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Authentic Communication: Dealing with Moose-on-the-Table
By Jim Clemmer
Imagine a team meeting around a conference-room table. They are reviewing
progress and making plans. Charts are reviewed, slides are projected,
documents are handed out, and calculations are made. Now imagine that
standing in the middle of the conference-room table is a great big moose.
No one says a word about the moose. Everyone carries on polite and earnest
conversation as if this situation is very normal. Meanwhile the moose
is eating papers at one end of the table while plopping out moose pies
at the other end of the table splattering a few participants' business
suits. Team members are passing papers around the moose's legs. They shift
in their chairs to make eye contact with each other under the moose's
belly or to see past it to the front of the room. Papers need to be pried
out from underneath the moose's huge hoofs. When the moose lifts its head,
his massive antlers poke into the meeting room ceiling, raining down chunks
of ceiling tile and knocking out a light. No one says a thing about this.
The leader carries on blissfully with the meeting.
This, of course, is not a real scenario (at least, not in my experience!),
but a symbolic one. The moose represents an issue that everyone knows
is a problem but isn't being addressed. People are trying to carry on
as if things are normal. Meanwhile the issue is blocking progress and
has caused some team members to tune out of conversations. Like a dysfunctional
family with an abuser in its midst, no one wants to confront the problem.
By failing to declare the issue, they further empower it. The moose grows
bigger.
The Moose-on-the-Table scenario is one that we run into very often within
management teams. The problem is that conversations among the team aren't
authentic. They don't deal with the real issues that are blocking progress.
Some teams have a huge moose to deal with; others have a smaller moose.
Some teams have a whole moose family crowding them out. Do you have a
moose on your meeting room table? Here are a few symptoms:
• |
The real conversations happen in the hallways or office
after the meeting. There the moose or issues are clearly named. |
• |
Team members complacently agree to a consensus at the meeting –
then go off and do their own thing. They don't voice their disagreements
for fear that they'll be labeled as not being team players. |
• |
Commitments aren't kept and deadlines are missed. It's considered
whining or copping out for a team member to give his or her real opinion
about the feasibility of the proposed change. |
• |
Once the team leader gives his or her opinion, everyone else stays
quiet or falls in line behind the executive. Team members suck up
to the leader and pretend the moose doesn't exist. |
• |
Sudden surprises often come "out of the blue" –
especially from within the organization. The team leader is frequently
surprised to see a simmering problem suddenly erupt into a full blown
crisis. |
• |
The team leader dominates meetings and most conversations. If he
or she wants any of your ideas, he or she will give them to you. |
How do you deal with Moose-on-the-Table? There are many potential causes
of the problem, so there never are any pat answers to that question. Timing
is everything. Depending upon the situation and players involved, poorly
timed or clumsy attempts to deal with "moose issues" can be
a CLM (either a career limiting move...or career limiting moose).
One way of dealing with the Moose-on-the-Table is to introduce the concept
to everyone in the team and play with it. It's a powerful and fun way
to get serious issues out in the open. Some teams have given everyone
a little stuffed moose. Others made up Moose Hunting T-shirts after a
retreat where we discussed and resolved tough issues. You could get people
at a meeting to anonymously write down and hand in a few of the biggest
moose they feel are present. Cluster the similar issues and hold a secret
ballet vote on the top clusters. If you suspect people aren't being open
during a discussion, ask "is there a moose-on-the-table we need to
talk about?" Or if you see a potential issue emerging you might say,
"I'd like to put a little moose-on-the-table..."
For all the talk of communication today, there's pitifully little of it
going on. As Mark Twain once observed about the weather, many managers
talk about communication but too few really do anything about it.
Excerpted from Jim's bestseller, The
Leader's Digest: Timeless Principles for Team and Organization Success.
View the book's unique format and content, Introduction and Chapter
One, and feedback at www.theleadersdigest.com.
This book is a companion book to Growing
the Distance: Timeless Principles for Personal, Career, and Family
Success. Jim Clemmer is an internationally acclaimed keynote speaker,
workshop/retreat leader, and management team developer on leadership,
change, customer focus, culture, teams, and personal growth. His web
site is www.clemmer.net. |
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