Even as investments in talent and technology resources grow, effective resource management is a top priority in 2024. Caught between driving growth and minimizing operational costs as business slows, leaders are scaling back on resources. This includes talent, tools, and financial spending.
Quick to realize the emerging trend, CHRO Amanda built an effective resource management framework for managers in her organization. In a marketplace demanding more value through improved customer experiences and a work environment that prioritizes employee experience, most leaders are seeking helpful structures to balance both goals and on-the-ground realities.
Here are some a few tips you might consider in designing your own charter for resourceful management.
Resource Management Tip #1: Be clear about your purpose
When you are asked to scale down on team resources, it may seem unfair at first. Take time to absorb the news before you break it to the team. Evaluate how the resource cutback will impact your team’s performance rather than productivity.
For instance, will working with two fewer tools still mean successful target completion? Similarly, will reducing reports’ frequency lead to your team being just as effective?
Looking for such task optimization opportunities demands you to evaluate all your team’s work in the context of your organization’s purpose. You can even create a quadrant matrix around the following:
- good-to-do tasks
- must-do tasks
- high-value tasks
- low-value tasks
This can make it easy to identify purpose-aligned work.
Such an approach may even help your team with velocity and unlock accelerated business growth.
Resource Management Tip #2: Be mindful about resource allocation
It can be tempting to equate resource allocation with growth opportunities. But often, it simply isn’t true. Instead of spreading yourself too thin, be mindful. This will help get over the stress and guilt. Instead, it will make you see the point in turning down resource requests that won’t move the needle.
In this context, view existing and potential resources as investment centers rather than cost centers. Compare two similar-costing resources to evaluate which one will offer most value in the mid-term. This will help you make worthy, profitable decisions.
It is also important that you consider the team and company’s growth focus for the next year or two. Allocate a majority of your resources to relevant areas. Avoid distributing them all the same across functions or capabilities.
Resource Management Tip #3: Prioritize high-output over resource-draining processes
Be realistic. Are you slashing down resources as a correction or because you need to scale down on costs? If it is the latter, avoid pushing your team to continue business as usual with fewer resources. This will eventually lead to burnout and quicker employee churn.
Instead, create a side-by-side list – processes that directly drive high output, and processes that are plain cumbersome. See what happens when you pause work on such processes and reallocate resources. In all likelihood, this strategy will make your team highly effective despite fewer resources.
An added advantage? It will reenergize your team. Employees want to do work that delivers value. No one wants to spend the day poring over work that only furthers an operational ask. The exercise will boost team productivity and impact with fewer resources.
Resource Management Tip #4: Collaborate to understand resource priorities
The best managers are good listeners. Don’t rush with your decisions when it comes down to resource management. Take time to understand what every team member has to say about their resource needs, optimization potential, and opportunities. This allows you to know authentic past patterns and common future needs.
This doesn’t have to be a complex, time-consuming initiative. Leverage an intuitive employee experience management platform to get the insights you need. This can be extremely powerful in arriving at highly informed decisions, an imperative in today’s data-led environment.
This approach can also give you insights into how your resource management strategy is faring on the ground. Conduct quick Employee Pulse Surveys. Respond with relevant solutions and revisit your resource strategy before you alienate employees.
Getting resource management right
Keep in mind: None of us can claim to get resource management right the first time. It demands continuous attention. First, for many businesses, priorities are shifting every few months. Second, fluid operations demand resource reallocation. Try not to be overwhelmed by this challenge. Take quick action, trust employee-aligned data that goes beyond quantitative metrics, and read the room continually.
Leaders like our hypothetical CHRO Amanda know that identifying top priorities that need to get done is a critical first step in managing resources effectively. From there, it’s important to align with peers and leaders to define what ‘more’ can be done. Think in terms of velocity, growth, and profitability over mere efforts.
Ready to move forward? Learn more about how SogoEX can help you craft policies and practices that resonate with your team, unleashing enhanced performance while maximizing resources. Connect with our team today!