The task of multi-site management becomes increasingly complex the more locations you throw into the mix. Without the right practices, systems, and tools in place, it’s difficult to communicate updates, prove compliance, and understand unit-by-unit performance. In this article, we explore 6 common multi-site management challenges and explain how you can resolve them.
23% of c-suite executives plan to expand their operations internationally within the next 3-5 years. This comes in spite of — and perhaps because of — rising economic and geopolitical uncertainties.
Wider coverage can lead to greater opportunities. But it can also lead to a loss of control.
The more locations you add to your network, the harder it is to maintain oversight, ensure consistency, and prove compliance. Multi-site management turns into a guessing game, rather than a well-oiled, data-driven effort. If left to spiral, this can lead to irreparable damage to your brand, finances, and reputation.
In this article, we help you identify and resolve multi-site management challenges before they snowball, and plan for sustainable growth.
Almost all multi-site management challenges stem from one root cause: decentralization. Like pulling a rubber band, there’s only so far you can stretch before the fabric of your organization begins to fray.
This can manifest in a number of ways. Below, we list 6 common challenges that stem from decentralization, and provide tangible solutions to help you repair any fractures in your operations.
Communicating critical updates via email and in-person meetings may work when you only have one or two sites to manage. But these channels become unfit for purpose the moment you onboard more locations — especially when you expand overseas.
Time zone differences make it difficult to organize meetings; emails get buried and forgotten overnight; and the mental load of remembering to check and respond to messages becomes too much to bear. Language barriers only add complexity to this challenge.
Ultimately, if you cannot get important information across clearly, and in a language everyone can understand, you increase the risk of misinterpretations. Which of course may lead to operational inconsistencies and non-compliance.
How to rebuild multi-site communications
The solution is simple: centralize and simplify your communication practices. Instead of harnessing multiple channels and outdated systems (such as email), adopt one intuitive digital workplace software with intranet functionality.
This will act as the foundation for all your internal communications going forward, including:
Notifications and acknowledgement capture mechanisms ensure your employees never miss an important update. AI powered search and metadata improve the searchability of your content. And localization features and granular user permissions enhance accessibility, enable personalization, and facilitate multilingual experiences.
All this being said, there’s still value in face-to-face interactions. So be sure to pencil in regular virtual or in-person meetings with every location in your workplace calendars.
Your sites may span across disparate continents and cultures, but they’re still a part of the same organization. There should be unity — not only for the sake of your operations, but for your company culture and employer branding, too.
However, facilitating collaboration across multi-site organizations is no easy feat. Physical distance and time zone differences provide fewer opportunities for locations to come together. Which in turn can result in siloed operations, fractured relationships, and inconsistently organized cross-site projects.
How to enhance multi-site collaboration
Bringing teams together in person is a valuable exercise. But it’s impossible to facilitate these types of meet ups regularly. Instead, you have to make the most of the digital tools available to you.
Unifying teams requires a blend of informal and formal collaboration tools. Including:
Success hinges on your ability to replicate operations across your sites.
During the onboarding phase, this is far easier to achieve. You’re starting from a blank slate, which means training, operations manuals, and policy documents are more likely to stick. Over time, however, units may lose track of what’s on-brand and what isn’t. This may be a result of outdated SOPs and miscommunicated updates, a lack of ongoing training, or individual owners choosing to “adapt” protocol without repercussion.
How to eradicate operational inefficiencies
Enforcing consistency across your locations requires a concerted effort to centralize information, enforce acceptance, and track compliance.
Multi-site organizations that lack unity don’t just suffer from inconsistencies and non-compliance. They miss out on useful insights and lessons learnt.
For instance, imagine you’re a multi-site music retailer with hundreds of stores across the United States. One location manages to increase floor traffic and sales by inviting local bands and musicians to perform in-store each weekend. Without sharing this information with the other sites in your network, you could be missing out on further opportunities to increase performance across the board.
How to improve knowledge sharing
Empower your local managers to take initiative and share lessons, advice, and challenges via engaging blog posts, discussion threads, and knowledge base articles.
Incentivize this knowledge sharing with recognition schemes, such as values-based badges and network-wide “thank you” messages and shout-outs.
For more reserved employees, provide opportunities for sharing anonymous feedback. Quarterly surveys and polls are a great way to capture ideas or challenges in a quick, low-effort way.
Operational inconsistencies, knowledge silos, and communication breakdowns all lead to one crucial problem: skewed insights. When every location follows its own course, there’s no easy way to compare performance or identify and resolve problems. Furthermore, when reports are sent in varying formats — and on a monthly or quarterly basis — you’ll fail to gain real-time visibility into daily operations.
When problems do occur, they’re only visible once they snowball out of control. This leaves you vulnerable to reputational damage, regulatory penalties, and customer complaints.
How to improve the accuracy and accessibility of your data
Unifying your operations, processes, and communications in a single digital workplace is a great starting point. But to enhance visibility even further, we’d recommend building individual performance dashboards for every location.
These dashboards should consolidate:
Claromentis’ Locations application provides all of these data points in one convenient dashboard, accessible to you and your unit managers. In the near future, you’ll also be able to view training completion rates, policy approvals, and data from any e-form or automation (built within our BPA platform, InfoCapture) — as well as any data from your external POS systems.
Over a quarter of c-suite executives say “new or higher regulatory requirements” will have the biggest impact on their business within the next 12 months.
This impact compounds for international franchises and multi-site organizations. The more regions you operate in, the more regulations you must navigate — many of which may (unhelpfully) contradict one another.
Complying with these discordant frameworks can be incredibly demanding. You must adapt policies to reflect local laws, track employee compliance at each location, and find ways to audit teams and escalate instances of non-compliance (if and when they arise). Without clear systems in place to manage these efforts, compliance becomes a tedious juggling act. With every ball that drops to the floor, you increase the risk of reputational damage and legal penalties.
How to overcome compliance challenges
First and foremost, know your limitations. It’s impossible to become a legal expert in every country or continent. So, where possible, either hire compliance officers within every region or seek the help of external experts. These individuals will ensure operations adhere to the relevant local laws and frameworks, as well as highlight any areas for improvement.
From here, we’d also advise:
The biggest challenge facing growing multi-site organizations isn’t growth itself. It’s a lack of clarity.
As you expand into new regions, lines of communication break down, insights blur out of focus, and locations become siloed. Your organization fractures into disparate pieces, like a jigsaw puzzle dropped from a great height.
In order to simplify multi-site management and, in turn, boost compliance, sales, and consistency, you need to slot these puzzle pieces back together.
This is where a comprehensive digital workplace solution like Claromentis comes into play. Comprising intranet, e-learning, process automation, knowledge management, and data and reporting capabilities, Claromentis unifies every aspect of your organization. And, in doing so, brings total clarity to your multi-site operations.
Here’s what that looks like in practice:
We’ve helped many multi-site organizations and franchises, including TravCorp and Winkworth Estate & Letting Agents, overcome communication barriers and strengthen their operations.
To find out how we can do the same for your organization, book a helpful discussion call with one of our experts. We’ll listen to your requirements, showcase Claromentis features that could be of use, and answer any questions you may have.