header
Home arrow Who we are and what we do arrow Plans ect. arrow More on Competence and Commitment Saturday, 17 May 2008
Site Translator
Main Menu
Home
Training & Consulting Services
Contact Us
Who we are and what we do
How to become a Member
Scanlon Blog
News
Free Scanlon Materials
Links
Members Only Area
Best Practices
Scanlon Survey Site
Events
Lean Tools
Scanlon On-line Training
Lean Certification and Training
Scanlon Forum
Scanlon Store
User Menu
Log-in and Registration
Syndicate
iJoomla DigiStore Manager
Login to view your licenses
DigiStore shopping cart
Digistore Categories
Training Programs
Books
Scanlon Posters and Accessories
More on Competence and Commitment PDF Print E-mail

More on the Principle of Competence and the Process of Commitment

It requires a great deal of competency for a Scanlon organization to be successful. Initially management competency was stressed, but in the last 20 years Scanlon leaders have recognized that everyone in the organization must strive for competency. Today, Scanlon organizations invest a tremendous amount in their people. We were among the first organizations to practice the ideas of "Learning Organizations."

We believe people are an asset to be developed and not a cost to be reduced. Motorola (a Scanlon influenced organization) is benchmarked worldwide for their training and development program which spent over 50 million per year (1990) to provide 28 different curriculums from basic math and reading skills to advanced engineering training. Sears (a more recent Scanlon organization) established Sears University. Each Scanlon organization develops programs to increase the competency of everyone in the organization.

Competency Results: Three separate audits by outside firms found Motorola received a $30 return for each dollar they invested in training and development.

Competency requires both an organizational and individual commitment to succeed. A poet once wrote:

Three men went down a road as down a road went he, the man he was, the man they saw, the man he wanted to be.

For each of us to become the man or women we "want to be" we must make a personal commitment to change and improve. Scanlon practitioners strive for competency in three areas;
1) personal
2) professional (job)
3) organizational

In addition, Scanlon practitioners believe: No person, profession or organization is perfect. No person, profession or organization stays the same for long. They are either getting better or getting worse. Every person, profession, and organization is "in a state of becoming."

 
< Prev   Next >
EPIC Leadership Podcasts
Click Logo for Pdf File!
Advertisement
Who's Online
April 2008 May 2008 June 2008
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
Week 18 1 2 3
Week 19 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Week 20 11 12 13 14 15 16 17
Week 21 18 19 20 21 22 23 24
Week 22 25 26 27 28 29 30 31
Scanlon Quote of the Day
“The Scanlon Plan...If you have a plant manager and a labor leader with good will and common sense, you won't believe how spectacular the results will be.”
-Robert Townsend in "Further Up the Organization"
Home | FAQ | News | Events | Sitemap

footer