Prepare For Your Direct Report’s Graduation

Posted June 17, 2013 by The Metiss Group
Categories: Leadership, Performance Acceleration

 

This is the time of year we celebrate school graduations.  All students embark on their studies with the expectation that some day they will be moving on to another life experience.  In some way, your direct reports have the same expectation.  How prepared are you for your direct report’s “graduation?”

One of the best practices for preparing for the departure of a direct report is to cross-train other team members on key job functions.  Delegate the identification, documentation, and training of these important activities to your direct reports. Challenge them to implement effective backup procedures and test how well they work when they are on vacation.

Empower your direct reports to cross-train each other and your group will still be successful when a key member “graduates.”

 

The One Meeting You Shouldn’t Reschedule

Posted June 10, 2013 by The Metiss Group
Categories: Leadership, Performance Acceleration

A recent study by team of scholars from London School of Economics and Harvard Business School analyzed the day-to-day schedules of more than 500 CEOs from around the world and found executives spent roughly 18 hours of a 55-hour workweek in meetings (33%).  The more direct reports a CEO had the more, and longer, internal meetings they had.

Given all the constraints on a leader’s time, it is understandable how some meetings get rescheduled in favor of higher priority, more important time commitments.  However, the one meeting leaders should not reschedule is the performance review or succession planning meeting with their direct report.  Direct reports see their performance review or succession planning meeting as a significant event often fretting over the meeting for weeks.  Many direct reports lose sleep the night before and are distracted and ineffective at work before the meeting, even when it is a meeting they anticipate will be extremely positive. Unfortunately, some leaders see this important/not urgent meeting as movable not realizing the disappointment it causes their direct report.

When planning these crucial meetings leaders should choose times and days of the week they are less likely to have to reschedule.  Monday mornings and Friday afternoons often work best.

Empower your leaders not to reschedule performance review or succession planning meetings, and you’ll have a more successful organization.

 

A Different Approach To Accelerating Performance

Posted June 3, 2013 by The Metiss Group
Categories: Leadership, Performance Acceleration

Wikipedia defines reverse psychology as “a technique involving the advocacy of a belief or behavior that is opposite to the one desired, with the expectation that this approach will encourage the subject of the persuasion to do what actually is desired: the opposite of what is suggested.”

Parents use reverse psychology on their children as a playful yet effective means to get them to do what they want.  Leaders can apply this approach as well.  According to Humetrics Hiring Hints newsletter, here are ways to guarantee that your best people will quit:

  • Treat everyone equally. This may sound good, but your employees are not equal. Some are worth more because they produce more results. The key is not to treat them equally, it is to treat them all fairly.
  • Tolerate mediocrity. A-players don’t have to or want to play with a bunch of C-players.
  • Have dumb rules. Great employees want to have guidelines and direction, but they don’t want to have rules that get in the way of doing their jobs or that conflict with the values the company says are important.
  • Don’t recognize outstanding performance and contributions. Behavior you want repeated needs to be rewarded immediately.
  • Don’t have any fun at work. Find ways to make work and/or the work environment more relaxed and fun and you will have happy employees who look forward to coming to work each day.
  • Don’t keep your people informed. You’ve got to communicate not only the good, but also the bad and the ugly. If you don’t tell them, the rumor mill will.
  • Micromanage. Tell them what you want done and how you want it done and get out of the way. Ask for their input on how it could be done better.
  • Don’t develop an employee retention strategy. Employee retention deserves your attention every day. Make a list of the people you don’t want to lose and, next to each name, write down what you are doing or will do to ensure that person stays engaged and on board.
  • Don’t give feedback. Employees want and deserve feedback.  On the spot feedback, weekly one-on-ones, and quarterly performance reviews all help employees accelerate performance.

Be creative when empowering your leaders to accelerate the performance of their direct reports, and you’ll experience more success.

Beware Of The Helicopter Managers

Posted May 20, 2013 by The Metiss Group
Categories: Leadership

We all know helicopter parents, who are always hovering overhead to make sure that their children are thriving. In one survey of 725 employers hiring recent college graduates, more than 25% had been contacted directly by applicants’ parents or received applicants’ resumes from parents; some even had parents show up at interviews with their children, negotiate the terms of their job offers, and ask for a raise or promotion.

In the workplace, many leaders become helicopter managers, hovering over their direct reports in a well-intentioned but ill-fated attempt to provide support. These are givers gone awry—people so desperate to help others that they develop a white knight complex, and end up causing harm instead. Studies suggest that helicopter managers prevent recipients from becoming independent and competent, disrupting their learning and confidence for future tasks. In focusing on the short-term benefits of helping, helicopter managers overlook the long-term costs.

To grow, people need to be challenged. Research shows that challenges are important predictors of learning and development on the job. Evidence reveals that people achieve higher performance when they are given difficult goals. Difficult goals motivate people to work harder and smarter, develop their knowledge and skills, and test out different task strategies, all of which facilitate effectiveness and growth.

Challenge your leaders to avoid the tendency to be a helicopter manager, and your organization will be more successful.

Leading by Example – Powerful Leadership Story

Posted May 13, 2013 by The Metiss Group
Categories: Leadership

There is a legend that is told of a French Monastery known throughout Europe for the exceptional leadership of a man known only as Brother Leo. Several monks took a pilgrimage to visit this extraordinary leader to learn from him. Starting out on the pilgrimage they almost immediately begin to argue over who should do certain chores.

On the third day of their journey they met another monk also going to the monastery; he joined them. This monk never bickered about doing chores and did them dutifully. And when the others would fight about which chores to do, he would simply volunteer to do them himself. On the last day of their journey, others began to follow his example and the bickering stopped.

When the monks reached the monastery they asked to see Brother Leo. The man who greeted them laughed. “But our brother is among you!” And he pointed to the fellow that had joined them.

Many seek positions in leadership to serve their own interests and not that of others. There are many self serving reasons why a person may want to lead such as power, status, networking and money. But the best leaders lead because they care about people. And those are the types of leaders that lead like Brother Leo. They teach through their actions, not by words alone. They are servants, not commanders.

What Do You Call Your Direct Reports?

Posted May 6, 2013 by The Metiss Group
Categories: Leadership

More and more organizations are getting creative with the titles they assign to their associates.  Titles like Sanitation Engineer (Janitor), Sandwich Artist (sub maker), VP, Hiring Really Great Talent (VP, HR), Corporate Magician (Admin Assistant), Transportation Captain (Driver), Director of First Impressions (Receptionist) are imaginative and conjure up fun images of the company and incumbents.  These untraditional titles stand out, make great conversation fodder, and communicate the company’s culture.

Some organizations choose titles that are attractive to customers and industry associates (banks are infamous for all their Vice Presidents).  Sales people have the greatest variety of titles: Sales Rep, Account Executive, Business Development Executive, Customer Specialist, and Sales Ninja.

When posting for job openings use titles that will resonate with the types of candidates you want to attract.  If you call your sales person VP, Sales and post the job that way, expect candidates with much sales experience, a significant group of direct reports, and higher salary expectations. If you post for a Sandwich Artist, you’ll likely not get responses from someone expecting to work behind a deli counter.

The title you use in your job posting doesn’t have to be the title you assign to the new hire.  Similarly, the title put on someone’s business card need not be the same title they hold within the organization.  For the same job, there can be different titles for job postings, business cards, and internal classification.

Empower your team to be creative in the titles they use, when appropriate and everyone will experience more success (and fun).

 

Continually Challenge Your Employees

Posted April 28, 2013 by The Metiss Group
Categories: Leadership

If you’ve ever embarked on an exercise program, you know after a while your body strengthens and exercises that were once difficult to perform are easy to do.  You then increase the intensity of the exercise by adding more weight or more reps until that becomes easy and then you add more again to challenge yourself.  Continually pushing our bodies is what creates the health improvements we seek.  If we stopped improving, eventually we would lose the gains we made.

The same is true with our work endeavors.  We must continually improve our work or eventually fall behind.  The “A” player who stops pushing for improvement will eventually become a “B” player and if still refuses to grow will become a “C” player and ultimately out of work.  You should insure your direct reports are continually challenged either through internal motivations or through your coaching.

Push your direct reports to improve and they will continue to be successful.

 

Always Be Looking For Ways To Develop Your Direct Reports

Posted April 22, 2013 by The Metiss Group
Categories: Leadership, Performance Acceleration

You are probably familiar with the Chinese proverb: “Be not afraid of growing slowly, be afraid only of standing still.”  As a leader, you should be challenging your direct reports to always be growing.

If you are not already doing so, empower your direct reports to chair your team’s weekly staff meetings.  This popular empowerment technique achieves many purposes.  First, it develops your direct reports to run effective meetings.  Second, it saves you time as you are no longer responsible for meeting preparation and follow-up.  Finally, you become more productive in the meetings focusing on the content and less on the process.

Empower and encourage your direct reports to always be growing and success will surly come.

Tip: Tailor Feedback To Your Direct Report’s Personality Style

Posted April 15, 2013 by The Metiss Group
Categories: Leadership, Performance Acceleration

One of the mistakes leaders make in giving feedback is delivering feedback in the same fashion for every direct report.  Just as a parent knows the proper way to connect with each of their children, a leader can improve their feedback by tailoring the message to the direct report’s personality style.

If you have a quiet introverted direct report, recognizing them in front of the whole team will not be as effective as a private and sincere attaboy. The extrovert, however, would love public recognition and a big deal made out of a similar accomplishment.

Get to know your direct reports and how they prefer recognition, tailor your feedback, and they will feel more empowered and successful (and more likely to repeat the recognized behavior).

Encourage Your Direct Reports To Focus On Organization Success First

Posted April 8, 2013 by The Metiss Group
Categories: Leadership, Performance Acceleration

If your administrative assistant prepared for the perfect meeting, yet the meeting did not go well, was s/he successful?  If the operations department increased productivity by 25%, yet the company missed it’s sales goal, were they successful?  If the sales department experienced record sales, yet the organization lost money, was that success?

Most people in an organization think of their department, work team, or individual contributions as being their most important focus and measure their success by how well those work units perform. Although the accomplishments of work units are important, at the end of the day, the success of the organization is all that matters. The goals and accomplishments of the whole team must take precedent.  For that to happen leaders must clearly communicate the organization’s goals and objectives and reward everyone when the organization succeeds.

Empower your team to put the organization first and the whole team will experience more success.