The value of experience can be hard to judge. You only know for sure
when you find yourself in a situation that demands it, and you perform –
or not. The same goes for your staff. Will their lack of experience let
them down? Or will their experience enable them to deliver in a tough
situation?
When a challenge arises, staff with less experience tend to get
bogged down in unimportant items and spread themselves too thinly, they
don’t have the prior experience to just know what needs to be done and
how.
Other symptoms of lack of experience include people coming into a
situation with a belief that “the answer is X”, where X might be process
mapping, improved accounting software or product line profitability,
etc. It might well be that they are part of the solution, but a fixation
with preconceived ideas is dangerous.
In many situations, you can work your way through. Experience is less
important as you have time to consider your next move. It’s only in
crisis situations, where there can be little margin for error, that
experience is worth so much more than even its weight in gold.
Back in my auto industry days, I recall the words of the grizzled
manager running the body assembly area, Derek Godsell. Talking about
man-management skills, he said: “You need a good selection of tools in
your box; you need to know how to use each of them; and you must know
which one is for which job.”
I think it applies to many areas, though of course one can’t be
expert in all of them. Bringing people into your team who have the
relevant experience will strengthen your performance.
The challenge – with start-ups in particular – is often lack of
resources. So fewer people (perhaps just you) have to cover many bases.
Secondly, even if you want to recruit expertise, it can be hard to tell
whether someone really has it. The truth is only revealed when that
crunch moment arises and they’re put on the spot.
So what are the key benefits of experience? What I value most in experienced staff is:
- Knowing what to do instinctively – picking what to focus on and what to leave out.
- Knowing how to do things – in particular handling a variety of people.
- Having a nose to sniff out whether something is a big issue or not.
- Having a big contact base – being able to call up others for advice straightaway.
- No – or at least few - surprises. They are less likely to be shocked by something and therefore more likely to stay calm in crisis situations, with clearer thinking and lower risk of panic measures.
For most people it’s inevitable that the older you get the more
experience you have, so it really does pay to have older employees
around you (preferably mixed in with younger ones).
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