01/26/2007
Managing Organizational Growth
Arriving at one goal is the starting point to another.
John Dewey
At the World Forum Foundation's "Managing For Quality: Working Forum for Multi-Site Early Childhood Organizations" in Amsterdam on October 3 - 6, 2006, we empowered a team of "analysts," led by Alison Pepper, to capture the key thoughts from presentations and discussions. They did a magnificent job.
As an example, here are a few nuggets from the presentation of Sylvia Neal of PLASP in Toronto, Ontario, Canada on "Managing Organizational Growth"....
- Strategy for growth important to consider process for growth, infrastructure, staff willingness.
- Important to keep in touch with staff and keep communication channels open.
- Essential to preserve culture of the organization — may get lost as company grows.
- Know what you can do and be willing to say “NO.” Example: government mandate for before- and after-school care in the province. Came to this company who said there was no way that they could do that.
- On-site analysis experience. Measurement tool to make sure we are measuring facts, not perceptions. United Way developed it. Measure over a 5-year period. Revenues, expenses, and service levels. It’s a very rigorous process. What does one vacancy cost?
- Have model sites where you provide the service.
- If you are ready and want to grow, then put strategies into place to grow. If you’re caught by surprise, then you have problems.
- Effective communication: Find many ways and accommodate people’s preferences; understand whether your message was delivered, and was it a message that they were interested in hearing?
- Meetings attended by people who can make decisions on the spot, rather than making staff wait for decisions.
Photo Galleries from Working Forum Multi-site
Reports from Working Forum Multi-site are available on these topics:
A New Career Helping Young Children Develop and Learn
Learn how to give a young child the very best foundation possible �" with a Bachelor of Arts Early Childhood Development at National University.
For more information about Exchange's magazine, books, and other products pertaining to ECE, go to www.ccie.com.
|
© 2005 Child Care Information Exchange - All Rights Reserved
| Contact Us
| Return to Site