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Implementing Technology in Small Business Organizations
by
Brian
Lipsett,
PhD
Executive
Director
DigitaLiteracy.com
Introduction
Small business organizations can vastly expand and augment their
operational capacity by incorporating computers, computer networks,
task specific software, databases, advanced computer applications
such as GIS, integrated office equipment and the internet. Computers
can be used to manage clients, funds, membership, research, planning,
and work product. Computer networks can facilitate the integration
of staff in workflow, help to rationalize organizational structures,
reduce redundant tasks, and enable organizations to take advantage
of and maximize the teamwork abilities of valuable but geographically
remote staff.
However organizations seek to take advantage of technology,
the most important components of successful technology elaboration,are
not the pieces of equipment, software and other items acquired and
deployed. Indeed, those things one produces, promotes, and circulates
with technology are, as crucial as they are to organizational survival
and growth, secondary to coherent staff cohesion.
Staff cohesion is found in on and off hour camaraderie,
but best exemplified by smooth workflow processes. This element
of organizational function is rooted in a process we call planning.
As tedious as staff meetings can be, everyone knows when they've
had a good meeting. How powerful and invigorating a good meeting
can be. That's all I am proposing here - Planning through meetings
and discussions. The key to effective meetings is to keep them short
and lay out a clear set of objectives that are stuck to as rigorously
as possible.
As you might already have guessed, this document
is not a celebration of computers and computer networks. This is
a document about organizational planning as a central process in
the health and long term viability of organizations. The key concept
this article seeks to convey is that computers and computer networks
are a means to facilitate organizational effectiveness, but not
when they are approached in a fashion that assumes that computers
will solve all problems.
Indeed, it is the planning process itself which is
the key to the effectiveness of organizational technology initiatives
and the overall health of the
organization. The excitement and "hype" associated with bringing
new equipment into an office can be used as stepping off process
for engaging staff in planning. Failure to address the planning
process in an organized fashion can result in a considerable amount
of wasted time, money, and effort, and many goals will remain unrealized
or only be reached tentatively, until something breaks down and
there's nobody to "fix it." At the very least, without careful planning,
money will be squandered on useless and ineffective components.
Conversely, with careful planning and commitment,
the process of "teching up" can become a leverage point for vastly
improved organizational development and effectiveness. Remember,
we are not simply discussing the enhancement of an organization
with fancy new equipment and their products, rather we are arguing
that organizational development can be leveraged through the process
of planning the incorporation of equipment, communication and data
management processes. The prospect of new technological "toys" provides
the excitement that will ensure a productive planning process.
Drawbacks and Impediments
Even with the attendant benefits of computer technology, the prospect
of "teching up" can be daunting to organizational leaders. Technology
learning curves can be long, and things move slowly on the bottom
of the curve. Once you are over the initial part of the learning
curve, rapid growth in organizational knowledge, understanding,
and capability can occur. Do not underestimate the importance of
training in this process. Setbacks can inevitably occur. When something
goes wrong, key staff involved in the implementation of technology
may need to start almost from scratch again in order to solve problems.
This is due to lag time between technology setup and component failure.
However, training can short circuit this particular problem. Numerous
other challenges face organizational leaders as they contemplate
technology initiatives. A few of these issues are listed in point
counter-point fashion.
- Small organizations typically lack a sufficient budget with
which to commit to a major revamping of office space, equipment,
and attendant structures of position, procedure and policy. We
believe that such costs can be minimized through careful planning.
- Small business organizations do not have the budget to maintain
such equipment in the face of component failure. Equipment is
now quite inexpensive and when properly deployed and utilized,
will cut labor costs.
- Small business organizations may not wish to divert a staff
person's time to the training necessary to take full advantage
of any given technology. After process, training is everything.
- Organizational leaders may be happy doing things "the old way,"
and may misunderstand the value and opportunities of new technology
based initiatives. Leaders can even be right in this, but may
just as easily throw the baby out with the bath-water even in
being right.
Nowadays, most equipment is relatively easy to set up, install
and troubleshoot even for non-technical persons. As stated however,
equipment failures, when they do happen (and they will), tend to
occur at a sufficient distance from the initial setup such that
people cannot remember what they did originally to get things to
work. This problem is especially compounded when clear lines of
responsibility for solving problems are not laid out in anticipation
of those problems that may arise. If nothing else, the benefits
of discussing the things that could go wrong during technology implementation
will embolden staff initiatives and root problem solving in a supportive
and dynamic environment. This overall benefit of advanced planning
is enhanced further when there is a commitment to train people in
advance to both move the technology initiative forward and anticipate
and solve problems.
This essay is not meant to dissuade people from implementing
technology in a small business organization. Rather it is meant
to encourage organizational leaders to take the process more seriously
than is frequently observed in the field. While it may be useful
to have a computer for each person on staff, it is important to
note that once an organization moves beyond one computer, the net
benefits of having the computers connected in a network increases
exponentially as the number of computers and ancillary equipment
in use in the organization's work environment increases. Moreover,
when integrating internet usage and web site deployment into work
processes, it is extremely important to think about the entire network
and not just a piece of it (i.e. like the internet connection itself).
Remember that computer networks are designed to augment
- not supplant - human social networks. The structure of the organizations'
human networks will almost always be changed by the implementation
of these technologies. It is through planning that perceived threats
to people's positions in these networks will be mitigated. Combining
training with the planning process will also help to empower staff
members to take control of the changes that technology can bring
to work processes, and this will maximize the effectiveness of the
changes and the organization as a whole.
The simple point is that technologies at issue in
this paper ought to be approached as tools which bring people togther
in pursuit of common, shared goals. Although human social networks
in the workplace can arise both formally and informally, it makes
sense to use the planning process for technology implementation
to enhance the strength of the most productive aspects of human
interaction in the workplace.
Technology Planning
Outline - Courtesy of the Progressive Technology
Project (PTP)
The following are elements
of technology planning that PTP have employed over the last 18 months
of work. Not all the areas described below were used in all of the
technology assessment and planning efforts conducted. Assessment
and planning work should be tailored to the organization and situation
at hand. PTP believes that good technology planning should start
with an assessment that becomes the foundation for the planning
efforts.
What
is "technology assessment"? - The elements
1) Identification of
organizational goals and strategies
2) Basic description
of the organization offices,
members, staff, etc . . .
3) Assessment of current
strategies of work What
works? What does not?
4) Assessment of current
technology usage To
do what? By whom?
5) Assessment of staff
and member technology skills
6) Assessment of current
organizational technology support strategies
7) Identify current
technological infrastructure--Assess all current hardware, software,
Internet connections, e-mail accounts, etc.
What
is "technology planning"? The elements
1) Summary of technology
assessment 2)
Summary of key organizing goals, strategies and current campaigns
3) Identification of
technology strategies and technology uses that support organizing
work and goals of the organization
4) Identification of
needed training and staff support to implement strategies and support
tech use in the organization
5) Identification of
needed technical assistance and maintenance to support technology
use in the organization
6) Identify needed equipment
and software
7) Prioritize the list
of strategies, training, and technical assistance
8) Create a budget and
time-line to implement
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