|
Here are some of our guiding principles and thoughts for our managers, staff, freelancers, and consultants
to consider and follow:
- Create an environment where people feel good about themselves. Research has shown that managers spend
three times as much time telling people what they did wrong as telling them what they did right. How often you can spot somebody
doing something right?
- Give people freedom. When did you personally work at your best? Probably when you were given freedom
and trusted to do it your way. Is this what you provide for your people? Have they been challenged, trusted and given freedom?
- Ensure our people are working within our organization's principles and have clear targets. Make the
framework crystal clear, then give people the freedom to work out their own way to achieve it - this will create opportunities
for innovation.
- Feedback is crucial to job ownership. Ensure that your people regularly receive feedback from their
internal or external customers. And ownership reinforces both responsibility and innovation -- if people genuinely have full
ownership, they will make sure it works.
- Choose our managers according to how good they are with people. Do you appoint managers on the basis
of core skills or length of service, regardless of their ability to motivate, support, and develop staff?
- Ensure our managers know how they are doing with their staff. Do your managers regularly receive peer
and upward appraisals?
- Recruit people for attitude, then train for skills. At the interview, do you test people on their
ability to talk through their core values, and their ability to do the tasks? What about whether they show positive
attitude, how supportive they are to others, or their ability to cope with change?
- Systems, not rules. Trust everyone to do their jobs to the best of their ability - with a clear set
of principles and a framework, but without detailed rules and instructions. Have you ensured that a process or system can
be changed if any member of staff can find a better way to meet the needs of customers?
- Celebrate mistakes. Saying 'I got it wrong' is a sign of responsibility and an indication of an honest
and open corporate culture. If people haven't made any mistakes, they probably haven't tried anything new. Does your culture
ensure people remain open or does it stifle learning?
- Have fun and do great things. Does your team enjoy their work? Are you creating an environment
where people can make great accomplishments?
- Eat well. Nourishing the mind, the soul, and the body are the intertwined foundations of
great people. What are you doing to ensure your people are learning, growing, and healthy? Is your team well-fed?
|