In an era when field service finds itself in a sea of constant change, what does it take for a leader to swim rather than sink? The recipe for success is far different today than it was even a handful of years ago – and only continuing to evolve. I sat down recently with Roy Dockery, former service leader, Author of The Art of Leading, and Director of Field Service Research at TSIA to talk about the state of service and what it means for leaders. With his multi-faceted experiences, Roy brings a unique perspective to the conversation and offered some excellent advice.
Kill the Culture of Complaining
Roy’s first point is simple and clear, but potentially harder than it may seem: service leaders must stop complaining (and teaching their teams to do so). “We have to kill the culture of complaining. In service we speak a different language, so we tend to get frustrated that other people don't hear us,” explains Roy. “So, within your organization, you create a culture of complaining and it creates a disconnect. You think you're just venting until you start seeing it become a tangible part of your organizational culture.”
This culture perpetuates the siloing of service and Roy also believes it leads to attrition. “It's normally the new technicians leaving and the reason they're leaving is because of this culture of complaining. Everyone's losing their one- to two-year technicians because they're being poisoned by a culture of complaining,” he says. “It also keeps talent from being interested in other functions of the business. If you can create a culture where people want to stay, you develop leaders that vertically move up, but it's also going to create a culture where your people move horizontally, which I call spreading field service DNA. When I worked at Swisslog, we wound up having field service people in engineering, in the warehouse, in sales, in customer success. So now I have someone in customer success who understands me; I have someone in sales who understands me. But if you make it ‘us against the world,’ which a lot of times we do, you don't get that growth. You create an environment where people tend to leave, especially if they're new, because it doesn't feel healthy, and it doesn't feel productive.”
Become a Translation Engine
Start by cutting the complaining and then take action to help change your organizations’ feeling of being misunderstood. How? Learn a new language – or, as I suggested in my 2025 predictions, get better at storytelling. “As leaders, we have to learn everyone else's language. We've got to be the Rosetta Stone, and then we've got to take the concerns of our organization and go effectively communicate them to those teams in their language so that our team feels heard,” says Roy.
And not only the challenges, but the opportunities as well. We know service is in such a unique position in the company to understand customer needs, to see new potential, to contribute to product development, to sell, and so much more – but if service leaders can’t position all of this in a language the broader business leaders understand, they continue to feel isolated and frustrated.
“Most field service organizations do not report directly into the CEO, so we're often outside of the C-suite table. But we have to learn how to speak C-suite. We've got to know how to speak to everyone upstream from us, or, as I like to say, field service should be a Rosetta Stone,” says Roy. “It doesn't matter what's going on, I should be able to take a problem to the CTO, the CFO, the CEO, the COO and be able to translate it to them in a way where they can take action on what I'm saying.”
Taking the time to understand the key objectives of the business is imperative, and then work on being able to translate what’s happening in field service – the challenges and the opportunities – into a language aligned to those objectives. And keep in mind that every company has a common interest – customer satisfaction. Use this common interest to help create a common language.
Be a Forecaster, Not a Firefighter
“Field service is a reactive organization by nature. Our teams should be reactive – our teams should be the firefighters. We, as the service leaders, need to be forecasters and not storm chasers,” urges Roy. “A lot of us come from that, a lot of us enjoy that. We tend to lean more towards getting into the tactical, getting into the problem resolution. But we need to be strategic.”
Protecting the space to do the forecasting versus the firefighting is the only way to start to bridge some of the silos of the business. “What we actually need to do is get into what we're talking about and look across the silos. You need to go forecast and say, hold on. Our sales department just got a 30% revenue increase target. Our product team just got told that they need to make three new widgets in the next two years and say, how does that affect us? How is that going to affect my headcount? How is that going to affect my employee training?” explains Roy. “Or we're already seeing the decline. We got a bunch of people retiring. Instead of waiting and then reactively saying, hey, HR, I need a bunch of people. Let's develop your own workforce strategy and say, I need some apprentices. I need entry-level positions. I need people to start coming in and shadowing my senior employees because I don't want to lose this knowledge.”
This strategic work is ultimately what will help the service function get its spot among the C-suite. “You need to be the person that's at the helm saying, okay, where's the CEO trying to go? Where's the organization trying to go?” says Roy. “We’ve got to be more intentional about pulling ourselves out of our natural inclination to be technical and into the problems. Look at the company as a problem and say, what is the field service solution to the company's problem, not the customer's problem? Let your team deal with the customers’ problems. Shift your view to the future because that keeps you learning. It keeps you engaged. It keeps you jumping into those silos.”
And as AI is poised to take every industry, including its service function, by storm - that strategic work is the work that holds greater value. If your goal is to swim not only through 2025, but for years to come, stepping back from the work of fighting fires and embracing the need to do more thoughtful, creative, strategic forecasting is a must.