‘Problems Are Only Opportunities…’
Disagreements among teammates suck up time and energy. The National Agreement offers a solution that fuels creative problem solving: the issue resolution process.
This department used issue resolution to make the selection process for a plum leadership role fair and transparent. How can your team use that process to improve your work environment?
Disagreements among teammates suck up time and energy. The National Agreement offers a solution that fuels creative problem solving: the issue resolution process.
When this team looked deeply to find out why its turnaround time wasn't up to par, it found a web of problems. Issue resolution helped members untangle that web and speed service to patients.
When problems linger, they make it hard for departments to focus on improving care and service. Use issue resolution and other partnership tools to vanquish those problems, once and for all.
Henry J. Kaiser, Kaiser Permanente’s co-founder, famously told fellow industrialist Warren Bechtel, “Problems are only opportunities in work clothes.”
If you work with unit-based teams—as a co-lead, consultant or sponsor—you might be rolling your eyes right now and thinking, “Well, if that’s true, I sure have a lot of ‘opportunities.’ Grrr!”
When a team has problems, it’s difficult—if not impossible—to boldly improve service and quality for our health plan members. Especially if problems linger and fester, eroding trust and goodwill. These can depress morale and even endanger patients.
Lucky for us, the leaders of Kaiser Permanente and the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions had the moral imagination more than two decades ago to envision a better way to solve problems. Together, they formed what would become our Labor Management Partnership.
As we celebrate our partnership’s 20th anniversary this year, we can look back and see how we have built the tools, structures and culture that support this alternative vision of how workers and employers can interact.
One of those tools is issue resolution. As you will see in the stories that follow, this process bypasses more traditional forms of problem solving in favor of going deeper to really uncover the source of the difficulty. By doing that, union members, managers and physicians not only can preserve their working relationships, but also make them stronger. This, in turn, fosters innovation and improvement.
Now that sounds like a great opportunity.
Insider tips from a union leader about how to ensure workers' voices are heard during the issue resolution process.
Format:
PDF (color or black and white)
Size:
8.5" x 11"
Intended audience:
Faciliators and others involved in leading the issue resolution process.
Best used:
Use these tips when you are having hard conversations during the issue resolution process.
When the going gets tough during the issue resolution process, the tough need these tips about how to move things forward and preserve working relationships.
Need a quick refresher on the difference between grievances and the issue resolution process? Download this handy chart.
Format:
PDF (color or black and white)
Size:
Two pages, 8.5" x 11"
Intended audience:
UBT co-leads, consultants and sponsors, as well as facility-level leaders.
Best used:
This infographic is best used to understand the issue resolution process, step by step.
Got issues? Use this handy flow chart to follow the road to issue resolution.
Format: PDF (color and black and white)
Size: 8.5" x 11"
Intended audience: Frontline workers, unit-based teams
Best used: Write in the box a phrase that helps you keep your cool in a tense situation. Color the diagram and hang in your work space.
What's a phrase that helps you keep your cool in a tense situation?
Format:
PDF (color and black and white)
Size:
8.5" x 11"
Intended audience:
Anyone with a sense of humor
Best used:
Our comic superhero helps make it clear that everyone has a part in solving problems in their department's UBT.
Our comic superhero shows how everyone has a part in solving problems in their department's UBT.