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You Cant Afford the Luxury of Disengaged Employees
In today's business environment with increases in staff reductions and rapidly changing roles and responsibilities, it is crucial that all of your team members be fully engaged in the tasks at hand. According to a Gallup survey, 350 billion dollars are lost each year in American companies due to disengaged employees. How then do you minimize the impact of this costly problem within your organization? Below are key strategies to help you grow your people toward peak performance and enable you to produce quantum results with your team. Own your outcome All to often employees are quick to blame circumstances the economy or a host of other causes for their less than stellar outcomes in a given situation. Only by taking personal responsibility for our outcomes and performance can we take back our power and create the results we desire. It's quit simple, if the problem is being caused by the economy; I am powerless to effect it. If, on the other hand, I am willing to take personal responsibility for it, I have reclaimed my power and am in a position to impact change. Make integrity a must This is not an option. The only way companies will survive and thrive into the future is by making integrity an absolute must throughout the organization. No longer can people skate by with questionable behavior and slippery deals. The time has come for each person to be honest and truthful in all situations regardless of the outcome. The cliché "honesty is the best policy" became a cliché for a good reason, it works! However, in order to create this environment of absolute honesty and integrity, you as a manager must be willing to allow people to make mistakes and it must be okay to mess-up once in a while without fear of repercussion. Challenge peoples limiting beliefs It is important for your people to understand the role their conscious and unconscious beliefs play in their ability to produce desirable outcomes. They must understand how every thought, action, and result is directly linked to their beliefs. By first identifying people's limiting beliefs, a person can begin to replace them with more resourceful empowering beliefs, which will then enable them to create the results they desire. For example, a belief that "I am not comfortable calling on 'C' level executives" can be shifted to one that feels better and is more empowering, like "While I am not totally at ease, I have a strong support team backing me up." While this is not a fully empowering belief, it is a small step in the right direction. These "bridge beliefs" shift the person's beliefs more toward the desired, empowered belief. Link Values to Behaviors Identifying a person's high driving values and helping them understand the role these values play in their productivity and satisfaction can go a long way toward achieving peak performance. A simple question like, "What's most important to you in your work?," will generally elicit the person's number one driving value. Continuing with questions like, "What else is important?" etc., will enable you to uncover the person's high driving four or five values. Knowing this will help you better match specific assignments to individuals, understand how to better motivate people, and result in more harmony among your team members. For example, a team member who lists "freedom" as a high driving value will be the ideal person to assign a task that can be done from a home office, while the person with "contribution" as a high driver will be well suited for a team project. Understanding your teams values will help you determine assignments and enable you to get the most productivity from team members while maintaining harmony throughout the organization. Create a compelling vision Many times an individual sees an overall vision for their role on a project that is out of alignment with that of the manager or the company. Often, the individual has beliefs about their ability to fulfill their function within this vision. By completing a visioning exercise in which you will, as a group, create the overall vision, you'll be in a position to establish specific individual goals for it's accomplishment. During this process you will uncover each person's apprehensions and limiting beliefs about their ability to accomplish the task at hand. By completing this exercise together, you are in a position to address their concerns. The result of this visioning exercise, if done properly, is a fully aligned team, holding the same overall vision, and having each member understand their role in its accomplishment. This will, naturally, lead to the next and final step in our process. Strategies and inspired action. Strategies and Action (or don't be a gerbil) Don't be a gerbil. Not that there is anything wrong with gerbils, they're quit cute, however not the ideal role model when it comes to achieving results in business. Unfortunately, too many people in business today are behaving like gerbils when it comes to their actions. They are taking action for the sake of action - "gerbil action" - and confusing activity with results. This is even more evident in sales organizations where individual sales people frantically call prospect after prospect, achieving little in terms of results and burning through territories faster than a California wildfire. This kind of unfocused action does nothing more than frustrate people and contributes to the high employee turnover we see in so many companies. A better way is to employ "inspired action." Inspired action is action that is created from a clear vision of the desired result. It engages the higher portions of our mind to create more focused, synchronistic action, producing quantum results. A simple way to develop more inspired action is to begin with a valued finding question like, "What's working?" When was the last time you heard this question at a company meeting? By shifting the group's focus from problem finding to value finding, you encourage inspired actions based on successes. It is a commonly accepted psychological fact that we attract more of what we focus on. By keeping the focus on what is right, or working in a given situation, our creative energies and minds will be drawn to more of the same. © 2004 Jim Donovan - PO Box 1147, Buckingham, PA 18912 - (215) 794-3826 Jim Donovan is the author of "Handbook to a Happier Life, a motivational speaker and coach. For a no cost bonus product & more, visit http://www.JimDonovan.com If you had all the information and tools you needed to live your dream life, would you use them? Yes?Click here ==> http://www.jimdonovan.com/ebookoffer.html
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But that time is time well invested to make sure your measurements are complete, accurate, and in synch with your organizational objectives. You must spend the necessary hours making sure that your Operational Measurements track to your objectives, that they provide a consistent measurements, and that they are at the appropriate level of detail to allow you to identify weaknesses in your operation, and implement improvements. But, when you find yourself counting things because you can, or you begin adding measurements that do not relate to your objectives that's the first sign of trouble. Also, when your Operational Measurements become the sole driver in your organization, that's a pretty good sign that you've turned the corner and are headed down the wrong path. Remember, not everything that counts, can be counted. And just because you can count it, doesn't mean you should count it. Let's use the example we previously discussed of a house painter. For our purposes here, this is a big house painting company with multiple crews who do different types of painting. At the start of the year the decision is made to set a new objective for your crew. You are now being asked to paint 13 houses per month with the same size crew, up from just 10 last year. You sit down with your crew and begin to look for ways to improve productivity. You make the necessary changes to your team or process and then set out to accomplish your new goal. Your changes are effective and productivity improves and you start reaching your new goal. Then, a funny thing happens. You get a memo from your boss that goes something like this. "The bean counters tell me that your paint brush usage is up 15% above last year. Every dollar counts, so I'm putting together a special task force to cut the number of paintbrushes being used. We need to reduce our paint brush usage to 10% below last years level within 30 days." And . . . . we're off . . . . this is what I sometimes refer to as "The Operational Measurement Shuffle". What is the Operational Measurements Shuffle? It's a dance that management sometimes does where we lose focus on our objectives and instead start dancing with a lot of extraneous information that may LOOK important, but really isn't. Sometimes it's not entirely clear when the Operational Measurements Shuffle actually begins. But if you pay attention, you'll see the dance by the end of the first chorus. We're now going to start counting things (paintbrush usage) that has nothing to do with our objectives, but that looks important to someone else far away. Notice that the boss didn't ask you to explain why paintbrush usage was up, nor did he look at the cost/benefit of paintbrush usage versus revenue, he just told you to reduce the usage. You can expect this new measurement to be followed by new measurements of the painters' hats being used, the amount of thinner being used, and questions about the number of rungs required on the ladders. And lastly he blamed the "bean counters". The uninformed always blame the bean counters. At first glance you might think that it's ok to wonder about the paintbrush usage. And it is. But there is a difference between asking a question, and putting in new measurements to track them. For example, a smart boss would have called and asked about the increase in the number of paintbrushes being used. Your response might have been something like this. "That's right. Our paintbrush usage is up. In order to meet our goals for the year (13 houses per month) we made a change from regular paintbrushes to disposable paintbrushes. The new brushes cost 30% less than the old ones, plus we save on turpentine, and clean up time at the end of each day. So our paintbrush usage is up, but our costs are flat or down." With a good boss, that will end the discussion. You've answered the questions, explained the variance, and shown that there is just cause for the increase. But a bad boss will not listen at all, or will just pretend to listen and then suggest new measurements on paintbrush usage. With a bad boss the fact that there is a valid reason for the increase in paintbrush usage is not really relevant. Paintbrush usage is up, and it must be reduced. For a bad boss, it's as simple as that. If you have learned how to manage your boss, then maybe you can convince them that the measurements are not relevant by showing how they don't relate to and can even detract from your objectives. But some bosses are so enamored with measurements that they can't tell a good measurement from a bad one. The long and short of this discussion is simple. 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