Leadership –
Don’t be a Wimp
Leaders have faith in
people. They believe in them. They have found that others will rise to high expectations.
R O B E R T K . G R E E N L E A F
True
leadership sets clear and concise expectations. It communicates information and
holds people accountable for what they are selected to do. Being direct and
setting expectations isn’t being mean. It’s about what you expect of them and
their work. There should be no doubt who you want on your team and at the same
time, retain your desire to maintain clear and concise communication with them
about what you expect them to do.
In most
cases, people do not like to be left in the dark. Nobody appreciates or accepts
a leader who provide you more ambiguity than facts. This leads to shoddy work
performance and missed deadlines. Once you implied that failure is acceptable,
you have lost your position as a leader. At the same time, one you have allowed
a team member to consistently miss work assignment or projects, you have
allowed that member to drag down the team and impact both morale and confidence
of the whole team in your ability to lead.
Making
exceptions and not knowing where you stand makes people anxious and stresses
them out. It is a distraction you don’t need. Don’t leave your expectations to
be unspoken. Express them up front to avoid failures. Remaining silent on your
expectation is pure neglect to the team’s ability to get things done. Don’t
feed into the negativity by remaining quiet. If you don’t talk about
expectations, you have a major problem when it pops up and then take it out of
the team because they never delivered what you expected out of them.
Not
knowing where they stand, what they are expected to do and when it needs to get
done are all the kind of things that makes them anxious and unhappy. It allows
them to think you are being unkind to them and treating them with less respect
they deserve. Being lazy or a little bit hazy about communicating to your team
is a major problem with most leaders. Silence, in this case, is not golden.
What makes it worse it when the failure comes, you yell at them about something
they had no prior knowledge of as you never shared the expectation with them
openly and candidly.
Good
leaders know ahead of time that before any project begins, they need to take
the time to set a clear and definitive expectations from the start. There are
so many other issues that may come up along the way and this ambiguity can
forestall many problems if the team is on the same page as their leader. Wimpy
leaders prefer ambiguity over clarity. It gives them more room to maneuver and
make decisions that would otherwise be cast in stone or within a line of
thought that was a clear expectation.
Being
vague or abstruse always leaves something else at someone else’s expense. There
is always a cost to such styles of leadership. One can clearly see the
advantage of putting a project in writing as it is a more positive projection
of both goals and objectives as well as the timeline, as well as the accountability
factor and expectations set forth in such an assignment.
If we
are continually setting expectations ‘off the cuff,’ we may paint a ‘too rosy
of picture.’ In reality, both are flawed designed initiatives and not dealing
with the reality of leadership principles. Initially, team members are energized
by all of these grandiose ideas and promises of impressive things to come.
However, once they realize these vague guarantees are mostly hollow, they lose
faith in the leadership.
A good
leader knows when to ask for input and or give directions on expectations
without input. There is a time for asking for feedback and a time for executive
directions. Being a leader who chooses to be direct in telling the team what
you require of them is a set expectation of a leader. It should not come as a
surprise that being direct is part of the job. On the other hand, a wimpy
leader may use a more passive dialogue to make people comfortable rather than
direct language. For some reason, some leaders feel that this ‘soft’ approach
is better when in fact, it is just plain weak and wishy-washy for many to
accept as a clear expectation of their own work.
There
should be no open-ended questions. There should be no open-ended tasks. There
should be politeness and respectful demeanor but with directness that everyone
can appreciate and understand. What it comes down to is this – can I or can’t I
trust this person to do this and if not, do I need to get or find another
person? The leaders should have that option on the table at all times. You
either trust someone or you don’t. Leadership recognizes this principle as a
necessity to get things done. If you don’t trust somebody to get it done, find a
different person.
We
shouldn’t put up with a lack of accountability in our own teams. We shouldn’t
retain them until we can’t stand them anymore. If they don’t fit the need, find
somebody else who fits the assignment and don’t frustrate yourself with making
excuses for that person who can’t get it done. If the person you don’t trust is
or remains to be a viable option, talk to them, reiterate what the expectations
are and then allow them to withdraw from the project or commit to it. Let them
experience their own accountability through their own natural consequences of
their actions and deal with that at the right time.
When you
find a person you can’t trust, it is best to inspect them before you expect
them to do a job. What that means is simply take the time to trust but verify.
Do a follow up or numerous follow-ups to inspect their work progress. Don’t
fear being labeled a ‘micro-manager’ in such cases. The fact is, the other team
members know the flaws of the person better than you do and understand such a
cautious approach. Holding someone accountable is your job. Giving them input is your job as well as
giving them the opportunity to do the work up to your expectations.
When you
lead them in a constructive, trusting manner, you simply make them better
workers and reinforce the organization’s ethos and culture. Remember that your
leadership is a brand. It is your reputation so if you need to verify,
follow-up, and ensure quality and consistency of the employee, then leave it up
to the methods required to ensure such an outcome. Everyone is different and
all require different methods. You can create consistency in them by creating
having consistent methods and procedures in place that can be counted on the be
there for the team to benefit from.
Mutual
responsibility is at the core of accountability; the bonus is not solely on the
person who leads to provide direction. It is equally the duty of the leader and
team member to hold each other accountable. There are things the leader must
provide and other things the team member must provide – clear expectations, and
those needed resources must be identified as well as the timeline and deadline
to get things finished up and completed. Quality and timely work is still job
one in most cases.
A good
leader never hesitates to ‘spank’ an employee for doing something wrong. Now,
being spanked can take on various meanings but constructively spoken, it merely
means to be held accountable for their actions. This makes the employee
stronger as well as the team. It creates a bond that is hard to break up under
duress and stress as time wears on all involved but the trust and the
accountability never erodes to the point of mistrusting each other’s efforts.
One without the other shows we don’t care and every team member needs to know
that their leader cares.
A good
leader holds himself or herself accountable as they look into the mirror and
identify their own attributes and contributions to the expectations. Once a
leader sees their own position, they know how the others stack up in their
relative roles or positions as a team. Wimpy leader often point out the faults
of their team members to avoid looking bad themselves. They want to convince
the boss and others it was their wrongdoing that caused the failure. Almost
instantly, they want to change the behavior of the team rather than the
behavior of themselves.
Team
leaders who set high standards for themselves will often see a significant improvement
in the team and at the same time, members will be more readily to accept their
oversight and input when you become trustworthy of their confidence and respect
in you. Some leaders impose the burdens of the expectation on themselves rather
than the team and that works in the eyes of those who follow him or her.
As
leaders, we have a responsibility to correct and motivate those entrusted to
our stewardship. A servant leader is responsible for his people and all those
assigned to the relative project or department. If something needs to be
discussed with a team member, it is the leadership’s responsibility, not that
of an outsider or a person delegated to do so.
This is
very harmful to the credibility of the leader and cause ripples of doubt in the
team’s circle of trust of their leader. Nobody likes corrective action being
delivered by someone not a member of their own team. It is considered being
disrespectful and often taken with the wrong attitude or intention of the act
itself. Many call this act ‘passing the buck’ and a good leader knows the buck
stops with them. Some people will say that if you treat people well, they will
return the favor and if you treat them poorly, they will also return the favor
as that is what karma says is a natural consequence of such an act.
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