Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Three Keys to Success in Business

This morning I had a wonderful yoga class and breakfast meeting with a good friend of mine who owns several businesses. He is a self-made success story if there ever was one and we were discussing what it takes to be successful in business – and we were lamenting why more of our employees don’t “get it”. We made the following observations about success and I believe they are spot on for differentiating winners from ordinary companies and ordinary employees.

Execution: Winning companies and people perform. They make a plan and they follow through on what they have committed to do. I have always believed that success in business is 20% strategy and 80% execution. Business is dynamic: ‘strategy’ only sets a path forward given today’s known factors and assumptions about tomorrow – but ‘execution’ adapts to and accounts for the dynamic, constantly evolving, real-time environment in which we all operate every day. Execution is performance in spite of any obstacle.

Accountability: Winning companies and people do not make excuses. Excuses are the death of a company and the human spirit. Think about it: when do you make excuses? Only when you’ve given up! Or when you believe you have exhausted all options and there is nothing else you can do to succeed. What happens then? You start to explain why you couldn’t get the job done: you make excuses…Successful people don’t quit. Conrad Hilton said “Success seems to be connected with action. Successful people keep moving. They make mistakes, but they don’t quit”. Keep moving and keep thinking!

Problem-Solving: Winning people and companies are always thinking and innovating. They are always trying to find a better solution, a cheaper solution, a faster solution. And they never quit because they have a fundamental problem-solving attitude and approach to life. I call this “engagement”. Do you come to work – to life – engaged, trying to solve problems, to find a better way? Or do you come just to do what you are told and to sleepwalk through the day?

Want to be a better business person, employee, or human? Develop these three traits and you can’t help but be successful.

Friday, July 3, 2009

Have The Courage To Be Great

Some of my favorite quotes on pursuing greatness:

Think. Think about the values and principles that are important to you.
Believe. Believe in yourself based on the thinking you have done.
Dream. Dream about what you want to become, based on your belief in yourself.
Dare. Dare to make your dream a reality.
~Walt Disney~

There is no chance, no destiny, no fate that can circumvent or hinder or control the firm resolve of a determined soul.
~ Ella Wheeler Wilcox ~

I learned this, at least, in my experiment: That if one advances confidently in the direction of his dreams, and endeavors to live the life which he has imagined, he will meet with a success unexpected in common hours.
~Henry David Thoreau~

What would you attempt to do if you knew you could not fail?
~Robert Schuller~

Wherever you go employ all your heart.
~The Shu King~

The secret to life is to have a task, something you devote your entire life to . . . and the most important thing is -- it must be something you cannot possibly do!
~Henry Moore~

By believing passionately in something that does not exist we create it. The non-existent is whatever we have not sufficiently desired.
~Nikos Kazantzakis~

Why sometimes I’ve believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast.
~Lewis Carol, Chronicles of Narnia~

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Never, Ever Quit

"In the business world, the rearview mirror is always clearer than the windshield."
~Warren Buffet~

Leadership requires incredible resilience to the comments of all of those around you who do not have to make the decisions that you have to make under pressure and with incomplete information. Never doubt yourself, and always learn from your mistakes; because you will make many of them. The question is how well you recover from your mistakes. Never get down on yourself and never give up.

"It is not the critic who counts. Not the man who points out how the strong man stumbled or where the doer of deeds could have done better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs and comes short again and again; who knows the great enthusiasms, the great devotions; who spends himself in a worthy cause. Who, at the best, knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those timid souls who know neither victory nor defeat. "
~ Theodore Roosevelt ~


"There is no chance, no destiny, no fate that can circumvent or hinder
or control the firm resolve of a determined soul."
~ Ella Wheeler Wilcox ~

Monday, April 27, 2009

Continuous Learning: A Foundation for Sustainable Success

It may sound like heresy in corporate America to say that results don’t matter, but they don’t … if you don’t understand what drives results. Too many executives focus on results without taking the time to understand what drives those results and to reinforce those drivers in their managers and employees. And, contrary to popular belief, results are not about hard work and effort (although those are critical factors in any success equation); results are about working smarter and understanding how your team’s behaviors, actions, and measurables contribute to their success or failure.

This is a mentoring and coaching issue more than an accountability issue. Too many executives take the easy route and just complain that their managers and teams are not meeting their goals and objectives and blame it on lack of accountability. But they have not taken the time to identify the key behaviors, actions, and sub-goals that will result in success at the larger level. This is the responsibility of executives. Most managers and teams cannot appreciate the complexity that comes with trying to “be profitable” on a corporate scale. There are just too many factors to consider: sales variations from month to month, monthly cost variables, macro-economic trends, inventory swings, overhead cost allocations, business unit allocations, healthy and unhealthy cannibalization between business units, cyclicality, known and unknown competitor actions, etc. And these are all excuses waiting to happen… and excuses are the death of a company.

Successful executives take the time to work with their managers and teams to identify the controllable actions, behaviors, and measures that they want their managers and teams to be responsible and accountable for. These controllable actions, behaviors, and measures, if executed across every facet of the business, should lead to the higher-level corporate goal (typically profitability or cash-flow). And they mitigate most opportunities for general, ambiguous excuses from managers.

If the company does not achieve its higher-level goals then one of three things has happened: (1) the managers and teams did not deliver on their controllable actions, behaviors, and measures; (2) the controllable actions, behaviors, and measures were not, in fact, the correct ones to affect the higher-level goals; or (3) other factors intervened. We can learn something different, and critically important, from each of these three different potential outcomes.

First, if the managers and teams did not deliver on their controllable actions, behaviors, and measures then it should be clear to everyone, including the managers and teams themselves, that they failed. And this is a crucial point. The controllable actions, behaviors, and measures should be so clear, fundamental, and directly controllable that there is little, if any, room for excuses. Of course the goals need to be created in an intelligent manner. For example, goals need to be set so as not to be contradictory with one another (decrease headcount but increase production) and so as to recognize that other intra-period activity can influence the outcome. For example, if the goal is to decrease finished goods inventory through a concerted sales effort but the production department produces more than forecast, then the sales team might have had a stellar sales month despite the fact that inventories rose that month.

A mature executive team recognizes and works with these nuances. Additionally, a mature executive team is also adept at breaking problems or challenges down into component root causes. This is critical in setting controllable actions, behaviors, and measures because if the team sets an overly broad, arbitrary goal without understanding what the true drivers or root causes of a business problem or challenge are then they will almost surely not result in the required outcome. This is the second outcome that can occur: the controllable actions, behaviors, and measures were not, in fact, the correct ones to affect the higher-level goals. And the only people to blame in this instance are the executive team – it is truly a failure of leadership, mentoring, and coaching. This is like saying that our baseball team is losing because our pitchers are giving up too many runs and therefore we need to get better pitching. But the coaches failed to validate whether the runs were earned or unearned; whether the problem was with our starting pitching, middle-relief, or closers; or if the real problem was with our hitting if we looked at proper benchmarks for our pitchers. The last thing we want to do is go out and replace all of our starting pitchers if the real problem lies elsewhere – we might only be exacerbating the problem.

This is the most exciting part of the game (errrr…work): problem solving the root causes of what is driving failure. Too often, executives come up with superficial root causes, or focus on irrelevant or unrelated root causes, and play the blame game. In my experience, the primary reason for failure is that the managers or teams are focused on solving the wrong problems that will not result in the desired results. This is what makes business (and sports) so interesting. You get to take the learnings from last month or week, or last game, and try another approach to solve the problem… if you have the courage to recognize that it is not always about execution…but about operational strategies…which the executives or coaches have to determine.

This is often referred to as “learning to learn”. It is the foundation of all successful people and organizations. This is the power that comes with a true learning organization: we might not get the results we wanted…but the more important questions are: what did we learn and what are we going to do differently this time? If you can reach this level of self-awareness and leadership and eliminate the politics that comes with an organization that blames rather than learns and teaches and an organization that obfuscates rather than delivers meaningful, timely, actionable financials and metrics then your organization has a foundation for success.

Organizations with these attributes celebrate failure rather find fault and blame and are positioned for growth and continuous improvement. Failure is recognized as an integral part of learning, experimentation, and risk-taking. When people and teams are blamed for failing, rather than praised for learning and improving, it has a severe chilling effect on all future risk taking and innovation. And worse, it destroys morale, commitment, and the confidence required to lead through difficult times.

This is not about celebrating mediocrity nor about tolerating sustained failure. Quite the contrary…when executive teams fail to create an atmosphere that encourages understanding, introspection, and learning they create and foster mediocrity and failure. There is no other outcome, unless you believe in luck. Aiming for good business results without understanding root causes, is like raising children without understanding what good parenting is. If your children turn out well, you can only attribute that to good fortune. If your business succeeds without good root cause analyses you are only lucky, and in the long run that is not sustainable.

I mentioned earlier that there is a third possible driver in why a manager, or team, did not achieve the results they intended to achieve: other forces could intervene. It is the great fallacy of our sophomoric, unenlightened minds to believe that we control our destiny – for we do not. We can only control our actions and behaviors; and sometimes despite our best efforts and despite the fact that we chose the correct actions and behaviors, life intervenes and everything does not go as planned. That is the beauty of life: we cannot control what life brings to us; we can only control how we respond, or how we choose to act and behave in response to life’s surprises.

Mature businesses recognize that this is a distinct possibility and, thus, they are most interested in assessing the competencies and capabilities of their managers and teams in the context of the possible depth of the learning and understanding that comes from failure and that could lead to better actions and behaviors in the future.

Excellent executives and corporate boards (and sports team owners) recognize that getting results is a learning process. And ironically, when you have the right people who are self-aware, apolitical, and realize that failure is good; who are managing to the right processes which imply learning from experience and continuously improving; and who are measuring the right controllable actions, behaviors, and goals… the results will take care of themselves.

These executives and boards hold themselves accountable first and ask honestly: (1) have they set the correct controllable actions, behaviors, and measures with their managers and teams? And (2) are they working with their managers and teams to learn from failure and to continuously improve? (3) Have they created an apolitical environment in which their people can learn, grow, and succeed?

This is the true nature of leadership and coaching. You are as much responsible for the success of your company or team as your employees or players are. Are you creating an environment for them to succeed?

Thursday, April 16, 2009

The Best Strategy: Always Speak The Truth

What is the best negotiating strategy? Never bluff, always tell the truth, and have the facts, and keep the possibility in your mind that you could be wrong. The same is true of life in general.

If you always tell the truth, life is so much easier and you always have the confidence that comes with moral integrity. In other words you don’t have to worry about your “tells” if you are telling the truth; your integrity, sincerity, and confidence in your position will be transparent to everyone else. What better negotiating position is there than that when you are dealing with a business partner? What better relational position is there than that when interacting with anyone in your life.

And it is so much easier to remember the truth. When you start to tell different stories it becomes too much to keep track of. Isn’t life complex enough already? Isn’t your life interesting enough and challenging enough already? And lies are never as convincing as the truth; the truth is natural and spontaneous and it shows through in the moral confidence that comes with the integrity of being transparent.

And if you always tell the truth then you never have to bluff. Why bluff? You only bluff when you are in a position of weakness. But if you are then either change the playing field or yield to the stronger position. Save your credibility, integrity, and strength for another day when you have the stronger negotiating position. Your opponents will respect you much more for having the integrity to know when to fold and for treating them with the respect that comes with acknowledging a stronger position. Your basis for future negotiations will only be solidified.

For once you bluff, or lie, you are always a liar. People remember that and then you lose all credibility. Always negotiate from strength and always keep your integrity in tact.

How do you negotiate from strength? There are no tricks or secrets. Just have the facts and always stick to them. Don’t exaggerate or overstate them. Many negotiations end in frustration and loss of integrity because we argue over opinions rather than facts. If you have the facts, you can keep opinions and emotions to a minimum.

The same is true in life. When you are confronted with a difficult situation stick to the facts as much as possible; focus on the facts and not on hearsay or opinions or personal judgments, and be as unbiased as possible in assessing the facts. If you are wrong, admit that you are wrong based on the facts. This is incredibly powerful: to admit your fault when you have made a mistake or when you are presented with new information that changes your position on something.

Commit yourself to knowing the truth and not to defending your position. Let go of the need to be right and accept the possibility that you could be wrong. It is said that “the ability to hold two competing thoughts in one's mind and still be able to function is the mark of a superior mind” (Fitzgerald, 1956). If you open yourself up to the possibility that you are wrong you become a much better listener…and listening is the key to negotiating and to life.

Stick to the truth, negotiate with the facts, and listen with an open mind.

Namaste!

Monday, April 6, 2009

Communication Challenges and Benevolent Assumptions: The Root of Interpersonal Conflict and Resolution

In my experience of observing people interact, listening to them argue, and observing relationships develop and deteriorate at all levels of business I believe that 99% of interpersonal conflict occurs because of truly basic miscommunication issues and because people fail to carry benevolent assumptions about the people they are interacting with.

Basic miscommunication occurs because most people are really poor listeners and because of the inadequacy of any language to accurately represent what we are trying to communicate. Have you ever been speaking to someone or to a group of people and someone responds with a complete non-sequiter? People are so distracted and overextended these days that their minds are naturally wandering to all of the things that they need to take care of while you are speaking. Also some people are not even trying to listen, they are just waiting to say what is on their mind.

Listening requires intense active effort to stay focused and to follow a person’s line of thinking and to let them finish their thought to completion. Even harder is listening to another person follow-up and then to be able to hold both thoughts in your mind and compare them. Being a good facilitator requires exactly this effort and ability. Practice it the next time you are at work and repeat back to both people the summary of what you just heard by comparing the thoughts from both people. On many occasions you will find that the second speaker wasn’t even listening to the first person and is off on a tangent. Can you bring the conversation back to the point by guiding the conversation back to the original topic?

On other occasions, and not infrequently, you will find the second speaker claiming to disagree with the first person’s comments but often the claimed disagreement is only because the second person did not completely hear out or grasp the first speaker’s message. This only compounds when the first speaker makes the same mistake regarding the second speaker’s comments. And then the discussion is headed nowhere very fast. This is the major problem with meetings today. People do not listen to each other and they do not have the discipline or skills to keep conversations focused on the issues at hand.

Unfortunately both the speaker and listener are at fault – the listener because he failed to actively listen and stay on track, the speaker because he does not have the ability to respond and guide the conversation back on track. Both are critical skills for success in business and relationships. Facilitation is a learned skill and requires both intelligence, patience, subtlety, and directness. Active listening is simple: let go of all of your own thoughts and focus only on what the speaker is saying, nothing else.

To do this successfully actually requires another key skill that many people lack but once accomplished will bring you incredible success in business and relationships: the ability to suspend disbelief and to accept the possibility that you are wrong. Poor listeners are not able to do this because they are too focused on defending their own position and trying to figure out how they are going to rebut or refute what the speaker is saying.

This happens all of the time in business when two people are arguing and they refuse to just stop and listen and to imagine how the other person’s point of view might be correct. The quicker that both people can do this the quicker they can resolve their disagreements. In fact, they cannot resolve their difference until this happens. When this happens at work I always insist that each person articulate the other person’s point of view and how that point of view could be correct.

Arguments and disagreements can still ensue, but everyone arguing has the obligation to understand the other person’s point of view before they can argue their own point of view. This leads to much quicker and amicable resolutions and makes sure that the differences are based on true differences in values, priorities, or strategy rather than misunderstandings, misperceptions, or a basic failure to listen.

Compounding people’s inability to listen is that even when people are actively listening the spoken language is a very poor communication vehicle for ideas both simple and complex. How many times have you tried to communicate something and the message is just not getting across? Language is imperfect and subject to so many literal and subjective meanings that by its very nature language makes it difficult to communicate. Add in to that non-verbal cues like body language and past interactions with people and it becomes even more difficult.

This is why it so important to seek to understand what the other person is saying before you seek to be understood. Active listening requires asking clarifying questions to make sure you have gotten the point. I often try to repeat back to the listener in my own words what I think I just heard and what I think it means or implies. Try it and you will find out how much you really missed and how complex ideas really are. And you will also build a tremendous amount of rapport and credibility with the person you are speaking to.

Doing this really successfully requires a listener to also carry “benevolent assumptions” about the other person especially when there is the potential for conflict. Benevolent assumptions are assumptions that presume that the other person has no ill will toward you or any malicious intent.

When we do not make benevolent assumptions and instead assume that people have bad intentions toward you we stop actively listening and start to hear what we expect to hear: confrontation and maliciousness. And from this starting point, communication can only deteriorate. In other words, assuming malicious intentions becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy because the other person can sense your animosity in your response. And how do you think they will respond?

The benefits of carrying benevolent assumptions in two-fold: first, the very nature of benevolent assumptions makes you a better listener because you are actually listening with an open-mind seeking to understand rather than shutting down because you are in a defensive state. Second, having benevolent assumptions also brings a self-fulfilling prophecy – when you actively listen with an open mind to others and can restate what they have said in your own words how much more open do you think they will be to your ideas when it is your turn to speak?

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Integrity and Authenticity: Be True To Your Words and To Yourself

Great leaders have complete integrity about themselves and all of their actions. Great leaders do not yield from a core set of values, they do not make exceptions or excuses, they do not allow for small indiscretions. And they live these values in every aspect of their lives, both business and personal. They live fully integrated lives on weekdays and weekends, with their families, their communities, and their businesses. They do not make exceptions or yield their values for any circumstance.

One cannot truly lead others if he does not have complete integrity in all of his actions; for the truth is a light that will shine through the cracks and the inconsistencies of dishonesty. At the end of the day, all that a person has is his word. And once that is broken the potential for true leadership is lost; for true leadership is founded on trust. Trust is the foundation for an organization’s mission and purpose. Trust is the basis on which all future change and organizational and individual growth takes place. No one will move, or change, or grow if they are operating from a base of fear and insecurity.

Furthermore, a leader only has one form of meaningful “capital” within this world and that is his word. Integrity demands complete consistency between one’s words and one’s actions. When one’s words and actions are out of alignment then a leader loses all credibility and the ability to inspire and motivate others. Great leaders recognize this and do everything in their power to speak the truth at all times and to follow through on their commitments. They know that if they let their people down then their people will have no reason not to let them down and their organizations will never achieve true greatness.

Leaders expect their people to be accountable for their results, people expect their leaders to be accountable to their words.

Once integrity is mastered, true authenticity can be achieved. Authenticity is not spin, nor is it opportunistic. It is genuine and comes from the soul. People sense this innately and leaders must learn to express their authentic selves to reach the deepest of human connections. Authenticity is the uncensored sharing of yourself with others and implies the deepest knowledge of your self. Few people can reach this depth comfortably if at all. But when this uncensored, spontaneous, honest expression of one’s self is reached, then true inspirational leadership can be achieved.

How is this reached? Always speak from your soul with honesty, caring, understanding, empathy, and openness. If you are in integrity then you have nothing to hide or fear. Just be. Just be in integrity with your soul and express yourself authentically from that place.

Namaste.

Saturday, March 7, 2009

Inspiring Your Team: Quantum Leadership

Leadership: It is not about how many ideas you have but how many ideas you inspire others to have.

When you are truly comfortable with yourself as a leader you recognize that your ability to inspire others is the most critical value that you bring to an organization. It is not your ideas or your analyses, as many managers believe. For your ideas and analyses are exactly that, your ideas and analyses. As an organization grows and develops beyond the influence of a single entrepreneur or manager, it relies on the collective insights of multiple departmental and business unit leaders; and to get true excellence out of those leaders you must be willing to let go and allow them to lead.

It is not unlike the difference between giving a man a fish and teaching a man to fish. One experience lasts for a moment, the other for a lifetime -- or beyond if that man teaches another to fish.

Do you want your people coming to work wondering what you are going to ask them to do that day or do you want them coming to work knowing what they are going to do that day because they own their goals, objectives, action plans, and timelines?

If you usurp that ownership, you unwittingly have not only eliminated true accountability but you have also interrupted the creative problem solving energy. And both of these will kill your organization’s growth and development. AND it will only serve to, falsely, reinforce the notion that you are the only person who can figure out what needs to be done and to get the job done. Hmmmm….

My experience is that almost everyone is more capable than we realize they are, we just don’t allow them the space to show their greatness. And when we limit that space, we you lose accountability and creative problem solving.

True accountability cannot be achieved without the accountable individual buying into the goals and objectives and owning the process by which the goals and objectives will be achieved. Too often, managers dictate goals and objectives to their subordinates rather than spending the time to listen and develop mutually agreed upon goals and objectives. When you fail to do that you have lost the natural, innate commitment of a human being to a shared goal. This disconnect occurs at a metaphysical level and in many occasions is imperctable to either individual. But if one is self-aware, she notices her energy shifting when she commits to something that she believes she can accomplish and that she can determine how to accomplish. This is true accountability in the Quantum age.

Many managers struggle with this concept because their experiences and perspectives are still rooted in a “Newtonian” view of the management and work. From that context, managers own the work, the goals, and the methods for achieving the goals or completing the work. In the Quantum view, the workers own the work, the goals, and the methods. This is not only because we are shifting from an industrial work base to a knowledge work base but also because of the evolution of humanity and the desire for self-actualization, autonomy, growth, and individuality in the 21st century.

Much has been written on this difference between Newtonian and Quantum perspectives of leadership. See especially, Leadership and the New Science: Discovering Order in A Chaotic World (Wheatley) and Quantum Leadership, A Textbook of New Leadership (Porter-O’Grady and Malloch).

But the greater loss in usurping someone’s ownership of their goals, objective, action plans, and timelines is not the loss of accountability but the loss of creativity. When an individual truly accepts accountability, not because a manager has told them what their goals are and how to do their job, but because they have participated in the development of the goal and objective and because they have taken ownership of the method, process, action plan, and timelines required to achieve the goal…then something miraculous happens; their energy shifts and they start to own the solution to achieve the objective. They start to think and brainstorm and innovate. The creative process starts to unfold.

In fact, when this is operating at its peak, new insights are gained that actually reshape the goal into objectives that better align with higher order organizational goals and objectives. Furthermore, new value creation can take place -- value creation that is beyond the ordinary potential of a Newtonian organization. This is Quantum value creation which allows an organization to become self-sustaining.

Self-sustaining. Did you ever realize that your management style may be limiting the potential of your organization? Well it is, if it depends on you to set goals and objectives and to determine how the goals and objectives will be achieved.

Do you give your team the autonomy to set their goals and objectives or do you dictate to them? Do you let your team determine how they will approach their work, how they will do their jobs, and how they solve the challenges that confront them? If you do not, you are only getting a fraction of their potential and they will always disappoint you.

Let go and unleash the power of your team. You will be amazed by the results.