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Articles and Interviews

Discussion of Practice What You Preach

by Editor of AccountingWeb.com 2001

AccountingWeb.com, 2001

David presented findings from his latest book, Practice What You Preach, which explores statistically the relationship between employee attitudes and financial performance in 139 professional service offices worldwide.

Session Moderator: Thank you for joining us today in the AccountingWEB Workshop. We are pleased to welcome David Maister today.

David Maister is widely acknowledged as one of the world’s leading authorities on the management of professional service firms. For two decades he has advised firms around the world in a broad spectrum of professions, covering all strategic and managerial issues.

I would like to take a moment to thank TAG International for sponsoring and making Mr. Maister’s workshop possible today.

Mr. Maister will present the findings of his latest book, Practice What You Preach: What Managers Must Do to Create a High-Achievement Culture, available today for purchase on the AccountingWEB site, which explores statistically the relationship between employee attitudes and financial performance in 139 professional service offices worldwide.

Firms were found to make significantly greater profits and faster growth where employees agreed with the following nine statements:

  1. Client satisfaction is a top priority at our firm.
  2. We have no room for those who put their personal agenda ahead of the interests of the clients or the office.
  3. Those who contribute the most to the overall success of the office are the most highly rewarded.
  4. Management gets the best work out of everybody in the office.
  5. Around here you are required, not just encouraged, to learn and develop new skills.
  6. We invest a significant amount of time in things that will pay off in the future.
  7. People within our office always treat others with respect.
  8. The quality of supervision on client projects is uniformly high.
  1. The quality of the professionals in our office is as high as can be expected.

    Welcome, David, the floor is yours!

    David Maister: Thanks. Does anyone have a quick reaction to that list?

    Look at number eight. It’s insultingly obvious. Why doesn’t everyone do this?

    Becky Dowd: Good question!

    Richard Stinson: Tight time budgets might be a reason number eight is not followed.

    Stephen MacNeil: Demands on time and trying to control time in a contract for fear that we cannot bill it.

    David Maister: In other words, quality will be compromised if we can’t bill it?

    Stephen MacNeil: Seems to be the direction I’ve seen lately.

    Session Moderator: Number seven is a good topic.

    David Maister: What number seven means is do you have the guts to fire a big-billing partner who treats people in the firm with a lack of respect?

    Todd MacDonald: Short of firing him, what can be done?

    David Maister: Counsel him or her, and make clear that your firm has non-negotiable standards. It’s a question of whether or not you have any ironclad principles, except for cash. What I’ve proven (not just my opinion) is that those who have the guts to have standards make more money 

    Becky Dowd: Seems obvious to me. How can we as nonpartners get our partners to act on these principles?

    David Maister: Nonpartners can’t change partners. Change firms. Life’s too short to work for idiots without principles.

    Session Moderator: David, why don’t you cover the nine areas one by one for us?

    David Maister: OK, moderator. First, client satisfaction. Everyone preaches it, but the question is do you have a system that forces you never to compromise? For example, how many of you give clients an unconditional satisfaction guarantee?

    Stephen MacNeil: Not here.

    David Maister: The world is filled with well-intentioned people who know what to do, but get stampeded by short-term expediency.

    2. We have no room for those who put their personal agenda ahead of the interests of the clients or the office.

    Todd MacDonald: Is this ego stuff?

    Session Moderator: Sounds like it to me…

    David Maister: We’ve all got egos. It’s about what the ironclad standards are that your firm chooses to compete on, and therefore never compromises.

    Notice it doesn’t say we are “sorta” team players. It says we fire individualists who don’t work well in teams. Teamwork is profitable, but only if you don’t compromise. Reactions?

    Becky Dowd: I agree!

    Session Moderator: Compromise what?

    J. Fisher: Compromise is good—it prevents arguments.

    Stephen MacNeil: Not everyone functions well in a team setting…do we fire those who excel in their own way?

    J. Fisher: But not being a “team player” can promote arguments and resentment.

    David Maister: There’s less resentment if everyone knows the rules. Do you have a “rights and obligations of every firm member” statement that lays out what your nonnegotiable standards of behavior are? The message of the study is that it doesn’t have to be teamwork. The message is that you get the commercial benefits of what you absolutely always do (and are), not what you try to be if it’s convenient.

    J. Fisher: I see.

    Session Moderator: Are you talking about a mission statement?

    David Maister: No, it’s not a mission statement if people are allowed to transgress it, even slightly. I’ll repeat my language. It’s about our values, our nonnegotiable minimum standards of behavior that define who we are and what form of excellence we are going to deliver to the market, not aim at. Deliver. Every time.

    Stephen MacNeil: My experience is that those standards, especially for the partner group, are situational.

    David Maister: Yeah, that’s the point. The world is so full of wimps that standards are “situational.” But notice, I’m absolutely not making moral statements; I’m saying I can now prove with data that firms that uncompromisingly enforce high standards make more money.

    Session Moderator: What about number three? Those who contribute the most to the overall success of the office are the most highly rewarded.

    J. Fisher: Positive reinforcement?

    David Maister: It’s not positive reinforcement in the sense of “Do this and I’ll pay you” That’s treating people like prostitutes. It’s about being a firm defined by common views of what it takes to be a full professional.

    Stephen MacNeil: Is contribution limited to being a rainmaker?

    David Maister: No. That’s 19th century thinking, and that’s the point. Too many accounting firms run on the principle that if you bring in lots of cash as a rainmaker, you’re not held to the same high standards of supervision, respect or bringing out the best in people. I’ve found that it’s false financial logic to let 800-pound gorillas get away with not meeting other standards. You make less money if you do that.

    Let me go down a different tack. I’ve learned that you don’t make money by chasing money. You make it by exciting and enthusing your people to reach for high standards. That takes a manger who is a net creator of excitement and energy.

    Stephen MacNeil: The money will follow?

    David Maister: Financially successful offices outperformed the rest on all 74 employee attitude questions! Here are some where they most outperformed the rest:

    • Enthusiasm and morale around here has never been higher.
    • Management of our office is successful in fostering commitment and loyalty.
    • People are more dedicated here than in most other organizations.