Transforming businesses from obstacles to prosperity!

Thank you for taking the time to investigate what we have to offer. We created this service to assist you in making your company the very best. We differentiate ourselves from what others define as a consultant. The main difference between consulting versus counseling is preeminent in our mind.

A consultant is one that is employed or involved in giving professional advice to the public or to those practicing a profession. It is customary to offer a specific offering without regard to other parameters that may affect the ultimate outcome.

A counselor is one that is employed or involved in giving professional guidance in resolving conflicts and problems with the ultimate goal of affecting the net outcome of the whole business.

We believe this distinction is critical when you need assistance to improve the performance of your business. We have over thirty years of managing, operating, owning, and counseling experience. It is our desire to transform businesses from obstacles to prosperity.

I would request that you contact me and see what BMCS can do for you, just e-mail me at (cut and paste e-mail or web-site) stevehomola@gmail.com or visit my web-site http://businessmanagementcouselingservices.yolasite.com

Mission Statement

Mission, Vision, Founding Principle

Mission: To transform businesses from obstacles to prosperity

Vision: To be an instrument of success

Founding Principle: "Money will not make you happy, and happy will not make you money "
Groucho Marx

Core Values

STEWARDSHIP: We value the investments of all who contribute and ensure good use of their resources to achieve meaningful results.

HEALTHY RELATIONSHIPS: Healthy relationships with friends, colleagues, family and God create safe, secure and thriving communities.

ENTREPRENEURSHIP: Learning is enhanced when we are open to opportunities that stretch our thinking and seek innovation.

RESPECT: We value and appreciate the contributions of all people and treat others with integrity.

OUTCOMES: We are accountable for excellence in our performance and measure our progress.

Monday, June 27, 2011

Business Owners-Train Managers, not Leaders:

We have all known someone we consider to be a “born leader”.  But can leaders be made as well as born?
Maybe yes, maybe no… but definitely not within a time frame you can afford.
If you own a small business, don’t waste time and money trying to develop leaders within your staff. Since the average person is likely to have 11 different jobs by the time they are 44 years old, any skills an employee gains from money you spent on leadership training is almost guaranteed to benefit some other company, not yours.
And there’s another reason to stop trying to teach your employees to be better leaders.  Leadership “skills” are traits that are difficult to develop.  The ability to stay cool under fire and make smart decisions is hard to teach.  The ability to motivate and inspire employees is very hard to teach.  Charisma is impossible to teach.
Leadership skills are also extremely difficult to measure.  “What” is easy to measure; “how” is another proposition entirely since soft skills are involved. Compared to leadership skills, management skills are more easily measured because they produce measurable outcomes.  The act of managing a process might be difficult, but measuring the results of that process should be straightforward.
So as a small business owner, what should you teach your staff?
Teach management, not leadership.  Teach employees, whether in “leadership” positions or not, to follow processes and guidelines:  Processes and guidelines you establish and maintain.  Teach skills like decision making (within parameters you establish) and attention to detail (based on metrics you develop) and follow-up and feedback (based on goals and targets you set).
That doesn’t mean managers or supervisors must be automatons that rigidly follow checklists.  Regardless of position, every employee can make judgment calls as long as their decisions fall within established parameters.  The farther up the food chain, the broader the parameters and the greater the latitude.  Then every employee, but especially managers who should be allowed to operate with broad authority, can be creative within boundaries you establish.
For example, every manager can be cool under fire if taught to prioritize effectively and make smart decisions.  What is a smart decision?  The decision you want your employees to make.
So quit trying to create leaders.  Pass on ropes courses and experiential training and transformational leadership retreats.  You don’t need more leaders.  You are the head of your company.  Teach employees in positions of authority to extend your ideas, your approach, your goals, and your vision to the rest of your team.

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