Archive for the ‘Leadership’ category

Write a Job Description That Attracts “A” Players

July 13, 2012

Employers often complain that they are unable to fill open jobs. But many are looking for such a narrow set of competencies that no candidate could possibly measure up. Exhaustive job descriptions deter solid prospects who worry they don’t fit the overly specific (or ambitious) criteria. Next time you’re hiring, consider these tips:

  • Focus on success factors, not experience. Don’t itemize every skill the candidate could possibly need. Instead, briefly list the most important abilities required for a person to succeed.  Describe what success looks like (i.e. successful sales candidates will demonstrate the ability to penetrate new geographic markets within 6 months, successful accounting candidates will be able to demonstrate the ability to have closed month end books within 3 business days).
  • Make the title clear. The way you label a job defines who will apply. Use job titles that clearly describe the profession. Don’t use insider jargon.  It’s important to know you might call a position one thing inside the company but advertise for it differently, and perhaps even have a different option on the business card to open the right doors (i.e. you might post an adv. for an Outside Sales Professional, internal call it an Account Executive but have VP Client Relations on their business card).
  • Watch your biases. Be careful not to include requirements that would rule out capable candidates who don’t exactly match the ideal in your head.  Let the success factors weed out the candidates not arbitrary requirements.  You may think a position requires 5-8 years experience and a Bachelor’s degree in a particular field, but if someone with 3 years experience with a different degree can demonstrate previous success, would you really want to exclude them from even sending you a resume or expressing interest?

It’s also helpful to spend some time beating up what experience or education a candidate MUST bring with them, versus what can be acquired on the job in a reasonable amount of time. Remember finding someone who has the right healthy skills and culture fit with the basic hard skills may be a better investment than those who have all the hard skills but are a lousy culture fit.

source: Management Tip of the Day, Harvard Business Review

Include Core Values Into Your Selection Process

July 6, 2012

In his recent book “The Advantage: Why Organizational Health Trumps Everything Else In Business,” Patrick Lencioni describes how a legendary company screens for their their core values.  The company’s culture is built around a healthy sense of self-deprecation and humility. When candidates come in for interviews, they typically wear classic business suits, starch shirts and ties.  The male candidates are asked to exchange their suit pants for khaki shorts and complete the remainder of the interview (which includes a tour of headquarters) wearing the shorts.  The candidates in their suit coat, shirt, tie, dark socks, shinny shoes, and silly shorts are demonstrating one of the company’s core values.  Many candidates object and opt out of the process on the spot; others humbly embrace the notion and continue with the interview.

Core values are critical to companies and if candidates cannot embrace them while seeking the job, they surely won’t live them on the job.

Empower your hiring managers to challenge their candidates to demonstrate your core values and you’ll continue to have a successful organization.

Use Cognitive Abilities To Overcome Technological Distractions

June 29, 2012

There are varying degrees of steadiness. Some people are focused, unyielding, and undeterred by distractions. Some are flexible, multi-tasked, and enjoy distractions. Some are a little of both.

How does the ubiquity of technological distractions today impact our ability to be productive? How do the super-steady types avoid getting frustrated with all the interruptions. And how do the easily distracted types garner enough focus to finish anything?

The answer is: we adapt to the situation for short periods of time. Our ability to adapt is largely a function of our cognitive abilities. We must continuously adjust our natural style and what feels comfortable; we must either block out the interruption or respond to it. Those with strong cognitive abilities are likely to be most successful in adapting to today’s work environment.

Are your direct reports developing their cognitive abilities? Are you screening new-hire candidates for their thinking abilities? Empower your direct reports to focus on their critical thinking skills and they will be successful.

Empower Your Introverts To Contribute To Meetings

June 23, 2012

We all remember the quiet, shy person in high school who rarely spoke up in class. The person who listened intently, took lots of notes, and worked hard at flying under the radar. When the teacher called on this introvert, we were all amazed at the insights offered and surprised the person didn’t speak up more often.

The best contributors to your meetings are often the quietest. These reflective, contemplative thinkers have great ideas that are frequently lost on the team. As a leader you’ll benefit by going out of your way to get the input of these team members. Some ideas to get their involvement:

  • distribute an agenda and/or discussion topics well before the meeting, specifying what decisions need to be made (the introverts will be well prepared and more likely to contribute to the discussion);
  • don’t let the domineering extroverts monopolize the conversation (the extroverts love being the focus of the meeting and the introverts are content letting them);
  • do not assume the introvert’s quietness means they agree (the introvert’s head nod means they heard the point not that they concur);
  • encourage the introverts to contribute by setting a rule that their silence means they disagree (this forces them to speak up);
  • ask the introverts to “think out loud” and never, never criticize these thoughts (introverts prefer to speak after their thoughts are complete and are uncomfortable expressing their incomplete thoughts).

Empower the introverts on your team to contribute to team meetings and you’ll have a more successful organization.

Let Your Selection Process Itself Be An Evaluation Tool

June 15, 2012

What if there were a way to know before you hired someone how well they respond to emails, manage timelines, and coordinate meetings?  A good selection process can do just that.

Most selection processes include email communications, assessments/tests, and reference checks.  Observing how candidates handle those steps and the space between the steps can give you great insight into the candidates’ ability to handle certain situations.

When you send emails to candidates (hopefully your are doing a core values email screen), ask the candidate to respond in a particular way (i.e. “short and to the point” or “as if you were replying to a customer”) and watch how the candidate follows those directions.  When asking candidates to take assessments or tests, ask that they be completed by a set date or ask by when they expect to complete the task; then watch to see if the candidate finishes by that date/time.  When conducting reference checks, ask the candidate to arrange the meeting times between you and their references to see how well they coordinate the meetings.

A candidate may do very well in their interviews and have all the right skills, but if they don’t follow directions, meet deadlines, and setup meetings well in the interview process, what makes you think they will do much better if you offer them a job?

Empower your hiring managers with a selection process that challenges candidates to perform business basics and you’ll experience better hires.

Are You A Level Five Leader?

June 8, 2012

According to bestselling author Jim Collins, humility is a key ingredient of Level 5 leadership. His simple formula is Humility + Will = Level 5. “Level 5 leaders are a study in duality; modest and willful, shy and fearless,” says Collins.

Collins is also a noted leadership speaker, collecting over $75,000 per speaking event. As you can imagine, those speaking events attract some very accomplished leaders. One question Collins asks in his sessions is for the leaders in the crowd to raise their hand if they think they are a Level 5 leader. Inevitably many leaders raise their hands. Collins then, much to the leaders’ chagrin, says “a Level 5 leader would never raise their hand.

Collins’ point is Level 5 leaders with all their humility would never admit they are an accomplished leader; that they are always striving to be better and never satisfied with their performance.

Level 5 leaders look in the mirror during bad times and out the window during good times. Humble leaders are not afraid to seek outside counsel to make their organizations better knowing they don’t have all the answers.

Empower yourself to pursue Level 5 leadership and you and your team will experience greater success.

It’s Okay To Treat Each Of Your Direct Reports Differently

June 1, 2012

Parents know it. School teachers know it. Sports coaches know it. Each of us responds differently to various types of mentoring and leadership. One child may need more nurturing while another responds to firm boundaries. Some students learn best by reading while others learn best by writing. Some athletes perform better when individually challenged while others excel in team situations.

Successful leaders – parents, schoolteachers, coaches, business managers – learn how those they are leading are best inspired and customize their leadership approaches accordingly. Often leaders are too concerned about being fair and focus on applying the same leadership practices with each direct report. Treating your team members differently doesn’t mean you are not being fair. In fact, treating everyone similarly could be perceived as unfair.

Empower yourself to understand each of your direct reports’ motivations and needs, apply a leadership approach tailored to those needs, and the team will be more successful.

 

Conduct Consistent One-On-Ones Create Happier Direct Reports

May 18, 2012

In their book “Contented Cows Give Better Milk,” Richard Hadden and Bill Catlette research the impact happy employees have on organizations. They found companies with happier employees:

  • outgrew peers by 4:1 margin
  • earned more than $40 billion than peers
  • created more than 800,000 jobs than peers

One of the best ways to create happier employees is for leaders to conduct consistent one-on-one meetings with their direct reports. The frequency and duration of the one-on-ones is at the manager’s discretion, but weekly 30 minute meetings work best. Consistent one-on-ones provide direct reports an opportunity to voice needs and receive praise. The sessions also provide the opportunity to assess goals with the purpose of ensuring culture and happiness are synchronized.  Regular one-on-ones allow the leader to recognize issues and deal with them before they become time-sucking, full-blown problems.

Direct reports who have consistent, dedicated time with their supervisor are much happier with the organization and, more importantly, their supervisor (remember most superstars leave companies because of the poor relationship with their boss). All this happiness leads to increased profitability and growth.

Empower your leaders to conduct consistent one-on-ones and your organization will be more successful.

Screen For Core Values Early In Your Selection Process

May 11, 2012

Almost all business leaders agree the most important component of their cultural fabric is their core values. Executive teams and strategic coaches have spent countless hours developing and refining these crucial organizational identifiers.

Good hiring managers screen for the organization’s core values early on in the screening process to gauge core values fit – before the hiring manager has fallen in love with the candidate. We recommend a core values email screen be conducted after a candidate has successfully passed the first phone screen.

In the email screen, the candidate is asked to reply in an email how they have lived each of the organization’s core values. This not only gives the hiring manager a feel for how the candidate internalizes the core values, but provides a great sample of their writing and email skills.

Here is a sample email screen:

Below are the core values for the ABC Company. Please take a few moments to provide an example of how you have demonstrated each of these core values in your professional life. We are looking for specific examples; if you do not have one, you may leave it blank, but we are not looking for hypothetical situations. We don’t expect a novel, but sometimes being too brief loses the meaning or the context. Please respond as though you were responding to an email request from the individual to whom you report.

Results Driven: Be accountable for getting the right things done right and on time.

Team Focus: Place team goals ahead of personal goals.

Do the Right Thing: Even when no one is looking or will ever find out.

Empower your hiring managers with core values email screening, and you’ll increase your odds of making a successful hire.

Be Clear About Team Expectations

May 4, 2012

According to a Harris Interactive study of 23,000 workers, managers and executives:

  •  22% of workers focused on organizational goals
  •  10% of people have clear, measurable deadline-driven work goals
  •  8% of people systematically schedule priorities
  •  23% of workers understood organizational strategy and goals
  •  60% of worker’s time actually spent working on key goals

If this were applied to a football team of eleven players:

  •  Only two would know what the next play was going to be
  •  Only two would be focused on executing the next play
  •  Only one would know his specific assignment on the next play
  •  Only one would be totally committed to the next play
  •  Only two would meet their commitments on the next play

The greater the clarity of the mission, the greater the odds of success. Team members must know what is expected of them, in as granular a way as is practical, in order to meet or exceed those expectations.

Empower your teams with clear expectations and you’ll be more successful.