Silos are one of the most common problems that businesses face. They've become so familiar that many see them as an inevitable feature of organisations above a certain size, and accept them as part of doing business. Indeed, traditional company structures and the human tendency towards tribalism make them very difficult to avoid.
Whilst common, it does not mean that they are problem-free, and the presence of silos is almost always to the detriment of a business. Their removal and the alignment of all departments throughout an organisation should be a priority to the senior management of a company.
In this article, we will look at what a business silo is, their effects, their cause and ways to counter them.
Named for the agrarian grain storage silos, business silos refer to business divisions that do not share or hoard information and operate independently from other parts of the business. This is most often down to cultural problems within a business, but can also caused by computer systems that do not successfully align and therefore struggle with easy information sharing.
Very commonly, business silos form around departments and are characterised by employees that look and think inwardly as to the needs and goals of their department rather than those of the wider company. An ‘us versus them’ mentality often develops and those within a silo regard employees outside it with suspicion or even hostility.
Siloed departments will fail to collaborate and will resist helping other departments, as anything taking employee time away from their professional goals is seen as counter to the perceived good of the silo. Similarly, they will pursue the completion of their own objectives, even if doing so harms or works contrary to those of another department, or even the company as a whole.
Business silos are normally intrinsically linked with the various verticals and departments, as successful companies generally proscribe to the same blueprint for corporate structure as it is proven to be effective and manageable. Despite this, with the proper processes in place, silos can be avoided.
As well as silos forming around departments they can also form around geographical locations in multi-office companies, shifts (eg. day shift vs night shift) or seniority levels.
So what is an example of a business silo?
There are many ways that business silos can come about but some of the most common are:
Silos, at their core, come from a lack of alignment and communication between different parts of a business. One of the key actions that can be taken to alleviate the negative effects of silos is to ensure that all departments have the same data to base decisions on and can share new findings.
At Red Flag Alert, we understand that for data to be effective it must be visible across your business. We have designed our platform to allow a collaborative approach to risk management and AML compliance.
Our business data is delivered in easy-to-understand company reports that can be used by staff from any department and means that transparency and visibility are increased across your entire business, based on the same reliable source of information. This helps align separate departments by allowing for process-led decision-making.
A good example of this is reducing the friction between credit risk and sales. These are two departments that very frequently silo as salespeople work in a high-pressure, target-driven environment where individual jobs can be quickly lost. Those working in credit risk can develop an ‘us against them’ mentality as they frequently are seen as ‘the bad guy’ and feel that their role protecting the business is undervalued by colleagues.
These two departments frequently come into direct conflict as the sales team has spent time prospecting and selling, only for credit risk to block the deal. Both departments eventually get more and more entrenched and their relationship can become hostile.
Using Red Flag Alert’s business health ratings, credit risk professionals can set an acceptable level of risk to pass their standards, and the sales team are able to prescreen prospects to ensure that they are only spending time selling to creditworthy companies. In this way, the relationship between the two is collaborative, not a competitive one.
Our company monitoring software has also been designed to promote intradepartmental communication. With Red Flag Alert, you can create fully customisable monitoring lists and share these, and their alerts, with any other members of the business. Should a key client show signs of going insolvent then all department heads can be alerted at the same time and work together to find, market to, prospect and land a new key account; or if a prospect is showing key buying signals then marketing and sales can find out at the same time and work out a marketing strategy for sales to then call at the perfect time.
Red Flag Alert can also seamlessly tie into your CRM system, keeping information automatically up to date and giving all staff members access to our market-leading business data directly in your own platform.
These are just a handful of benefits that our platform will bring your business. Get a free trial today and see how Red Flag Alert will protect and align your business today.