ports were damaged; needed to coordinate all traffic in/out of the lone airstrip, while respecting Haiti's sovereignty. Coordination increased in-bound flights from 16/day to 160/day.
- The oil slicks were omni-directional and indeterminant
- Highest priority was to cap the well to stop the flow of oil
- Money was not the issue; rather, the allocation of supply-chain resources (e.g. booms, dispersants, volunteers, etc.)
- Volunteers had passion, energy, vessels - but lacked an overall concerted plan.
- Created processes to focus and coordinate the volunteers to go after the 10,000 oil patches.
J.J. Irani (Tata Steel) -
My main takeways were Mr. Irani's message concerning rewards and recognition to build a quality culture in Tata:
- Financial rewards are given the the employee's spouse; and, recognition of the employee is public. (I did not hear any mention of how rewards are distributed to single individuals or non-married couples).
- 'QUALITY ' = Quality Unites and Leverages Individual Talents,Year-upon-year.
Barbara Corcoran (Corcoran Group) -
A very high energy, enthusiastic speaker sharing her experiences while building a real estate empire.
- Perceptions are reality
- All the good ideas are on the outside [of the organization]
- Don't under-estimate the power of recognition
- "Shoot the dogs" early, but always value and respect the individual. Try to make the individual feel good about being let go.
- Fun is good for business
- Two kinds of people - "Expanders" and "Containers". Healthy organizations need both.
- You have the right to be there.
Rob Bryant (Computer Sciences Corp.) -
Master Black Belt and motivational speaker relating his personal triumph of overcoming paralysis after a 55-foot fall in 1982 to quality, safety and employee engagement.
- Hard times do not dictate the outcome - you do.
- Encourage people and replicate best practices, rather than punish
- Don't cover-up mistakes; take ownership. Apologize.
- Build partnerships.
- 20% of employees are discouraged at work; the longer the employee service, the more/larger is the number of disengaged.
- Build engagement through actions and deeds. Communicate, communicate, communicate.
- Engagement = winning the hearts and minds of employee.
- Build employee esteem; best companies treat their employees like family.
- Apply Lean first, then Six Sigma. Lean gets rid of the junk. Six Sigma improves what's left.
The 2011 WCQI was another great event. I attended the Leadership Institute; tweeted about the WCQI for ASQ, participated in the Statistics Division's Tactical Planning session; delivered a paper at the ICQI conference-in-a-conference (on 3M's Process & Product Understanding - an example of statistical engineering); attended a few sessions, helped staff the Statistics Division booth, visited the STAT hospitality suite, and cheered on the 3M team in the International Team Excellence competition.
The city of Pittsburgh represented itself well.
I am looking forward to the 2012 WCQI - Anaheim, CA.
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