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Leading through Change
By Dr Ken Blanchard
People always tell me they want to be magnificent! Yet how often is ordinary
behaviour at work commonplace? I believe this gap between what we want
at work and what we get is often down to the way people are treated by
their leaders. People do want to excel. They want to develop and make
a difference. They want to be recognised for the value they add to their
organisations. So, if they are to become magnificent, particularly in
times of change or uncertainty, leaders must embrace their needs; escape
‘the boss’ mentality and favour a culture where management
and employee work together to identify and achieve excellence.
Crucially, leaders also need to trust and be trusted by their people.
Time and time again workplace surveys list ‘integrity’ as
the number one attribute people seek in a leader. Whatever our business
sector, and whatever our position in an organisation, we want to see leaders
encouraging ethical values and delivering ethical performance. The Anderson,
Enron and Worldcom scandals, coupled with the aftershocks of September
11th sent a wake up call to the corporate world. Now, I’m getting
venture capital groups asking my advice on how they can operate more ethically
and I know the tide is turning!
Yet the very nature of 21st century business practice brings change, uncertainty
and a challenge to being open and accountable. Ten years ago, if you couldn’t
satisfy a customer immediately, they had to wait. Today, technology has
ensured that speed and efficiency mean everything. Prices can be checked
internationally in a moment and bad customer service simply won’t
be tolerated. An organisation that wants to stay ahead of the burgeoning
competition needs to be customer driven, fast and flexible, continuously
improving and cost effective. It needs to keep changing on a regular basis.
And here is the problem. Change is traditionally seen as threatening.
How does an organisation balance, in an ethical way, the need for continuous
transformation and development with the need to maintain employee motivation
in difficult times?
I strongly believe there are hard hitting, ethical strategies that build
profits, productivity and long term success while benefiting both employer
and employee even in times of great uncertainty. In fact, the best ethical
strategies encourage and foster change. At their core is a set of three,
key concerns around which all other business issues revolve. When these
three concerns shape business and influence its development, change becomes
a welcome, empowering process.
The first concern of a successful, ethically run company is ‘Vision.’
There are three parts to this - a good vision comprises (a) a customer-focussed
goal; (b) a picture of what success looks like and (c) a clear understanding
of the operating values that will achieve that success.
A customer-focussed goal requires everyone to know what their purpose
in business is. For instance, Disney says it is in ‘the happiness
business.’ A picture of success for Disney World means that ‘people
have the same smile leaving the park as when they came in’. The
operating values that get Disney there are first safety, second courtesy,
third the ‘show’ and fourth running an efficient, profitable
operation.
Vision such as this really comes into play in tough times. Keeping everyone
focussed, ensuring they know what business they are in, how they should
behave and what their values are is a great bedrock of stability in an
otherwise vulnerable, fluid environment.
The second concern every organisation should have is how they are going
to equip their people – how are they going to train and develop
them to accomplish the Vision? I’ve spent the last twenty-two years
developing programmes to build leadership, self-leadership and team effectiveness,
enabling people to transform organisations as they move from being dependent
to independent in their workplaces. Only when people are empowered to
achieve their goals will they perform to the best of their ability.
The third concern goes right back to the first book I wrote twenty years
ago. The One Minute Manager® outlined the importance of praise and
positive culture. Praise is especially significant when the going gets
tough. Constantly ‘catch people doing things right’ and ensure
that good performance is acknowledged. It is not enough to simply expect
good performance because that is what someone is paid to do – time
and time again, employee morale surveys show that money alone is rarely,
if ever, a motivator. Respect and acknowledgement rate far higher.
To be truly influential, these three concerns must be connected on a daily
basis. The power of training is only unleashed when it is linked to the
Vision, which is why the best, most sound management links training with
business strategy. Positive affirmation can’t work without vision.
We were recently asked by a major company in Germany to develop a reward
and recognition scheme, but initial consultations revealed the company
wasn’t clear on their Vision. We first had to develop this, as you
can’t promise a reward system unless people know what deserves a
reward!
Leaders must champion these three key concerns and, if necessary, change
their management style accordingly.
I’m currently working on a new book about change called The Leadership
Pill, a fictional story about a pharmaceutical company that develops a
pill that creates more effective managers. People go crazy to get it -
it immediately outsells Viagra. A guy comes along with a ‘pill challenge’
to take two poorly performing groups and see whether his good management
techniques will enable his group to out-perform the group taking the pill.
He succeeds, having discovered the secret of what people want if they
are to adapt to change quickly. They want integrity, partnership and affirmation.
They won’t put up with leaders saying one thing and doing another.
They don’t want to be subordinate to anyone and they want individual
recognition of themselves and their achievements.
In change situations, it is all too common for leaders to behave in opposite
fashion. They refuse to share management knowledge, drive a bigger wedge
between themselves and the people they lead and inadvertently dampen morale
yet further, when they should be concentrating on communication, communication
and more communication.
When change is announced, people want information and they should get
it. Open the books. Show everyone how the company makes money. Tell it
like it is and create a sense of ownership in colleagues that enhances
their sense of responsibility by building up trust between management
and employee.
Keeping people fully informed shows integrity and respects their deeply
felt need to understand change will impact them individually. Organisations
that are unable to acknowledge that leadership has moved on and that employees
especially seek empowerment and recognition in times of instability will
be left short staffed and struggling at a time when they need it least.
Their best people will justifiably get out their CV’s with a view
to finding a more supportive, developmental organisation.
In summary, If you want to keep colleagues motivated through change, constantly
cheerlead where your organisation is going, what it stands for and what
is trying to accomplish. Keep focused on the goal. Keep catching people
doing things right. Trust in the power of your people. They can live with
and through change if they have the power to work towards and achieve
the goal.
To be an effective team leader, the goal isn’t to be boss and make
sure everyone knows who is in charge. It’s to do whatever it takes
to help your team perform well. In effective teamwork, leaders partner
with their teams, serving them as a mentor or coach. Effective leaders
value their people and set them up for success. They let go of authority
in favour of creating an environment that inspires people to support and
meet organisational goals. People in today’s workforce want to be
recognised as appreciating assets and, when they are, profits are the
applause organisations get for doing a good job.
Leadership
and the One Minute Manager
Kenneth Blanchard, et al |
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Leadership
and The One Minute Manager goes straight to the heart of management
as it describes the effective, adaptive styles of Situational Leadership.
In clear and simple terms it teaches how to become a flexible and
successful leader, fitting your style to the needs of the individual
and to the situation at hand, and using the One Minute Manager techniques
to enhance the motivation of others. "Situational Leadership
has been the cornerstone of our management training programme for
the last five years. Now the model is available to everyone through
this action-oriented book" MIKE ROSE, Chairman and Chief Executive
Officer, Holiday Inns Inc.
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Dr Ken Blanchard is the founder and Chief Executive
of The Ken Blanchard Companies, an international training and development
company specialising in leadership, organisational change, team
building and customer service. Contact the UK office on 020 8540
5404 or send email enquiries to janet.leeson@kenblanchard.com.
Website: www.kenblanchard.com.
This article was originally published in People Management magazine
but remains the copyright of The Ken Blanchard Companies.
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