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Bridging the Credibility Gap
By Jim Clemmer
Too many managers have a giant credibility gap with the people they are
charged with managing. Credibility is based on perceptions of trustworthiness,
reliability and integrity. Yet, studies indicate that many employees just
don't believe or trust their organizational leaders.
Just 53 percent "of employees believe the information they receive
from senior management," according to Bruce Katcher, President of
Discovery Surveys, a Massachusetts-based firm specializing in conducting
employee opinion and customer satisfaction surveys and focus groups. He
bases the figure on a review of the company's database of 30,000 respondents
from 44 international companies.
Another survey of a cross-section of 1,000 working Americans in companies
with at least 1,000 employees found that "only half of employees
believe what their companies tell them -- and almost 20 per cent do not
believe that their employers usually tell them the truth."
The May, 2003, survey, which was done by Harris Interactive and commissioned
by Towers Perrin, also indicated that "employees generally believe
their companies are more honest with shareholders and customers than they
are with employees."
One deadly consequence of this management credibility gap is that employees
emotionally distance and disengage themselves from their bosses and their
organizations. And this we/they schism can have profoundly negative consequences.
It can deplete morale and undermine efforts to build strong brands, when
uncaring staff take little pride in their work and may even show customers
disdain for their employers.
It can also take a disastrous toll on organizational improvement efforts
when the people who will make or break such efforts have mentally quit
their jobs but keep trudging in to work every day.
It's nearly impossible to improve an individual's, team's or organization's
performance in productivity, cost-effectiveness, customer service and
innovation if employees don't trust their managers.
If the snicker factor in hallways and cafeterias runs high, management's
grand strategies and exhortations will be a source of cynical merriment
-- and half-hearted action, at best.
How do managers with a we/they attitude widen the credibility gap with
the people they manage?
Looking outside, instead of within
Too often, managers fail to develop internal expertise, draw
out the ideas of the people closest to the action, or systematically collect
customer input from employees directly serving the customers. To make
matters worse, managers then reveal their thinly disguised contempt for
the lack of homegrown know-how by continually turning to outsiders for
expertise and advice. Managers don't see employees as credible or worth
investing in. Employees reciprocate.
Not serving the servers
Few employees directly serving customers can provide excellent service
when they themselves can get only mediocre support from above. Ineffective
processes, misaligned systems, internal conflict, bad communication, uncaring
bosses, inadequate training, faulty feedback loops -- the list of factors
that contributes to the credibility gap runs far too depressingly long
in far too many organizations. Poorly served servers rarely produce well-served
customers.
To make matters worse, as employee dissatisfaction rises and customer
satisfaction falls, managers will try to fix employees through training,
motivation programs, new technologies, management fads of the week, or
coaching (read discipline). None of these really attack the credibility
problem. Morale slides further as the we/they gap widens.
'Blame storming'
When things go wrong, weak managers too often try to fix the blame rather
than the problem. They point fingers and lay guilt rather than take responsibility,
seek out root causes of problems and fix them. Research has shown that
the vast majority of defects, errors, service breakdowns and such originate
in an organization's systems, processes or structure. Yet, many managers
look to blame their people rather than their processes. They will, for
example, implement performance appraisal systems to hold individual employees
accountable for what are actually systemic shortfalls controlled by management.
Such actions do nothing to foster trust.
Confusing information and communication
Information dumps are often e-mail or presentation monologues
filled with factual reporting and impersonal language that talk at people.
But trust and credibility are built more on emotions and feelings. They
are issues of the heart, not the head. Bridge-building communication involves
verbal, two-way dialogue that exchanges points of view, pays attention
to what people have to say and connects their shared values and goals.
Too many organizations are drowning in information while thirsting for
communication.
Open doors and closed minds
Weak leaders don't like to be challenged or confront tough situations.
They will proudly declare an open-door policy while actually dissuading
any employees from walking through it. So people tiptoe around sensitive
issues or keep their real opinions confined to huddled hallway discussions.
The we/they gap widens as people stop having real conversations and start
saying what's politically correct or what the boss wants to hear. Problems
fester until they explode with devastating consequences.
Avoiding feedback about themselves
Managers with low credibility often don't realize that their
declarations, promises and threats aren't believed and just pour more
gasoline onto the fires of organizational cynicism. These managers don't
seek honest and open feedback on their own behaviour. They delude themselves
into believing that acquiescence is agreement. Then they bitterly complain
about their employees' resistance to change and apathy for innovation
and improvement. The we/they gap is everyone else's fault. There are no
quick and easy ways to close credibility gaps. But here are some things
that the strongest and most credible leaders do:
Listen up
Closing the credibility gap can be helped by developing regular
-- at least annual, better more often -- processes to gauge real employee
perceptions about their managers' level of leadership as well as other
issues, including morale, obstacles to higher performance, pet peeves
or key irritants. And then managers must pay attention to the findings
and demonstrate real commitments to act on them. When actions speak louder
than words, employees will have more reason to trust those above them.
Reach across the great divide
It's hard to build credibility from a cloistered office. So spend
very little time there. Don't summon people to your quarters -- seek them
out in theirs. Hold meetings in common rooms -- the more visible, the
better -- and spend lots of time with employees on the front line as well
as customers, suppliers and partners. Familiarity and informality brings
people closer.
Get their input
Run a continuing series of breakfasts, lunches, town-hall meetings,
shop-floor conferences and the like. Take this time to ask for feedback,
concerns, and suggestions. Keep things informal. Openly share information
and treat everyone as key partners. A simple question such as, "What's
the dumbest thing we do around here?" can produce powerful insights.
Then make use of what you hear. And make sure your employees know you
are doing that.
Run two-way meetings
Many meetings widen credibility gaps between managers and employees
because they are heavy on informing and light on communicating. Employees
often see meetings as top-down, self-serving forums pushing management's
goals, needs, and agenda.
Effective meetings engage all participants in open conversations identifying
problems on both sides -- management and employees -- and then bring everyone
together to solve them. This is where strong managers find out what's
hindering the people on the frontlines of customer service and figure
out how to better serve those servers.
Stop trying to 'motivate'
Manipulating or "motivating" employees emphasizes and
widens the gap with management. To motivate is to treat employees as children,
rather than as partners working together to meet mutually rewarding goals
-- a better workplace, happy customers and delighted shareholders.
Be approachable
Be very careful how you handle bad news or dissenting opinions. A wince,
a sharp question or irritated body language can send powerful signals
that you only want people to tell you good news or what they think you
want to hear. If you often find that you're not told about problems until
they have mushroomed into giant issues, that likely means approaching
you is seen as high risk. Or it indicates that your credibility for taking
proactive action is so low, no one bothers. In either case, you need to
get unvarnished feedback through anonymous surveys, focus groups or interviews
run by trusted third parties, or an insider who will tell you what people
in your team are really saying.
Be radical
Don't just get out of your office, eliminate it -- especially
if it's bigger and more private than those of the people in the organization
you lead. Doing so would be an example of one courageous and dramatic
step toward narrowing we/they gaps.
Management offices are too often powerful symbols of separation and hierarchy
(not to mention useless overhead costs). It's so easy today to carry your
office with you in your notebook computer, cell phone, BlackBerry, etc.
Use whatever shared workspaces, cubicles, and meeting rooms are available.
Hold most of your one-on-one discussions in the other person's workspace.
Originally published in The Globe & Mail. Jim
Clemmer is a bestselling author and internationally acclaimed keynote
speaker, workshop/retreat leader, and management team developer
on leadership, change, customer focus, culture, teams, and personal
growth. During the last 25 years he has delivered over two thousand
customized keynote presentations, workshops, and retreats. Jim's
five international bestselling books include The VIP Strategy, Firing
on All Cylinders, Pathways
to Performance, Growing
the Distance, and The
Leader's Digest. His web site is www.clemmer.net. |
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