- Improve the performance of your team members – If you see that your team does not perform as well as it should, the first thing that you need to check is whether the team members can be trained to perform better. You must always look for ways to train and improve the people forming your teams. Note that you also must not forget to improve yourself in the process!
- Add competent people to your team – Sometimes, your team members are performing well, but you discover that you will not succeed with the current team as it stands. Maybe you lack some specific competences. Maybe it is just the sheer number of people that is insufficient to do everything that needs to be done. In those cases, you will find that you need to adjoin more competent people to help you achieve what you need to achieve. You need to grow your team!
- Change the leader – When a team is composed of the right people but still does not progress, maybe it is time to look for a new leader! Or maybe some people on your team would be better suited to lead certain aspects of the project. This is tougher to do when you are the team leader yourself. You have to look at your delegation skills and see how you can use some better suited people to help you with leadership. You can keep the control of the overall project, but delegate the leadership responsibilities of certain parts to someone else if you feel it will be better for the project.
- Remove inefficient members – Finally, sometimes you need to remove inefficient members from a non-performing team. A single member can change a winning team into a losing team! In that case, you have to put the interests of the team first and remove that person from your team. For you as the leader, the team is what counts. You need to compose the best possible team and this should be your focus.
Monday, August 31, 2009
4 Ways to Improve Your Team
Friday, August 28, 2009
The Leadership Cycle
Dear Managers and Leaders!
I feel starting a company, even the smallest solo company, is pure leadership. You need to create and clarify your vision, define your mission, set clear objectives, plan for action, and then take action. This can be a very stressful situation if you try to do everything at once. It can be overwhelming at times, since you feel responsible for everything. Observing myself as I start my solo company, I came up with a crude, back-to-basics description of the leadership process to help me focus on the right things. It can be summarized as follows:
- Set your objectives
- Plan for actions
- Advance according to your plan for a while
- Assess where you are
- Correct course
- Advance according to your new plan for a while
- Assess where you are
- Correct course
- Advance a bit more
- ...
As you can see, this process is a cycle that repeats itself until you reach your objectives. As you assess where you are, you also need to evaluate whether the objectives you are pursuing are still valid. Things change rapidly and you must have an open mind towards changing your destination.
The time between the planning phase and the assessment can vary greatly from one individual to the next, between one methodology and another. For instance, the Agile software development methodology says that this “action time” must be very short. Other software development methodologies are not asking the same pace for assessing projects. I personally favour short action time periods because it is more forgiving. It allows you to correct course before the deadline is reached!
To assess where you are, you need to be able to measure where you are. Qualitative objectives must be turned into measurable goals to ensure that you know when you reach the objectives or when you go astray. This is essential to the success of any enterprise. If you cannot measure when you meet your objectives, when will you be able to celebrate your successes?
The one thing that this leadership cycle breaks is the illusion that everything must always be perfect for you to succeed. You can always correct course and repair your mistakes as you advance in your project. Of course, some mistakes will be tougher to correct than others, but until the deadline, you still stand a chance to succeed. Your success will be better measured by your resilience than by the amount of mistakes and problems that you encountered in your journey. I would even say that mistakes are not that important; how you, as a leader, respond to the challenges encountered is what really counts. I personally feel that this thought is reassuring and allows me to take action despite my fear of doing something wrong.
What about you dear leaders? Have you ever noticed this leadership cycle in your practice? Are you accepting mistakes and correcting course as you go? Let us know what you think by adding your comments below.
Until next time,
Remi Cote
PS: If you find these postings interesting and would like to learn more about what I can do for you and your team, then please visit www.innovachron.com or contact me directly at remi@innovachron.com.
Monday, August 24, 2009
Authenticity
Friday, August 21, 2009
Questions as Leadership Tools: Being Asked Questions
Tuesday, August 18, 2009
Questions as Leadership Tools: Constructive Questions
- Situation logical levels
- Time
- Perceptual positions or the position of the observer
- Environment – where and when, what is the context
- Behaviour – what, which actions
- Strategies – how, in which way, with which tools
- Values and beliefs – why, according to which values
- Identity – Who am I, how do I perceive myself
- Purpose – For who, for what
- What belief led me to think that way? - (past, values and beliefs)
- For what, for whom do I act this way? What purpose does it serve? – (present, purpose)
- What will I do to achieve that goal? - (future, strategies)
- In which context will I make this presentation? Who will be part of the audience? - (future, environment)
- What did I do to make that person cry? – (past – behaviour)
- How will I feel if I took this leadership role? – (future, identity)
- Why did you do that? What was the purpose of this action? – (past, purpose)
- What role do you think you will have in this situation? – (future, identity)
- Why does he think I’m doing that? What values does he think drive me in that direction? – (present, values and beliefs)
- Why are we always fighting? – (present, behaviour)
- What will be the essence of our team in five years? – (future, purpose)
- What position should that team have in the context of the entire enterprise? – (present, identity)
- Why are they still fighting? – (present, behaviour)
Friday, August 14, 2009
Questions as Leadership Tools 3: Implicit Questions
- Death or hospitalization of an organization member or immediate family member
- A life-threatening, lost time accident occurring within the organization
- Major theft or felony crime committed in the organization
- Significant threat to the organization’s core mission
- Legal action or credible exposure to legal action, such as damages caused by an employee in the conduct of duties
- Organizational exposure in the media, such as a positive or negative newspaper story mentioning the organization, or a visit to the organization by a journalist
Tuesday, August 11, 2009
Questions Analysis: Vision Clarification
- What do you want to accomplish? – The answer to this question represents where you want to go. It describes the final future state you want to accomplish.
- What will tell you that you successfully accomplished your vision? – This will provide you with a way to clearly establish objective criterion for success. Often times, we start an enterprise without knowing how to define success. This can lead to never ending projects, ill-defined goals, and lack of motivation towards accomplishing the goals. If you want to know when you’ll arrive at destination, you need to draw the finish line first.
- What resources will you need to accomplish your vision? – This is the list of things you need to bring with you for the journey. What do you need to be able to accomplish your vision? What are the people, the material, the knowledge that you need to successfully reach your destination?
- What are the advantages and downsides for your team members, your team, and other actors of the system? – What will be the impact of this vision on the people you lead, on your team, and on other people important to your organization?
- What will happen if you do not accomplish your vision? – Answering this question should bring you a sense of urgency and gauge the importance your vision has for you. This question should help you bring purpose into your project of accomplishing your vision. Without a clear understanding of the purpose of your mission, it could be quite difficult to keep your motivation and the motivation of your team up in face of adversity.
- What are the steps to accomplish your vision? – This is the project planning per say. The fact that you understand the steps required will allow you to define clear milestones along the way and secure early wins. This is important for motivation and control.
- What minuscule change can you do today towards your vision? – This ensures that you turn your plan into action as quickly as possible. It ensures that you will not postpone until tomorrow what you can do today. It also enhances your accountability and checks that you really want to implement your vision now.
Friday, August 7, 2009
Questions as Leadership Tools
- It allows the leader to monitor the various actions that are under his control and ensure that everything gets done on time and meets expectations.
- Good questions also direct people in the right direction, ensuring that everyone works towards the leader’s vision.
- It allows a leader to correct course and highlight mistakes on the fly, but by making the people realizing their mistakes themselves which is less confronting.
- Questions also constitute a powerful tool to show team members that a leader cares deeply about what they are doing and wants to understand where they are, what they are doing, how they are doing it, and where they want to go.
- By asking questions instead of giving all the answers, a leader gives his team a lot of autonomy and respect. The team members must come up with their own answers instead of waiting to be told what to do.
Tuesday, August 4, 2009
Finding Your Purpose
Dear Managers and Leaders!
I’m back from vacation today. It was good to be out for more than a week, but I’m now really happy to be back to the grind! I’m rested and full of ideas and energy for the year to come! It is great to be with you again!
I think the way you feel when coming back from vacation tells a lot about how you feel about your job. This year feels so great in comparison to the past couple of years. Back then, coming back from vacation was less than exciting for me! All the energy gained back during vacation was gone the minute I entered the office. All the positive thoughts and good intentions I had about work while on vacation suddenly vanished when faced with the barrage of emails and the meetings I faced the first morning. I think this attitude clearly shows the number one problem I had back then: lack of purpose.
When working is “just a job”, when you do not feel energized to go to work in the morning, you should question your purpose. Do you know WHY you do all that work? Are you able to link your actions to some higher level mission or intention? What are you trying to achieve? If you cannot answer these simple (actually tough) questions, you will likely not be really motivated by your work. If, on top of that, you work really hard and are under a lot of stress, then you will face burn out soon.
As a leader, I think it is your own responsibility to find your purpose and then communicate it to your followers. Without purpose, you will not be able to create a vision for yourself and for your group. Without that clear vision, it will be very difficult to motivate yourself and your followers, and drive you all in a good direction. It is essential to have a strong purpose and clear vision to be able to prioritize your tasks and be able to say no in a positive way. Your purpose should always drive your actions. Without purpose, people will drive your agenda and you will lose ownership of your life.
So, how do you find your own purpose? I am reading a book called “In Extremis Leadership” written by T.A. Kolditz and I find one of his ideas really interesting. He says that to find purpose in what you do, think about how your business impacts people’s lives, how you change the life of others by your actions, by the work you do. So, when asking yourself why you are doing the job you do, look for answers in the way your job or you impact the lives of others. You will likely find a powerful purpose and regain motivation. This purpose is what will fuel your energy and secure your focus in tough times.
What about you dear leader, do you feel energized when coming into work in the morning? Do you have a strong sense of purpose for the work you and your team are doing? Do you know how your work impacts other people’s lives? Please share your thoughts with the other readers by adding a comment below.
Until next time,
Remi Cote
PS: If you find these postings interesting and would like to learn more about what I can do for you and your team, please visit www.innovachron.com or contact me directly at remi@innovachron.com.