Keenan 411

Jim Keenan is Vice President of Sales Strategy and Operations with a Global Technology Company, an Enterprise 2.0/Web 2.0 Connector, an Entrepreneur still trying to get it right, and a PSIA Certified Ski Instructor for Vail Resorts. Husband to Big E and father to four great kids. In a nut shell, I'm a Sales Guy. Life is good!

Why Not Create a Movement

Motivating people is critical. People drive companies, promote products, save lives, eliminate disease and change the world. These things are done in small focused group efforts or by creating a movement. Movements have something efforts don’t have — ENERGY.

Movements happen when an idea grows bigger than the originator. Movements are more than an just an effort, they become viral and participants make them personal. Why not turn your important corporate efforts into movements?

The most important efforts in your company should be movements, why waste time in efforts, that have half the return?

Rather than having an expense reduction effort, create a cost savings movement. Pick a cost savings goal that can make a difference, like eliminating the need for lay-offs. Give people a compelling personal reason to cut costs. Movements are personal, people need to “feel” the benefit to them and their peers.

Once you have identified the effort and set a goal, market it and brand it. Give it a name, “Save a Dollar, Save a Job”. This makes it unique to your organization, it creates a sense of ownership. It’s a lot easier to get excited about saving money to save your job or your friends job, than it is to cut travel because you got an e-mail asking you to. To create a movement it has to be personal.

To turn the effort into a movement, promote it. Asking or mandating people cut expenses on a conference call, or via email isn’t going to get people behind it. You need to find the influencers in the organization. Introduce the effort to them personally. Explain why it is important. Share the organizations vision of avoiding layoffs. Have weekly or bi-weekly newsletters and calls to announce progress and share the numbers. Highlight the divisions, and individuals who saved the most money. Give recognition to the person and group that created a creative new way that cut costs. Share how they did it and how much it saved. Create contests and get peoples competitive juices flowing. Make it fun!

An effort to cut costs, increase revenue, reduce carbon footprint, or attack a competitor is good. A movement is a whole other story.

What is going on inside of your company? A whole lot of efforts, or is there a movement afoot?

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  • Jim

    Dont know if you have seen Seth Godin's new book Tribes - but what you described is exactly what he discussed in the book (just with your own unique point of view!)

    I would very much like to start a movement in AGS - and some of the things I have been running by you are for that exact reason - I think it is really clear we need something just havent gotten to the level where we can hope for a movement
  • I haven't seen his book, I like his blog, and read it often, however
    have never read his books. Not sure why. I think need to invoke the
    rule of "3" hearing your talk about it.

    A movement at AGS would be clutch. Making it personal, is the
    difficult part. The breast cancer walk is a movement, the diabetes
    foundation is more like an effort. Why?

    Let me know if I can help.

    //keenan
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