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Manufacturing


Learning experience



How to educate your work force

By Abby Cymerman


Smart Business Akron/Canton | June 2008

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Dolf Kahle<BR />Co-owner and CEO, Visual Marking Systems Inc.
Dolf Kahle
Co-owner and CEO, Visual Marking Systems Inc.

Dolf Kahle understands the power of visual management.

The co-owner and CEO of Visual Marking Systems Inc. makes sure his message is constantly in front of his employees. He puts posters in the cafeteria to illustrate the company’s strategic plan and action steps and posts whiteboards in each department to help his 105 employees keep score of goals and make note of issues to be resolved.

“If you put it in front of people and they read it every day, they’re going to do better at remembering what it is than if they just hear it,” he says.

Smart Business spoke with Kahle about how he educates employees to strengthen his $11.2 million graphic design and printing business.

Q. What are the keys to growing a successful company?

Strategic planning, a strong management team and education of all the employees — and that’s twofold. One is training in their specific job, and two is education about the company’s strategic goals.

In 1982, when my father and I took over the company, we put together an annual business plan.

By the time I took over the company, I realized that to grow, I had to get the managers more involved in the planning. If you try and run everything by yourself as your company is growing, you will find that everything has to go through your desk.

Q. How do you get managers involved in the planning?

First, I had to train my managers better, but in particular, find which managers to grow with the company. That’s a difficult thing to do because you have people who have helped you get there, but they are not necessarily the people who are going to help you grow.

So in 2005, we started strategic planning off-site with the senior management team, with us all doing the planning. We look at our strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats. Everybody is involved; we do our homework ahead of time, and we go off-site for two days and put together a strategic plan with specific action items.

The only way you’re going to grow an organization is to have everybody understand what the game plan is and buy in to it. They have to say, ‘We agree. This is the direction we want to go.’ I have a senior management team of eight people; that means that nine of us are running the company, not me.

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