What would you do?

#1

utvols74

Well-Known Member
Joined
Nov 7, 2011
Messages
2,716
Likes
2,791
#1
If you’ll allow a simple analogy… sometimes putting a problem into another context helps give clarity.

You own a pretty good “upscale” sports bar – drinks/dinner meals and desserts. You routinely have a good crowd of patrons – but rarely a weekend waiting list. The restaurant manager keeps the place very clean – kitchen, bathrooms, dining area. Your place passes routine inspections with a score of 95 or higher due largely to him. This manager keeps the place unique in terms of décor changing it out routinely to keep it interesting. Under his direction, your social media presence is very good, but not as good as other restaurants you’ve noticed. You average 4.1 out of 5 on customer reviews –lower than 2-3 other similar restaurants in town whose averages are 4.5+. The menus and prices are very similar. Some of your lower rated customer reviews cite long wait times for food while others cite appetizers which are less than appetizing. Servers were noted as sometimes not being very friendly. The general manager hires/fires the chef, cook staff and wait staff. You’ve spoken to him about the customer reviews and he is slow to make meaningful changes. Months pass. The average customer review drops to 4.0. Turnover has increased among the staff. The attitude in the restaurant is starting to get “tense”. Your monthly profit and loss statement is not trending in the right direction even though you are still making bank.

At a social gala you notice two owners of the other competitor restaurants sitting at a table and talking. You ask to join and pretty soon you all are talking “shop”. You find out their restaurants typically have 1+ hour weekend waits – while yours never does. You check your phone and notice that each maintained their average 4.6 customer review while yours is hanging on to a 4.0. The talk turns to restaurant general manager (all seem to have very similar duties) and you discover that they’re paying their guys only slightly better than you do – yet they (apparently) receive much better results.

Options you consider driving home:

  • Replace the general manager
  • Replace the supervisors
  • Select the few cook/wait staff that need replacing
  • Do nothing. A 4.0 rating is better than most restaurants in town and with a little pressure on the GM, things will turn around (eventually) albeit costing you revenue in the process.
What would you do? I would replace the supervisors as a starting point. They’ll take care of #3. Replacing #1 at this point would be too disruptive.

Now consider our UT Vols GM is making north of $5M a year. The “supervisors” are making north of $1M a year. The staff is all making between $300 and $600k a year. They’re running an enterprise whose brand is worth $100s of millions of dollars with a national audience and legions of stakeholders we call “fans”.
 
#2
#2
If you’ll allow a simple analogy… sometimes putting a problem into another context helps give clarity.

You own a pretty good “upscale” sports bar – drinks/dinner meals and desserts. You routinely have a good crowd of patrons – but rarely a weekend waiting list. The restaurant manager keeps the place very clean – kitchen, bathrooms, dining area. Your place passes routine inspections with a score of 95 or higher due largely to him. This manager keeps the place unique in terms of décor changing it out routinely to keep it interesting. Under his direction, your social media presence is very good, but not as good as other restaurants you’ve noticed. You average 4.1 out of 5 on customer reviews –lower than 2-3 other similar restaurants in town whose averages are 4.5+. The menus and prices are very similar. Some of your lower rated customer reviews cite long wait times for food while others cite appetizers which are less than appetizing. Servers were noted as sometimes not being very friendly. The general manager hires/fires the chef, cook staff and wait staff. You’ve spoken to him about the customer reviews and he is slow to make meaningful changes. Months pass. The average customer review drops to 4.0. Turnover has increased among the staff. The attitude in the restaurant is starting to get “tense”. Your monthly profit and loss statement is not trending in the right direction even though you are still making bank.

At a social gala you notice two owners of the other competitor restaurants sitting at a table and talking. You ask to join and pretty soon you all are talking “shop”. You find out their restaurants typically have 1+ hour weekend waits – while yours never does. You check your phone and notice that each maintained their average 4.6 customer review while yours is hanging on to a 4.0. The talk turns to restaurant general manager (all seem to have very similar duties) and you discover that they’re paying their guys only slightly better than you do – yet they (apparently) receive much better results.

Options you consider driving home:

  • Replace the general manager
  • Replace the supervisors
  • Select the few cook/wait staff that need replacing
  • Do nothing. A 4.0 rating is better than most restaurants in town and with a little pressure on the GM, things will turn around (eventually) albeit costing you revenue in the process.
What would you do? I would replace the supervisors as a starting point. They’ll take care of #3. Replacing #1 at this point would be too disruptive.

Now consider our UT Vols GM is making north of $5M a year. The “supervisors” are making north of $1M a year. The staff is all making between $300 and $600k a year. They’re running an enterprise whose brand is worth $100s of millions of dollars with a national audience and legions of stakeholders we call “fans”.

The GM of the restaurant created a great product. People love it. He typically turns a profit. It isn’t made efficiently and some of the employees don’t pull their weight. The GM is leaving a ton of profit on the table and the shareholders are starting to recognize they deserve a better return. They are counting on the GM to cut the dead weight and be MORE profitable.
 
#7
#7
If you’ll allow a simple analogy… sometimes putting a problem into another context helps give clarity.

You own a pretty good “upscale” sports bar – drinks/dinner meals and desserts. You routinely have a good crowd of patrons – but rarely a weekend waiting list. The restaurant manager keeps the place very clean – kitchen, bathrooms, dining area. Your place passes routine inspections with a score of 95 or higher due largely to him. This manager keeps the place unique in terms of décor changing it out routinely to keep it interesting. Under his direction, your social media presence is very good, but not as good as other restaurants you’ve noticed. You average 4.1 out of 5 on customer reviews –lower than 2-3 other similar restaurants in town whose averages are 4.5+. The menus and prices are very similar. Some of your lower rated customer reviews cite long wait times for food while others cite appetizers which are less than appetizing. Servers were noted as sometimes not being very friendly. The general manager hires/fires the chef, cook staff and wait staff. You’ve spoken to him about the customer reviews and he is slow to make meaningful changes. Months pass. The average customer review drops to 4.0. Turnover has increased among the staff. The attitude in the restaurant is starting to get “tense”. Your monthly profit and loss statement is not trending in the right direction even though you are still making bank.

At a social gala you notice two owners of the other competitor restaurants sitting at a table and talking. You ask to join and pretty soon you all are talking “shop”. You find out their restaurants typically have 1+ hour weekend waits – while yours never does. You check your phone and notice that each maintained their average 4.6 customer review while yours is hanging on to a 4.0. The talk turns to restaurant general manager (all seem to have very similar duties) and you discover that they’re paying their guys only slightly better than you do – yet they (apparently) receive much better results.

Options you consider driving home:

  • Replace the general manager
  • Replace the supervisors
  • Select the few cook/wait staff that need replacing
  • Do nothing. A 4.0 rating is better than most restaurants in town and with a little pressure on the GM, things will turn around (eventually) albeit costing you revenue in the process.
What would you do? I would replace the supervisors as a starting point. They’ll take care of #3. Replacing #1 at this point would be too disruptive.

Now consider our UT Vols GM is making north of $5M a year. The “supervisors” are making north of $1M a year. The staff is all making between $300 and $600k a year. They’re running an enterprise whose brand is worth $100s of millions of dollars with a national audience and legions of stakeholders we call “fans”.

The best part about college football season is people making dumbass analogies on the state of the program.
 
#12
#12
I've answered this elsewhere tonight but... here we go.

You have to eliminate jobs because they're not relevant anymore, you have to fire "people" because they're not getting it done t one level or another. In the midst you may also have to help train people - recognizing they have potential but need help. If you're not going to fire Willy Martinez or Banks, then friggin get their azzes some help!! You brought in folks to "evolve" your offense - WTF would you not bring in folks to help Banks and company?? Of course, if he resisted it (reminder, who's in charge?), then just fire his ass - but what true professional wouldn't swallow his pride and go with the program? What person at Bank's stage of his career would fight it? That's just stupid. I guess we'll have to wait until the offseason to find out.... but man, I would've loved to have had CJH role at his $$$$ and gifted time. I sure as hell didn't get that post 9/11. He needs to learn and understand really fast.... what I did may years ago. You're not here because you're a buddy, you're here to get a particular job done. So F'ing do it. You stand at the podium, you tell us about the goals for the program, but you can't manage your staff in a manner that gets you there? Or even resembles that?
 
Advertisement



Back
Top