by Eric Harkins, ForbesBooks author of “Great Leaders Make Sure Monday Morning Doesn’t Suck: How To Get, Keep & Grow Talent“
The “Great Resignation” has seen a mass exodus of people leaving their jobs for a variety of reasons, some of which are related to work cultures they deem unsatisfactory.
But studies suggest that company leadership goes a long way toward defining a work culture, and many managers aren’t properly trained to be leaders. Businesses that are struggling to keep talent, operate efficiently or hit goals need to know when to make changes in the leadership team and act swiftly.
It’s all about the leaders you allow in your company, because a bad leader will never create a good culture. A fish rots from the head. It always starts at the top.
Every company should be focused on building a cool place, with cool projects and cool people. Leaders should have two main goals: creating a culture high performers want to be a part of, and making sure Monday morning doesn’t suck. Those mornings are miserable when you have employees who are not engaged and not capable of doing the jobs they are in, and that culture is often a direct reflection of poor leadership.
High-ranking company leaders should do these things to build and sustain a strong culture:
Hire slow and fire fast.
Address the one consistently poor-performing employee or risk losing the other nine good performers. Create a culture that high performers want to be a part of. Imagine if every employee you had was high-potential and a strong performer. Monday morning would be a lot of fun. Why do we let ourselves settle for anything less than that and keep dragging along the incompetent and unengaged employees?
Have an honest assessment of your company’s leaders.
Some of the hardest work involves having the honest conversation about which company leaders can help build the desirable culture and which ones can’t. It’s gut-wrenching at times. It’s hard because you have to be decisive and make the tough call on talent. Knowing how to move on with the right people and change the bad leaders is something a lot of companies never do.
Create a list of expectations.
I calls this list LEAD – leadership expectations and development. It’s a guide for managers and other company leaders to know what is expected of them every day, and it includes these requirements:
- Bring energy and enthusiasm to work every day
- Build relationships at all levels of the organization
- Support the direction of the company – no hidden agendas
- Be decisive – make the tough call when it needs to be made
- Manage the performance of your teams
- Consistently deliver results
- Help the company grow by developing people
When you implement a tool like LEAD, it becomes a game-changer. You’ll have clarity on who your good leaders are and confirm which ones aren’t helping you create the culture you want.
Communicate with directness.
When leaders lay out a consistent set of expectations, it makes their performance-related conversations with employees or managers underneath them easy. Take a minute and think about someone on your team who isn’t performing at the level you’d like them to. It’s not personal; it’s based on expectations. Pretty simple. But some leaders avoid having these conversations. Leaders need to be able to deal directly in this way because their high performers deserve that from them.
Ask someone in your company if they think it’s a cool place, with cool projects and cool people. If they say yes, congratulations. If they say no, maybe you can get some great feedback and be the driving force for change – that is, only if you’re really willing to sign up for what being a strong leader really means.
Eric Harkins is the president and founder of GKG Search & Consulting, a Minneapolis-based consulting firm that helps organizations acquire and retain top performers. He is the ForbesBooks author of “Great Leaders Make Sure Monday Morning Doesn’t Suck: How To Get, Keep & Grow Talent“. During his 25-year career in corporate America, Harkins has held leadership positions ranging from manager to chief talent officer and chief administrative officer.
via https://www.AiUpNow.com
October 18, 2021 at 03:01AM by Contributor, Khareem Sudlow