It's a really neat experience to watch
management
and teambuilding theories prove
themselves true.
It's incredible to see the power a
leader has just
in his or her subtle behaviors to
either develop
a team or to crush one.
It's amazing
the power
a leader's respect has on team
performance.
Recently, I had the chance to guide
one of my
client's through their Strategic Plan
update.
Now
the cool thing isn't that they even
cared enough
to update the plan; the cool thing is
what the leader
did and didn't do during this
process.
Two years ago
when I worked with this client to
initially develop
their plan, they had a
different "leader". That leader
had been in power for over 20 years.
He'd run an
organization that fulfilled its
mission, yet its management
team always seemed a bit on-edge.
When I worked with
them on their original plan, I found
out why.
During those work sessions, I saw the
leader demean
select senior staff members in front
of their peers.
I saw him allow some to come to the
sessions unprepared
or not at all, yet he'd chastise
others if they weren't
prepared ahead of time for the next
several sessions.
I also saw him agree with the group
while we worked as a
team, but then unilaterally change the
plan after the sessions.
The team's input meant nothing in the
long run.
The leader
didn't respect their input enough to
agree to it for the
long-term or to implement many of
their ideas. He didn't
respect their ideas. He didn't
respect them as team members.
He didn't respect them as
individuals. Needless to say, the
planning process soon became an
unwelcome exercise for the team.
The plan was never completed correctly
and most of the
senior team never saw the end product
that the leader had
approved.
It wasn't the plan the team
had developed in
the work sessions. It wasn't a plan
that anyone used or
cared about. It wasn't a plan. It
was just a document.
Two years after that experience, the
new leader asked me
to help update the plan. The new
leader had been a former
senior staff member.
However, this
time around, he mandated
full participation by senior staff.
During our initial work
session, he challenged his senior
staff to be honest, share
their ideas, and help him develop
their plan.
He told them,
"This is your plan. I'm just
responsible for ensuring it gets
completed. But you have to believe in
what we develop here."
Subsequent sessions included input and
challenges by all
team members including the leader.
Senior staff members
were comfortable challenging his ideas
and he challenged theirs.
There was a lot of joking, idea
generation, planning, energy,
and respect.
The true extent of his respect for the
team came to light when
the leader had to miss one of the work
sessions due to a family
emergency. He didn't cancel the
session or reschedule it.
He told
the team to handle it. Upon his
return and review of that session's
accomplishments, he approved
everything the team had done.
He liked what had been produced and he
told the team why.
In just four solid work sessions, the
shambles of the prior plan
were re-evaluated, brought up-to-date
where necessary, and
trashed where needed. New ideas flew
around the room and
became a solid, clear, focused three-
year plan.
Their plan is terribly aggressive.
Their plan is going to
challenge the team and the leader to
make some incredible initiatives
into functioning realities.
Their
plan is going to propel
that organization forward and position
it to deal effectively
with an aging workforce and an ever-
changing future. However,
their plan is their plan.
The leader showed the team respect
before, during, and after the
process and the team produced. The
power of this leader's respect
built a team and changed an
organization.
Do you respect your team enough to
change your organization too?
Copyright 2004 - Liz Weber of Weber Business Services, LLC.
WBS specializes in Strategic,
Business, and Succession Planning,
as well as employee and leadership
training.
Additional articles can be found at
http://www.wbsllc.com/leadership.shtml
Liz can be reached at
mailto:liz@wbsllc.com or (717)597-8890