I have been having a learning experience in the last month about why communication is effective. I have also learned that most people don’t pay attention.
One of the more routine and boring tasks in my job is the issuing of monthly checklists. They are compliance checklists, full of fun (not) legislative requirements. The old process required me to generate them from the system, they came out as PDFs; then load them into a really awful online system (done on the cheap by someone with a very linear mind who couldn’t image the end user making mistakes), which sent an awful email to the recipient (discovered after years of use). The recipient had to log in, download the checklist, print it out, complete by hand then log back in and tick a box to say complete. I had to do a lot of nagging to get the boxes ticked, and always suspected the checklists were not being carefully completed. Unfortunately, there was no budget and little interest in upgrading the terrible system, so it remained.
This year my boss decided to change things. Now, when I generate a checklist it formats in Word. I then send detailed emails along with the checklist to each individual. The email contains what I thought of as clear and understandable instructions. Each Person opens the checklist, completes by clicking on Ok or Fail boxes (nothing else can be amended) and can add comments at the end. The checklist is then sent back to me in Word format. I save it in a particular location and the database we have automatically picks it up and we can review the results. Much better. A thousand times easier to complete(I too have a checklist), and easier to administer. Most people failed to send the checklists back the first month. Then they sent them PDF (doesn’t work). Then the second month, I-sent reminders to the non-completers. In those reminders I said “The checklist was emailed to you earlier this month. It can be completed electronically.” At least two people tried to log in to the old system and told me their checklist was missing. The third month (now) I sent the checklists early (i always loaded them online early, but the first two months were adjustments, so the checklists ran late), and 5 people sent them back early. I had to tell them they couldn’t send checklists confirming they were compliant for the whole month of May at the beginning of the month.
My explanatory email is getting more precise every month, and I am contemplating a training session for these people. Not to mention, a lot of people ave raised issues with the content and processes in their checklist. These would be the same processes they ticked off month after month.
I had always suspected that the world was full of people who didn’t pay attention, but this is surprising. I know that I read (ok, skim) quickly, but I often go back and read something two or three times, to make sure nothing has been missed. My stepfather, who really does read every word (i suspect non-diagnosed reading issues as a child) only reads things once, but he really does read every single word. He is the only one in my immediate family who doesn’t read much for a hobby, although that is changing now he has discovered John LeCarre. These people who don’t read carefully and then just take action, boggle the mind.
In other news, there is big legislative change coming in my industry. I started freaking out late last year when i realised that most other industry participants were working on coping, and my company wasn’t. I am the main legislative updater, so failure here will land on me, despite my Chicken Little efforts. The problem was there was no effective channels for me to report this up and push for actual action. So, a committee has been formed that has this responsibility. Huge sigh of relief when my summary of the changes went off to them and they agreed a project must happen. It went to another committee(or so we thought) to be assigned resources. Except that the person taking it to that committee forgot. And then there were no resources. Then on friday, I went to a meeting where I was expecting to meet the potential BA for this project (we are at least 6 months behind in my opinion) and act as technical resource. I was told that I am the BA. A tiny squeak emerged. So, those months when I did nothing, sigh, could have continued to work on things, because I need that now.
But, on discussion with my boss, this has not yet been agreed, so someone else may yet get to do this.









