How better to start a story than with a big bang?
Thatâs how Andrew Lam-Po-Tang describes the time in 2012 during which explosive, disruptive forces were impacting Fairfax Media, an Australia- and New Zealand-based company whose 400 or so brands include newspapers, magazines, radio networks, and digital media.
Andrew [Sydney, Melbourne, London, 1993-2004] saw this âbig bangâ as exerting pressure on Fairfax from five frontsâsocial media, mobile Internet, cloud computing, print decline, and media consumption.
âIt was a new universe in which the company had to operate and evolve,â he said.
As CIO, CTO, and director of group services at Fairfax, Andrew spent three years at the helm of the IT team exploring how best to use rapidly evolving technology to drive the companyâs digital transformation.
His team tackled the challenge by first asking the CEOs of the companyâs business units what they wanted to achieve within the context of this new universe.
It then put together a set of capabilitiesâa target state pared to five key elements: audience obsessed, social, mobile, valued, and lean and agileâto help those leaders achieve their objectives.
This target state boiled down to collecting and storing audience data and then making that data available for use in terms of metrics and dashboards, and in algorithmically driven user experiences; monetizing Fairfax products via social media and tapping into social-media feeds as potential sources of content; creating awareness around the potential of mobile Internet; creating new sources of value and monetization by accelerating digital transaction businesses; and stripping out and variabilizing costs.
It was Andrewâs job to reorganize the tech team to deliver against those capabilities.
âIn considering any initiative, product, program, or decision, I had to ask myself a simple question: how would that action get us closer to our target state? If I was unable to answer this question, I had to then ask, should we even be doing it?
Also, he says, as the business got tougher, smarter, faster, and leaner, the impact of even a single, simple mistake could prove costly.
He cites the example of the member of his team who accidentally deleted the backup store for a key business. âAll of it! A simple âOops! I hit the wrong buttonâ type of mistake, but one that took nine days to rectify.â
âSo how do you guard against such mistakes? Most clients will say they need to fix their cultureâfix the way they think about these sorts of problems, anticipate them, and change the way they work so that their people care about getting things right at the first time of asking.â
This brings us to a guiding principle Andrew likes to draw upon, something he calls âWhat I learned in the neonatal intensive care unit.â
In 2012, his wife gave birth to a babyâDorothy (Dot)âwho was born with severe heart defects. Within the first four months of her life, Dot had endured two lengthy open-heart surgical procedures.
âWe spent a lot of time at the hospital and got to see, firsthand, how incredibly high-performing teams managed high-risk situationsâsituations far more important than anything I had to deal with in a business context. Babiesâ lives were at stake.â
Andrew says he has used his observations from that experience to provide a story and a learning opportunity for his team to connect withâbut never without first stressing that Dot pulled through her ordeal with flying colors and is today healthy and happy.
âWhen, as a parent, you spend 24-hours a day in an NICU, one of the first things you notice is a simple and powerful practice they use, something that I dubbed âcheck and check again.â The little patients have medication and treatment and drips and all sorts of stuff that needs to be administered on a continuous basis in different frequencies and different dosages. However, each and every time you change an environment, you introduce an element of risk and the potential to make mistakes".
So how does an NICU team make sure that it gets things right each and every time? By checking, and by checking again.
For instance, a NICU nurse must get somebody who is not involved in the day-to-day care of a particular patient to independently verify every step of the drug administration process: patientâs name, medication, precise time medication is to be administered, device thatâs to be used, dosageâevery single step.
âAnd this happens not once, but multiple times a day,â said Andrew. âThey never skip this independent validation process. And it really works!â
The questions he brought back to his technology managers were, âare you aware of your processes of delivery, of your go line, of your change procedures?â Have you thought about having a buddy help you check everything?â
This simple process, he says, brought about an immediate uptick in results.
The other thing Andrew observed in the NICU was something he called âstory time.â In Dotâs case, for example, each medical professional who came into her room had to be brought up to speed about who Dot was, what her care was about, what was happening at that precise moment, and what was supposed to happen next.
And they did this by telling Dotâs storyâa story with a beginning, a middle, and an end. It would start, âHello, this is Dorothy Lam-Po-Tang. She joined us two weeks ago having had an open heart procedure.â The middle part of the story would be about what had happened that day, and the end would be about what was expected to happen over the course of the next treatment, the remainder of that shift, the next day, and beyond.
Each new person in the chain would pick up Dotâs story and become the holder of that story.
âStorytelling is one of the most powerful ways we have as human beings to impart information. It is primal within us. We live to tell stories; we live to hear stories.â
And so Andrew encouraged his technology teams to become storytellers. âWhat's the story of your system? Where does it begin? Whoâs in it? Who needs to hear it? Have you rehearsed it? What have you done so far? What needs to happen next?
âYou might be surrounded by all the data in the world, but are you thinking about how to best internalize that data and to make it real for you? If youâre dealing with a mission critical system, being on top of that data and insight is really important.â
He commissioned a customized presentation and storytelling course for the IT leadership teamâa strategy that has since been pushed out to many more people across the technology group and has even been picked up by Fairfaxâs core business.
Before he knew it, he found people were using slides as a way to support their stories. That, he says, was really powerfulâand reminiscent of his days at BCG.
âI didnât learn everything in the NICU. Long before that, Iâd owed a great deal of what Iâve achieved to BCG. Thereâs pretty much a bit of BCG in everything I do today.â
The Fairfax transformation strategy, he says, is a great example.
âWhile much of our analysis was not necessarily visible, I was absolutely disciplined and rigorous about making sure that as each team made its case for change and developed its proposals, it was thorough in martialing its arguments and in pitching them effectively.
âStorytelling was one of the crowning glories of my time at BCG. It had an immediate impact on my effectiveness and Iâve carried that with me ever since. The cool thing is thatâand I know BCGers appreciate thisâyou can learn story, you can teach story. Itâs a really powerful tool set.â