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The team member told me that the team leader did not like the new procurement process. Thankfully though, the mystery was solved through a chance meeting with a team member from the affected team. Sadly Firefighters Can Make the Best Arsonists Why did the new procurement process work for all other IT teams but seemed to fail only in this team? The data supported what the team leader was telling us – the new procurement process was unworkable for his team. And, true to his word, he did provide specific occurrences showing where and how the new procurement process caused undue burden on his team. We even received a commitment that the IT team’s leader would actively provide feedback on where his team was having difficulty with the new process. We were assured that the IT team understood the importance of the new process. We talked with the IT team’s leader regarding the importance of the new procurement process. Yet, for some reason, one IT team could not reach the desired metrics and outcomes of the new process.
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Undermining Behavior is Not Always Easy to SpotĪ new IT procurement process had been designed in a collaborative and inclusive manner, tested with multiple focus groups, and people trained across all the IT teams. IT is ultimately about people working together effectively and any such barriers to success need to be prevented wherever possible. This blog relates to a personal experience with undermining behavior and offers advice for dealing with it.
#Undermine in a sentence how to#
In the last 2 months the Deputy Prime Minister has already blocked the Parole Board’s recommendations to move several dangerous offenders to open prison including murderers Steven Ling, Stephen Wynne and Adam Swellings, rapist and leader of Derby grooming gang Abid Siddique and serial rapist, Lee Hill.Working in IT can be difficult at the best of times, with operational and organizational change often a particularly difficult “nut to crack.” We can, of course, use proven methodologies and techniques, such as those by Lewin and Kotter for organizational change or PRINCE2 and Agile for project management and development, but sometimes there is a very-human “spanner thrown in the works” – that of “undermining behavior.” And of course this does not only happen in times of change, and it does not only happen in IT, but when it does happen, it is wise to understand how to spot it and then how to deal with it. Until today, the Deputy Prime Minister could only block a Parole Board recommendation to move an offender to an open prison if it went against the recommendations of the expert risk assessment without explaining why was based on inaccurate information or where there was not a wholly persuasive case for the move. We are also going to introduce a ministerial check on parole decisions to release the most serious offenders – to protect the public and make our streets safer. That’s why I’m toughening up the test the most dangerous criminals must pass before they can move into open prisons. Keeping the public safe is government’s first duty. These included proposed changes to the Parole Board release test to ensure public protection is always the overriding consideration and a new power for Ministers to block the release of the most dangerous offenders in the interests of public safety.ĭeputy Prime Minister, Justice Secretary and Lord Chancellor, Dominic Raab, said: The stringent new rules will mean the Deputy Prime Minister can block any such prisoner moving to an open prison unless they can demonstrably pass a tough three-step test, including proving they are highly unlikely to abscond that the move is essential for them to work towards future release and the move would not undermine public confidence in the wider criminal justice system.Įarlier this year, the Deputy Prime Minister announced a package of landmark reforms designed to restore public confidence in the parole system. Serious offenders will face the toughest test yet to prove they have turned their backs on crime for good and are eligible for a move to open prison, following a tightening up of the rules by the Deputy Prime Minister.įrom tomorrow (6 June 2022), all indeterminate sentence offenders – those who have committed the most serious crimes, including murderer and rape – will face much stricter criteria to move from closed to open prison.