Now What? Plot Your Management MAP!
Two Minute Management Video Tip — Plot Your Management MAP
My sister came into town for a visit last weekend and while driving to the airport to pick her up I ran into a nasty traffic jam. As far as I could crane my neck, cars, trucks and SUVs were stuck in hopeless grid lock. Never fear, cell phones are here. I popped up the navigation app, quickly mapped out a new route, bolted at the next exit and made my way around the entire mess. Slick! Cut my delay in half. 
As a manager, no matter how well you map things out your plans may become snarled. Just as traffic may slow to a crawl on the highway, business continues to hit the brakes due to the long term recession. With this in mind, you may be posing the question: “Now what?” What should you be doing and how should you be managing your group to extend your staying power and fortify your business success until the market turns around? You should be plotting and upgrading another kind of map — your management “MAP.” This means toning and clarifying how you manage, monitor and maximize these essential management resources: Money, Assets, and People. For the next few weeks I’ll be sharing ways you can take a fresh look at your management MAP.
Maps efficiently show you how to get from one place to another. The same is true for your management MAP. Great managers are constantly taking the pulse of what’s keeping their business strong and closely watching their management MAP. Consistently well-managed Money, Assets and People will generate a well balanced balance sheet. Several months ago I was chatting with a college professor who teaches entrepreneurial business skills. A comment she made echoed this thought and stuck with me; she said: “I love recessions because businesses who survive are those who know what they’re doing verses those who’ve been relying on luck.” She likes to see businesses apply management skills and good planning to weather tough times and emerge even more successful. Building or upgrading your management MAP will help you do this; put good business practices into play and regularly check and update those practices as the market changes.
M is for Money
How’s your business bank account or team budget looking these days? Here’s where the smart manager stands tall and says: “We’re looking pretty good.” No doubt they were looking pretty good before the recession too. If you’re not able to say this about the Money portion of your management MAP you may be nervously reaching for a drink. Always staying in good fiscal shape — keeping expenses and costs low while judiciously watching inventory, payroll and general spending – is good business and essential for survival in punk markets. We all know this doesn’t happen by chance. It takes deliberate, ongoing financial discipline and planning during both robust and rocky times.
How often do you take a long term, hard look at the Money portion of your MAP beyond the cursory – “Uh, yeah, we can make payroll this month”? Grab extra time and check improvements you can make in how you manage short term and long term money, accounting practices and processes, and everything else feeding dollars into and sucking bucks out of the budget in receivables, payables, checking and savings accounts and investments. If you can’t respond to the bank account question by saying, “we’re in pretty good shape,” start plotting the course for how you’ll get there. For all managers who haven’t done it lately, rebalance and chart an updated plan for the Money in your MAP now. Play with the numbers and look for improvements staring you in the face or hidden behind a value you haven’t picked apart in a while.
In light of the soft market, what changes can you make to improve the Money portion of your management MAP? Anything other than spending less and saving more? What monthly, automated purchase can you reduce or stop making and easily live without? What can you add to the budget to make you and your team more productive? Let me know what’s unique about your money management and how you’re doing! In my next installment we’ll take on the “A” in your MAP – Assets. What’s included? We’ll talk it about it in a couple of weeks! *
*excerpted in part and reprinted from Mary Elston management column with permission from Soundings Publications, LLC.


Why should you worry about being a manager who enables his or her team and what does “enable” mean? Since you are a manager who hires experienced and capable professionals, what additional enabling is needed? Simply stated, you need to provide the kind of enabling that helps people do their work. Peter Drucker, the business strategist once said: “A manager is responsible for the application and performance of knowledge.” A manager who “enables” is actively applying this concept. 