Companies today are experiencing a high degree
of disruptive change, such as the onset of new
technologies, intensifying global competition, sweeping
demographic changes, increased regulatory pressures,
and political and economic uncertainty. Along with the
disruptive influence of artificial intelligence, big data,
and robotization, our traditional concepts of work are
being reshaped in profound ways.
As a response, organizations are transforming —
both in the way they operate and, sometimes,
by adopting entirely new business models. In most
instances, organizations are relying on teams to help
envision, plan, and execute critical transformation
initiatives.
Although they have always been essential, today teams
matter more than ever. Whether it’s an executive team,
departmental team, cross-functional project team,
or even a team established with external partners
and suppliers, organizations have higher expectations
of teams than ever before. Teams today drive
innovation and strategy execution. The bottom-line:
Team performance is a make-or-break dimension in
the future success of organizations today.
- Two shipwrecked parties on opposite sides of Auckland Islands in 1864 had very different outcomes due to their leadership and teamwork. Captain Musgrave's party of 5 worked together over 20 months to survive by building shelter, finding food, and eventually escaping on a boat they constructed. Meanwhile, Captain Dalgarno's party of 19 fell into despair, conflict, and eventually cannibalism with only 3 surviving.
- Building high performing teams requires understanding key components like context, mission, talent, and norms. Teams must align on assumptions, set clear and measurable goals, ensure the right people and skills are present, and establish effective rules of operation.
This document provides a summary of the Rocket Model for building high-performing teams. The Rocket Model is a framework that consists of 9 components: Context, Mission, Talent, Norms, Buy-In, Power, Morale, Results, and Concluding Comments. It describes each component and what teams need to do to improve in each area. The model can be used to assess what is going well or poorly on a team and identify actions to enhance performance. Following the components in order is important as each drives the next. The model has helped hundreds of teams work more effectively together.
The article can be purchased at http://www.businessexpertpress.com/expert-insights-summary?search=bawany
CEE Leadership Masterclass Series in Leading to a #Disrupted, #VUCA World
CEE in collaboration with FGD Academy is pleased to offer a series of Virtual Masterclass.
For further details visit: http://www.cee-global.com/masterclass/
Ten highly practical Leadership Masterclass programmes, dedicated to developing Leadership skills for Board, C-Suite and Senior Level Leaders operating in today’s VUCA world
This Series of Courses will leverage on best-in-class or thought-leadership concepts, tools, and techniques to drive organizational & leadership excellence.
The Courses are designed to provide Business and HR leaders with a platform to develop from being good to great.
They are being offered in response to the market needs to ensure that their senior-level executives possess the right competencies and skills to successfully adapt to new realities when leading in a VUCA World.
Learning Outcomes:
• The context for leadership today’s VUCA business environment
• Understand the elements of Cognitive Readiness Competencies
• What is required to transform to be a ‘High-Performance Organisation’ (HPO)?
• How to transform your NextGen leaders to succeed in the VUCA world?
The CEE Masterclass Series is also available as customized in-company Leadership Development Workshops which are certified by The International Professional Managers Association (IPMA).
The programs incorporate a number of unique features and work on a number of levels. It is specifically aimed at enhancing and developing the skills, knowledge, and behaviors of the participants.
The participants will develop their understanding of Leadership Effectiveness and how it will lead to a creation of a sustainable competitive advantage for their respective organizations through the development of an organizational climate that will contribute towards enhancing employee engagement and productivity.
For further information, contact us at enquiry@cee-global.com or visit our website at http://www.cee-global.com/masterclass/
The Overview of the CEE Executive Coaching Solutions could be found here: http://www.cee-global.com/executive-coaching/
The Centre for Executive Coaching (CEC), a wholly-owned division of CEE, delivers recognized certified professional coach training programme for individuals interested in entering the field of executive coaching, as well as executives seeking to become better managers and leaders as managerial coaches in their respective organizations.
Further information on CEC could be found here: http://www.cee-global.com/about-cec/
For initial 30 min complimentary coaching session for CEOs and C-Suite Leaders, email us at enquiry@cee-global.com
It’s hard to sustain the top management balancing act. The ability to achieve and maintain the balance between opposing tensions is a critical skill for top managers. We discuss the balancing role, the challenge of identifying and developing this skill, and some ideas about finding balance.
The executive team at XYZ Company was constantly in conflict due to competing egos and goals. Bringing in a psychologist to have the executives sacrifice their egos did not work and conflict continued. A new CEO sought guidance. Team coaching helped the executives align by creating operational guidelines together, mitigating values differences and building collaboration and transparency. This resulted in profound positive changes like improved customer experiences and a shift to more cooperative team dynamics.
The document outlines three steps for building an effective top executive team: 1) Get the right people on the team and remove those who are wrong for the team, as the CEO is responsible for the team's composition. 2) Ensure the team focuses only on work that truly requires a top-team perspective rather than trying to handle everything. 3) Address team dynamics and processes, such as building trust and accountability between members, to improve collaboration and performance. Examples show how following these steps can help teams overcome dysfunctions and drive better business outcomes.
This document discusses lessons that can be learned from military leadership and applied to organizations facing turbulent times. It introduces the concept of Goal Orientated Leadership (GOaL), which is based on principles developed by military leaders over centuries. Under GOaL, leaders set clear outcomes and constraints but empower subordinates to determine tactics. This allows flexibility to adapt to changing conditions. The document contrasts this with typical leadership responses to crises that increase control and reduce responsiveness. GOaL is presented as a framework to help organizations navigate turbulence more effectively through empowered and agile execution.
Whether you want to increase employee engagement or boost profitability, great leadership in an organization matters. Leaders are the primary factor behind employee commitment and productivity. Further, these factors impact a company's bottom-line, meaning leadership, good or bad, can drastically affect the success of an organization.
- Two shipwrecked parties on opposite sides of Auckland Islands in 1864 had very different outcomes due to their leadership and teamwork. Captain Musgrave's party of 5 worked together over 20 months to survive by building shelter, finding food, and eventually escaping on a boat they constructed. Meanwhile, Captain Dalgarno's party of 19 fell into despair, conflict, and eventually cannibalism with only 3 surviving.
- Building high performing teams requires understanding key components like context, mission, talent, and norms. Teams must align on assumptions, set clear and measurable goals, ensure the right people and skills are present, and establish effective rules of operation.
This document provides a summary of the Rocket Model for building high-performing teams. The Rocket Model is a framework that consists of 9 components: Context, Mission, Talent, Norms, Buy-In, Power, Morale, Results, and Concluding Comments. It describes each component and what teams need to do to improve in each area. The model can be used to assess what is going well or poorly on a team and identify actions to enhance performance. Following the components in order is important as each drives the next. The model has helped hundreds of teams work more effectively together.
The article can be purchased at http://www.businessexpertpress.com/expert-insights-summary?search=bawany
CEE Leadership Masterclass Series in Leading to a #Disrupted, #VUCA World
CEE in collaboration with FGD Academy is pleased to offer a series of Virtual Masterclass.
For further details visit: http://www.cee-global.com/masterclass/
Ten highly practical Leadership Masterclass programmes, dedicated to developing Leadership skills for Board, C-Suite and Senior Level Leaders operating in today’s VUCA world
This Series of Courses will leverage on best-in-class or thought-leadership concepts, tools, and techniques to drive organizational & leadership excellence.
The Courses are designed to provide Business and HR leaders with a platform to develop from being good to great.
They are being offered in response to the market needs to ensure that their senior-level executives possess the right competencies and skills to successfully adapt to new realities when leading in a VUCA World.
Learning Outcomes:
• The context for leadership today’s VUCA business environment
• Understand the elements of Cognitive Readiness Competencies
• What is required to transform to be a ‘High-Performance Organisation’ (HPO)?
• How to transform your NextGen leaders to succeed in the VUCA world?
The CEE Masterclass Series is also available as customized in-company Leadership Development Workshops which are certified by The International Professional Managers Association (IPMA).
The programs incorporate a number of unique features and work on a number of levels. It is specifically aimed at enhancing and developing the skills, knowledge, and behaviors of the participants.
The participants will develop their understanding of Leadership Effectiveness and how it will lead to a creation of a sustainable competitive advantage for their respective organizations through the development of an organizational climate that will contribute towards enhancing employee engagement and productivity.
For further information, contact us at enquiry@cee-global.com or visit our website at http://www.cee-global.com/masterclass/
The Overview of the CEE Executive Coaching Solutions could be found here: http://www.cee-global.com/executive-coaching/
The Centre for Executive Coaching (CEC), a wholly-owned division of CEE, delivers recognized certified professional coach training programme for individuals interested in entering the field of executive coaching, as well as executives seeking to become better managers and leaders as managerial coaches in their respective organizations.
Further information on CEC could be found here: http://www.cee-global.com/about-cec/
For initial 30 min complimentary coaching session for CEOs and C-Suite Leaders, email us at enquiry@cee-global.com
It’s hard to sustain the top management balancing act. The ability to achieve and maintain the balance between opposing tensions is a critical skill for top managers. We discuss the balancing role, the challenge of identifying and developing this skill, and some ideas about finding balance.
The executive team at XYZ Company was constantly in conflict due to competing egos and goals. Bringing in a psychologist to have the executives sacrifice their egos did not work and conflict continued. A new CEO sought guidance. Team coaching helped the executives align by creating operational guidelines together, mitigating values differences and building collaboration and transparency. This resulted in profound positive changes like improved customer experiences and a shift to more cooperative team dynamics.
The document outlines three steps for building an effective top executive team: 1) Get the right people on the team and remove those who are wrong for the team, as the CEO is responsible for the team's composition. 2) Ensure the team focuses only on work that truly requires a top-team perspective rather than trying to handle everything. 3) Address team dynamics and processes, such as building trust and accountability between members, to improve collaboration and performance. Examples show how following these steps can help teams overcome dysfunctions and drive better business outcomes.
This document discusses lessons that can be learned from military leadership and applied to organizations facing turbulent times. It introduces the concept of Goal Orientated Leadership (GOaL), which is based on principles developed by military leaders over centuries. Under GOaL, leaders set clear outcomes and constraints but empower subordinates to determine tactics. This allows flexibility to adapt to changing conditions. The document contrasts this with typical leadership responses to crises that increase control and reduce responsiveness. GOaL is presented as a framework to help organizations navigate turbulence more effectively through empowered and agile execution.
Whether you want to increase employee engagement or boost profitability, great leadership in an organization matters. Leaders are the primary factor behind employee commitment and productivity. Further, these factors impact a company's bottom-line, meaning leadership, good or bad, can drastically affect the success of an organization.
The Joint Warfare Centre (JWC) began optimizing its organization in 2012 in response to changing NATO training needs. The optimization process involved reorganizing JWC's structure to better deliver exercises. It faced challenges in getting skeptical staff onboard, but eventually reached a tipping point of support. The new trial organization charts key functions like scenario development to increase agility, performance, and collaboration between divisions. It represents the first fundamental review of JWC's mission to align with its role in connecting forces through training. The optimization process taught the importance of continuous refinement and having the right adaptive culture during organizational change.
The document summarizes an upcoming leadership development workshop called "The Extraordinary Leader". It discusses research showing dramatic performance differences between weak and strong leaders, and presents a strengths-based framework for helping individuals improve leadership effectiveness. The workshop uses a 360-degree feedback tool and focuses on developing three of a leader's existing strengths to significantly boost performance.
Public and in-house workshop led by Jim Clemmer. Next public session in Toronto January 14, 2019. Full details and registration http://www.clemmergroup.com/events/leadership-coaching-workshops/
The document discusses applying the Rocket Model to virtual teams. It recommends that virtual team leaders: 1) hold an initial face-to-face meeting to set expectations; 2) be patient as virtual teams take longer to develop norms and cohesion; and 3) address unique issues such as clarifying context, roles, and accountability to build an effective virtual team. The Rocket Model provides guidance on team development, and its exercises can be adapted to diagnose and improve virtual team performance.
The document provides guidance on successfully transforming an organization. It discusses:
1) Overcoming resistance to change is crucial, as change is scary and people naturally resist dramatic changes. Leaders must realize people won't love them for causing disruption.
2) To achieve transformation, leaders must set clear objectives, engage all levels of leadership, overcome resistance through persistence and follow through, and hold people accountable for adopting new ways of working.
3) Focusing on establishing a clear vision, engaging and aligning leadership, and taking a systematic approach that links strategy and organization can help speed up transformation and minimize costs and disruption despite initial productivity declines due to change.
Unlocking the collective wisdom of the executive team is a major step toward competitive advantage. When communication, collaboration and creativity are given room to breathe, the impact on both workplace behavior and strategic outcomes produces measurable profitability.
Tapping into this collective wisdom remains a challenge for many organizations. Alignment is not automatic and needs to be cultivated. Instilling collaboration within the executive team by driving deep understanding of each individual team member fosters reassurance that executives can rely upon each to engage mutual accountability.
This document summarizes key topics from the September/October 2009 issue of Management Focus, an expert magazine on management knowledge for leaders. The main articles discuss:
1) Leadership behaviors critical for coping during an economic crisis, including taking prompt action, honest communication, emotional connection, and inspiration.
2) An interview with business adviser Ram Charan about his book on leadership during economic uncertainty and the importance of "hands on, head in" leadership.
3) How collaboration within an organization can be a competitive necessity.
This document discusses two perspectives on employee empowerment that often conflict. The mechanistic perspective views empowerment as delegating power through clear roles, tasks, and accountability. The organic perspective sees empowerment as trusting employees, tolerating mistakes, encouraging risk-taking and growth. Most empowerment programs focus on the mechanistic view, but both views are needed to fully understand how to effectively empower employees.
1) Team coaching has grown significantly in recent years as a way to improve team performance and leadership.
2) The authors define systemic team coaching as working with a team both together and apart to improve collective
performance, how they work together, and their leadership in engaging stakeholders to transform the business.
3) They propose five disciplines of effective teams: commissioning, clarifying, co-creating, connecting, and core
learning. Systemic team coaching addresses all five disciplines and how they connect.
The document discusses different types of teams and leadership approaches needed for teams to be effective, noting that teams are most successful when they have clear objectives, communication, membership criteria, defined roles and accountability, and leadership approach tailored to the task. While not every challenge requires a full team, understanding when to utilize discussion groups, single-leader units, or real teams can impact an organization's chances of success. Senior leaders play a key role in embracing strategic teaming and spreading these behaviors throughout an organization.
1. The document discusses a leadership training course that Microsoft employees could take which focused on distinguishing between management and leadership.
2. The author describes their experience in the course where 20 attendees were sequestered in the woods with limited technology access to focus on the curriculum.
3. A business simulation exercise in the course called "Tango" required participants to form teams and compete for projects, resources, and money, which brought out natural leaders within each team.
How Extraordinary Leaders Double Profitstconsolini
Extraordinary leaders can double profits according to a study of 300,000 leadership evaluations and business metrics. The top 10% of leaders produced net incomes of $4.5 million compared to losses of $1.2 million for the bottom 10%. While direct profit attribution is difficult, extraordinary leaders positively impact key drivers like employee satisfaction, retention, and productivity that strongly correlate with profitability. Organizations can develop extraordinary leaders through data-driven models identifying the 16 key leadership competencies and focusing development on building these strengths.
We take immense pleasure in unveiling the inaugural issue of our newsletter, “Ab Initio”. The literal translation of this Latin term is “from the beginning”, rendering it an apt name for our newsletter, which is aimed at putting forth a fundamental perspective on topical management-related issues.
The reluctance gap creates a barrier between every layer of functional leadership and collectively accounts for a substantial amount of 'missing' leadership capability. Addressing the gap allows leaders to be fully present and engaged and they can, in turn, build engaged teams
2 accelerating high performance team effectivenessmikegggg
This document summarizes an executive report on leadership and business strategy from The Beacon Group, a Canadian professional services firm. The report discusses high performance team effectiveness and provides analysis on developing effective leadership teams. It identifies key factors such as strategic clarity, cultural alignment, credibility, commitment, and accountability. It also provides models for measuring team effectiveness and offers suggestions for improving team performance.
There are three crucial steps for building an effective top executive team:
1. Get the right people on the team and remove those who are not contributing or resisting collaboration. A new CEO removed two regional executives resisting change and improved customer satisfaction ratings.
2. Ensure the top team focuses only on work that requires collective effort, like setting cross-functional priorities. Rationalizing priorities allowed one team to boost employee satisfaction from 52% to 81% in a year.
3. Address team dynamics like a lack of trust or conflicting agendas. Diagnosing issues through surveys and having the CEO intervene to broker decisions can improve collaboration, strategy alignment, and financial outcomes. Regular check-ins with lower levels also helped embed changes
Errors are not inevitable. With awareness and skill, they can be avoided or at least greatly mitigated. The key lies in understanding why organizations resist needed change, what exactly is the multistage process that can overcome destructive inertia, and, most of all, how the leadership that is required to drive that process in a socially healthy way means more than good management.
Reinventing your leadership team involves assessing and updating the composition, structure, and practices of your organization's top leaders to drive growth, innovation, and success. This can involve a variety of changes, such as reorganizing departments, adding new leaders with diverse skill sets, or updating the company's leadership philosophy. Here are some steps to help you reinvent your leadership team:
Assess Current Performance: Take an objective look at your current leadership team and identify areas for improvement. Consider factors such as communication, collaboration, and decision-making processes.
Define Your Goals: Clearly define what you want to achieve through the reinvention process. Consider your company's mission, goals, and values, and align your leadership team accordingly.
Evaluate Skillsets: Evaluate the skillsets of your current leaders and identify any gaps that need to be filled. Consider bringing in new leaders with diverse backgrounds and perspectives to help drive innovation and growth.
Foster Collaboration: Encourage collaboration and teamwork among your leadership team. Foster open communication, encourage idea sharing, and provide opportunities for cross-functional problem-solving.
Foster a Culture of Learning: Encourage continuous learning and development for your leadership team. Provide opportunities for professional development, coaching, and mentorship to help leaders stay up-to-date with industry trends and best practices.
By taking these steps, you can successfully reinvent your leadership team and drive long-term success for your organization.
Driving Organizational Performance in Complex Times - Mark Kinnich 031710Mark Kinnich
This document discusses driving organizational performance in complex times. It argues that alignment is critical for sustainable organizational performance. Alignment means there is agreement on an organization's direction, operating philosophy, and relationships. Through alignment, organizations unleash the untapped intelligence and energy of their workforce. Aligned organizations are more focused, nimble, have faster decision making, and consistent environments, allowing them to attract and retain better talent and achieve improved performance.
Beyond Teambuilding is a company that reinvents traditional teambuilding by focusing on meaningful change rather than just fun activities. Teambuilding events can benefit companies by addressing issues like individualism and lack of cooperation that undermine team performance. The company designs activities tailored to specific team problems, like a Lego challenge to improve project execution. While many teambuilding companies focus on fun, Beyond Teambuilding transfers the energy into real changes to complement organizational training and values. The future includes new teambuilding ideas focused on personal mastery and creating brand champions within companies.
The Joint Warfare Centre (JWC) began optimizing its organization in 2012 in response to changing NATO training needs. The optimization process involved reorganizing JWC's structure to better deliver exercises. It faced challenges in getting skeptical staff onboard, but eventually reached a tipping point of support. The new trial organization charts key functions like scenario development to increase agility, performance, and collaboration between divisions. It represents the first fundamental review of JWC's mission to align with its role in connecting forces through training. The optimization process taught the importance of continuous refinement and having the right adaptive culture during organizational change.
The document summarizes an upcoming leadership development workshop called "The Extraordinary Leader". It discusses research showing dramatic performance differences between weak and strong leaders, and presents a strengths-based framework for helping individuals improve leadership effectiveness. The workshop uses a 360-degree feedback tool and focuses on developing three of a leader's existing strengths to significantly boost performance.
Public and in-house workshop led by Jim Clemmer. Next public session in Toronto January 14, 2019. Full details and registration http://www.clemmergroup.com/events/leadership-coaching-workshops/
The document discusses applying the Rocket Model to virtual teams. It recommends that virtual team leaders: 1) hold an initial face-to-face meeting to set expectations; 2) be patient as virtual teams take longer to develop norms and cohesion; and 3) address unique issues such as clarifying context, roles, and accountability to build an effective virtual team. The Rocket Model provides guidance on team development, and its exercises can be adapted to diagnose and improve virtual team performance.
The document provides guidance on successfully transforming an organization. It discusses:
1) Overcoming resistance to change is crucial, as change is scary and people naturally resist dramatic changes. Leaders must realize people won't love them for causing disruption.
2) To achieve transformation, leaders must set clear objectives, engage all levels of leadership, overcome resistance through persistence and follow through, and hold people accountable for adopting new ways of working.
3) Focusing on establishing a clear vision, engaging and aligning leadership, and taking a systematic approach that links strategy and organization can help speed up transformation and minimize costs and disruption despite initial productivity declines due to change.
Unlocking the collective wisdom of the executive team is a major step toward competitive advantage. When communication, collaboration and creativity are given room to breathe, the impact on both workplace behavior and strategic outcomes produces measurable profitability.
Tapping into this collective wisdom remains a challenge for many organizations. Alignment is not automatic and needs to be cultivated. Instilling collaboration within the executive team by driving deep understanding of each individual team member fosters reassurance that executives can rely upon each to engage mutual accountability.
This document summarizes key topics from the September/October 2009 issue of Management Focus, an expert magazine on management knowledge for leaders. The main articles discuss:
1) Leadership behaviors critical for coping during an economic crisis, including taking prompt action, honest communication, emotional connection, and inspiration.
2) An interview with business adviser Ram Charan about his book on leadership during economic uncertainty and the importance of "hands on, head in" leadership.
3) How collaboration within an organization can be a competitive necessity.
This document discusses two perspectives on employee empowerment that often conflict. The mechanistic perspective views empowerment as delegating power through clear roles, tasks, and accountability. The organic perspective sees empowerment as trusting employees, tolerating mistakes, encouraging risk-taking and growth. Most empowerment programs focus on the mechanistic view, but both views are needed to fully understand how to effectively empower employees.
1) Team coaching has grown significantly in recent years as a way to improve team performance and leadership.
2) The authors define systemic team coaching as working with a team both together and apart to improve collective
performance, how they work together, and their leadership in engaging stakeholders to transform the business.
3) They propose five disciplines of effective teams: commissioning, clarifying, co-creating, connecting, and core
learning. Systemic team coaching addresses all five disciplines and how they connect.
The document discusses different types of teams and leadership approaches needed for teams to be effective, noting that teams are most successful when they have clear objectives, communication, membership criteria, defined roles and accountability, and leadership approach tailored to the task. While not every challenge requires a full team, understanding when to utilize discussion groups, single-leader units, or real teams can impact an organization's chances of success. Senior leaders play a key role in embracing strategic teaming and spreading these behaviors throughout an organization.
1. The document discusses a leadership training course that Microsoft employees could take which focused on distinguishing between management and leadership.
2. The author describes their experience in the course where 20 attendees were sequestered in the woods with limited technology access to focus on the curriculum.
3. A business simulation exercise in the course called "Tango" required participants to form teams and compete for projects, resources, and money, which brought out natural leaders within each team.
How Extraordinary Leaders Double Profitstconsolini
Extraordinary leaders can double profits according to a study of 300,000 leadership evaluations and business metrics. The top 10% of leaders produced net incomes of $4.5 million compared to losses of $1.2 million for the bottom 10%. While direct profit attribution is difficult, extraordinary leaders positively impact key drivers like employee satisfaction, retention, and productivity that strongly correlate with profitability. Organizations can develop extraordinary leaders through data-driven models identifying the 16 key leadership competencies and focusing development on building these strengths.
We take immense pleasure in unveiling the inaugural issue of our newsletter, “Ab Initio”. The literal translation of this Latin term is “from the beginning”, rendering it an apt name for our newsletter, which is aimed at putting forth a fundamental perspective on topical management-related issues.
The reluctance gap creates a barrier between every layer of functional leadership and collectively accounts for a substantial amount of 'missing' leadership capability. Addressing the gap allows leaders to be fully present and engaged and they can, in turn, build engaged teams
2 accelerating high performance team effectivenessmikegggg
This document summarizes an executive report on leadership and business strategy from The Beacon Group, a Canadian professional services firm. The report discusses high performance team effectiveness and provides analysis on developing effective leadership teams. It identifies key factors such as strategic clarity, cultural alignment, credibility, commitment, and accountability. It also provides models for measuring team effectiveness and offers suggestions for improving team performance.
There are three crucial steps for building an effective top executive team:
1. Get the right people on the team and remove those who are not contributing or resisting collaboration. A new CEO removed two regional executives resisting change and improved customer satisfaction ratings.
2. Ensure the top team focuses only on work that requires collective effort, like setting cross-functional priorities. Rationalizing priorities allowed one team to boost employee satisfaction from 52% to 81% in a year.
3. Address team dynamics like a lack of trust or conflicting agendas. Diagnosing issues through surveys and having the CEO intervene to broker decisions can improve collaboration, strategy alignment, and financial outcomes. Regular check-ins with lower levels also helped embed changes
Errors are not inevitable. With awareness and skill, they can be avoided or at least greatly mitigated. The key lies in understanding why organizations resist needed change, what exactly is the multistage process that can overcome destructive inertia, and, most of all, how the leadership that is required to drive that process in a socially healthy way means more than good management.
Reinventing your leadership team involves assessing and updating the composition, structure, and practices of your organization's top leaders to drive growth, innovation, and success. This can involve a variety of changes, such as reorganizing departments, adding new leaders with diverse skill sets, or updating the company's leadership philosophy. Here are some steps to help you reinvent your leadership team:
Assess Current Performance: Take an objective look at your current leadership team and identify areas for improvement. Consider factors such as communication, collaboration, and decision-making processes.
Define Your Goals: Clearly define what you want to achieve through the reinvention process. Consider your company's mission, goals, and values, and align your leadership team accordingly.
Evaluate Skillsets: Evaluate the skillsets of your current leaders and identify any gaps that need to be filled. Consider bringing in new leaders with diverse backgrounds and perspectives to help drive innovation and growth.
Foster Collaboration: Encourage collaboration and teamwork among your leadership team. Foster open communication, encourage idea sharing, and provide opportunities for cross-functional problem-solving.
Foster a Culture of Learning: Encourage continuous learning and development for your leadership team. Provide opportunities for professional development, coaching, and mentorship to help leaders stay up-to-date with industry trends and best practices.
By taking these steps, you can successfully reinvent your leadership team and drive long-term success for your organization.
Driving Organizational Performance in Complex Times - Mark Kinnich 031710Mark Kinnich
This document discusses driving organizational performance in complex times. It argues that alignment is critical for sustainable organizational performance. Alignment means there is agreement on an organization's direction, operating philosophy, and relationships. Through alignment, organizations unleash the untapped intelligence and energy of their workforce. Aligned organizations are more focused, nimble, have faster decision making, and consistent environments, allowing them to attract and retain better talent and achieve improved performance.
Beyond Teambuilding is a company that reinvents traditional teambuilding by focusing on meaningful change rather than just fun activities. Teambuilding events can benefit companies by addressing issues like individualism and lack of cooperation that undermine team performance. The company designs activities tailored to specific team problems, like a Lego challenge to improve project execution. While many teambuilding companies focus on fun, Beyond Teambuilding transfers the energy into real changes to complement organizational training and values. The future includes new teambuilding ideas focused on personal mastery and creating brand champions within companies.
Driving Organizational Performance in Uncertain Times - Mark Kinnich 031710Mark Kinnich
This document discusses driving organizational performance in uncertain times through alignment and engagement. It begins by outlining challenges to performance like strategy execution difficulties and lack of employee engagement. It then argues that alignment between strategy, structure, leadership and people practices creates organizational culture and drives engagement and performance. When an organization is aligned, decision making is faster, the workforce is more focused and nimble, and performance improves. The key is leveraging human capital through alignment to unlock untapped energy and intelligence in the workforce.
This document discusses management strategies and internal and external factors that influence business management. It states that a good management strategy requires clear objectives, best practices, policies, and effective use of resources. Success depends on strong planning, organizing, leading, and controlling functions. Management must consider both internal factors like resources and external factors like globalization, technology, and ethics when making decisions. External challenges like new store locations can impact management functions and require attention to detail. Concentrating on core management functions helps address business queries while dealing with internal and external influences.
Organizations have invested years in shaping up the leadership behaviors and in building a culture of high performance and a committed workforce. All of this is at stake today, owing to the ongoing pandemic – one of the biggest health crises ever – Covid19, pushing every organization to think differently about their leader behaviors to build a resilient organization, and a thriving culture.
Our latest brochure with the latest information on who we are, the case for action for developing the foundation for success, our practices areas and our people.
This document discusses keys to success and reasons for failure in organizational design. The five keys to success are: 1) Build on your strengths by identifying your unique role. 2) Go beyond lines and boxes by empowering decision making. 3) Know your roles by clearly defining impact and skills needed. 4) Rock your roles through ongoing development. 5) Support a culture of learning by making it a priority. The five reasons for failure are: 1) Poor planning leads to a false start. 2) Lack of leadership support and involvement. 3) Lack of adequate resources for implementation. 4) Focusing more on systems than people. 5) Leaders lacking change management skills.
How do you become a leader in the tech industry_.pdfAnil
Becoming a leader in the tech industry requires a combination of technical expertise, leadership skills, and a strategic mindset. Here are some steps you can take to position yourself as a leader in the tech industry
This document discusses strategies for building and coaching successful teams. It emphasizes the importance of setting clear goals and direction for the team. An effective team structure depends on factors like organizational culture and project goals. The ideal structure for most marketing teams discussed is a flat structure to empower team members. Regular evaluation of team and individual performance is important to ensure goals are on track. Effective communication, cultural fit of new members, and addressing issues like employee retention are also discussed as key factors for successful teams.
The document provides advice on both success and failure in organization design.
For success, it recommends focusing first on long-term strategic aspirations rather than immediate problems. It also advises taking time to accurately survey the current organizational state and being structured in selecting the right new design based on criteria linked to strategy.
For failure, it lists factors such as a lack of a clear case for change, lack of senior team alignment behind the redesign, leaders abdicating responsibility for driving the process, insufficient focus on co-creating the new design with employees, communicating the changes without real engagement, and inadequate focus on shaping the necessary culture change.
Tushar Somaiya is an experienced agile coach and trainer who founded ShuHaRiAgile and CoachingDojo to provide agile training and coaching. He has over 13 years of IT experience and 6 years of agile experience. He is a certified coach who helps teams discover their potential through neuroscience-based coaching. Tushar is passionate about creating democratic and self-organizing teams and believes in servant leadership.
The most common challenges faced by nonprofit leadership teams are: 1) Lack of a big picture perspective, as team members tend to focus narrowly on their specific programs or functions rather than the organization as a whole. 2) Lack of shared direction, priorities, goals and values across the team, which is foundational for effectiveness. 3) Poor performance not being addressed and individuals lacking necessary competencies, which negatively impacts morale, trust and effectiveness. Developing a big picture view, creating shared strategic plans with measurable goals, and ensuring accountability can help teams overcome these challenges.
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White paper 2018 how to build truly accountable teams
1. Accountable Teams —
Extraordinary Performance
How to Create Strong Teams
Through Clarity and Commitment
By Alex Vincent, Ph.D.,
Senior Vice President - Leadership Transformation Practice
and Vince Molinaro, Ph.D.,
Global Managing Director - Leadership Transformation Practice
3. 3ACCOUNTABLE TEAMS – EXTRAORDINARY PERFORMANCE
This was a team disaster looking for a place to happen.
It was a gathering of the executive team of a large
telecommunications company at a world-class resort
in Florida. The core event for the gathering was two
straight days of departmental briefings where each
Executive Vice President (EVP) would have to present an
update on his or her progress, and then endure a pointed
inquisition by the Chief Executive Officer (CEO).
Though none of the executive team enjoyed the
experience, no one would ever admit to it in public.
With the focus on competing presentations, each EVP
would work for weeks to come up with something that
could withstand both the harsh scrutiny of the CEO and
the judgmental scrutiny of peers. It really felt less like
a junket at a world-class resort and more like a forced
march into the Roman Coliseum.
At this team meeting, trouble finally erupted. A core
issue had been building for months. The EVP of Sales
finally put forward a proposal to take over the
company’s call center operations — a chronic source of
concern — from the EVP of Operations. An uncomfortable
silence fell over the meeting; everyone knew this was
an issue, but they were hoping it would be deferred
to another meeting. The CEO didn’t want the team
dynamic to sour the mood for the round of golf they
had planned later that day.
The heads of Sales and Operations went back and
forth at each other for nearly an hour, with all the other
members of the team watching. Some were relishing in
seeing the conflict unfold in front of them; others were
squirming in their seats because their tolerance for such
conflict was low. Finally, having heard enough, the CEO
waded into the argument.
Now he could have asked for more time to consider all
sides, or he could have asked the two battling executives
to meet in a sidebar to work out a plan to improve the
call centre going forward. Instead, he decided to take
a side.
The CEO endorsed the proposal from the EVP of Sales.
Case closed. This left the head of operations humiliated,
isolated, and feeling more than a little blindsided. All of
that was bad on its own, but what happened after that
meeting really added fuel to the fire.
Each member of the executive team went back to his or
her own departmental management team and delivered
their own version of what happened, with some versions
bearing little resemblance to what actually took place.
Shock and dismay was expressed about the CEO’s
decision to choose a winner on the spot. People started
choosing sides and digging trenches. The lines were
drawn — it was an all-out war.
How, you might wonder, did this team get to this point?
It was quite clear that the members of this team didn’t
enjoy each other’s company, largely because they didn’t
really know each other. Where there should have been
a common mission or purpose, there were only silos
and turf wars. The team’s planning processes were
flawed and decision-making relied solely on the whims
of the CEO.
And as for the CEO, here was a team leader who was
not managing team dynamics to get the best synergy
and outcomes from his executives.
This group may have called itself “the executive team,”
but there was nothing team-like about the way in which
it functioned.
If this were an isolated incident, it would serve mostly
as a cautionary tale for organizations and leaders who
may observe the early onset of some of the same
symptoms. But the fact is that this scenario is playing
out in teams and organizations all over the world.
That’s unfortunate because teams are more important
today for organizational success than ever before.
We need them to be stronger than they have ever been;
but as you will see from our research findings,
they simply are not.
INTRODUCTION
4. 4 ACCOUNTABLE TEAMS – EXTRAORDINARY PERFORMANCE
believed that high-performing
teams were essential to
organizational success
Companies today are experiencing a high degree
of disruptive change, such as the onset of new
technologies, intensifying global competition, sweeping
demographic changes, increased regulatory pressures,
and political and economic uncertainty. Along with the
disruptive influence of artificial intelligence, big data,
and robotization, our traditional concepts of work are
being reshaped in profound ways.
As a response, organizations are transforming —
both in the way they operate and, sometimes,
by adopting entirely new business models. In most
instances, organizations are relying on teams to help
envision, plan, and execute critical transformation
initiatives.
Although they have always been essential, today teams
matter more than ever. Whether it’s an executive team,
departmental team, cross-functional project team,
or even a team established with external partners
and suppliers, organizations have higher expectations
of teams than ever before. Teams today drive
innovation and strategy execution. The bottom-line:
Team performance is a make-or-break dimension in
the future success of organizations today.
Unfortunately, at a time when we are relying more on
teams, it’s clear they are not stepping up to meet these
increasing expectations.
LOW LEVEL OF SATISFACTION WITH
TEAM PERFORMANCE
A few years ago, Lee Hecht Harrison (LHH) partnered
with the Human Capital Institute (HCI) to survey more
than 250 professionals, ranging from individual
contributors to C-level executives of mid-sized to large
organizations across North America.
The survey results confirmed that the majority of
organizations (92%) believed that high-performing teams
were essential to organizational success. However,
only 23% were satisfied and thought their teams were
delivering on goals and missions.
TEAMS ARE CRITICAL
92%
thought their teams were
delivering on goals and
missions
23%
Leaders model the values of our organizationWhy does this gap exist? A deeper examination
of the issues reveals that the very nature of
teams has changed dramatically.
5. 5ACCOUNTABLE TEAMS – EXTRAORDINARY PERFORMANCE
TEAMS HAVE DRAMATICALLY
CHANGED
Teams have traditionally involved a leader and a group of
followers, all co-located to create frequent, face-to-face
contact. The team leader would organize the work and
assess performance. Team members executed the plan.
Today, the team dynamic is much different.
Workplaces have become global. Matrix-structures now
require teams to work across departments, functions,
and geographies. Your fellow team members could be
located down the hall, or on the other side of the world.
Your relationship is largely virtual — a voice during a
conference call, or an image from a video link.
Teams today are also more fluid and numerous than
in the past. Teams are formed, disbanded, and rebuilt
continually. This means that you may be participating
on several teams at once, either as the leader or as a
team member.
Mastering such emerging team dynamics requires
leaders to go beyond the normal terms of their roles to
manage and connect with people in entirely new ways.
How do you drive results and boost performance within
these emerging team configurations? For starters,
we need to abandon the traditional team interventions
and motivational strategies of the past.
For many years now, employers have believed that
wilderness retreats, rock-climbing, and drumming classes
were the key to building better teams. But do these
activities help fix poorly performing teams?
Recently, Newsweek published an article entitled
“Do Team Games For Employees Really Improve
Productivity?” The magazine noted that companies
spend almost one-third of all training dollars on team-
based development activities. Over the years, however,
informed observers have come to the conclusion that
they have no real impact on performance.
When a team is really struggling — locked in constant
conflict, missing its targets, unsure of what to do —
training games are completely ineffective because
they fail to get at the root issues plaguing an
underperforming team.
Through our work with teams globally, we have
concluded that the most successful teams are those that
understand both individual and collective accountability.
LEADERSHIP ACCOUNTABILITY
AND TEAMS
Leadership accountability has long been identified
as a key driver of leadership success. If we translate
leadership accountability into a team context, it means
being fully committed to the success of the team.
Our research shows that most organizations are
struggling under the weight of an accountability deficit.
In LHH’s Leadership Accountability Gap Survey
Leadership Accountability Gap Survey of over 2000
business executives worldwide, we found 73%
indicated that leadership accountability is critical to the
success of their organizations. Yet, only 31% responded
that they were satisfied with the degree of
accountability demonstrated by individual leaders.
If leaders are not accountable at an individual level,
then it will require a lot of work, time and energy to
cultivate and sustain team accountability. Put another
way, if leaders are unwilling to take on all of the hard
and complex work required by their roles, then the
teams they lead will follow suit.
The good news is that if a team can embrace the
principles of leadership accountability, it can quickly
enhance its performance.
Through our global work with teams, truly accountable
teams almost always exhibit two key, interrelated
dimensions. First, they demonstrate a high level of
clarity around mission and expectations. At the same
time, they also demonstrate a high level of commitment
to their collective mandate and to one another.
To help organizations build and sustain truly accountable
teams founded upon clarity and commitment, we went
to the front lines of business to talk with leaders about
their perspectives on accountable teams.
73%indicated that
leadership
accountability
is critical to the
success of their
organizations
31%indicated they were
satisfied with the
degree of accountability
demonstrated by
individual leaders
“Great teams need to be crystal clear on the
strategy of the organization and priorities of
the team.”
6. 6 ACCOUNTABLE TEAMS – EXTRAORDINARY PERFORMANCE
THE DNA OF TRULY ACCOUNTABLE
TEAMS: OUR STUDY
We deployed a parallel process in our study that included
interviews with several Chief Human Resources Officers
(CHROs) of large corporations. At the same time,
we launched a survey with executives across a wide
range of companies and industries to gauge team
performance and identify the hallmarks of successful,
accountable teams, and those that were simply not
delivering (see the Appendix for a detailed description
of our research methodology).
Overall, we wanted to better understand the dynamics
of clarity and commitment as cornerstones of truly
accountable teams. The results confirmed our point of
view, and provided more detailed insights that will be
valuable for any team leader and organization needing
to drive high performance from their teams.
A VIEW FROM THE TOP:
INTERVIEWS WITH CHROs
In general, CHROs made it clear that accountability
was a foundational component for success. That means
team members working not only for their own personal
success, but also for the success of the team.
Many of those we talked to believe that clarity, above
all else, was the cornerstone of building a successful,
accountable team. “An accountable team starts with
leadership,” said Kevin Barr, CHRO at Terex Corporation.
“The leader needs to drive a clear mandate. It can be
collaborative, but in the end, it has to be crystal clear
where you’re headed and the mission future state.”
Margaret Lazo, CHRO at Univision Communications Inc.,
added that clarity only comes from focused, definitive
communication. “There has to be a very consistent,
rigorous, and holistic means of communicating
expectations,” she said. “With effective communication,
you can hold people to expectations, measure their
performance, and find a way to make it truly meaningful
to them. Once everyone is on the same page, it goes
from ‘Look at how great I am,’ to ‘Look at how great we
are.’ That’s a big shift.”
Clarity on its own, however, will not achieve exceptional
team performance. Our interviews revealed that clarity is
a building block for another commodity that really drives
performance: commitment.
The CHROs believe strongly that the members of a team
must be ‘all-in’ on both their individual work, and the
performance of the whole team. “Our new CEO was
a West Point grad who went to Harvard, and he’s a big
believer in discuss, debate, decide, and then do,”
said Terex’s Kevin Barr. “When we agree on a command
and an attack plan, and half the team doesn’t go up
the hill with the others, everybody dies as a result.”
Mike Clementi, Vice President (VP) of HR at Unilever,
said that commitment is a shared commodity.
Individuals can be accountable to themselves,
but commitment has to be focused on things larger
than self. “We talk about it as shared outcomes,”
Clementi said. “Shared values around a shared purpose.
I think that’s an amazing motivator for people.
And the more emotionally connected you get,
the more accountable you become to the team.”
Maryjo Charbonnier, CHRO at Wolters Kluwer, added
that teams must be more than a collection of talented,
top performers. They must also be people who can learn
to collaborate, integrate, and create something larger
than themselves. “Teams need to be able to adapt to
their changing environments,” said Maryjo Charbonnier,
CHRO for Wolters Kluwer, a global professional services
corporation. “Sometimes, when you’re faced with a
large need for change, you need teams to be more like
marching bands to be successful. Everyone moving in
the same direction, at the same time. If rapid change
and innovation is in play, then you need to perform more
like a jazz band, where people can be more creative and
free flowing.”
The conflict between individual and team goals was
frequently cited as a potentially critical derailer for a
team striving to achieve great expectations. This is
particularly concerning for the CHROs in situations
where teams have been formed with no collective goals,
only individual goals.
“When you set individual goals and try to hold
teams accountable, there’s a disconnect,” said Dave
Goodes, Senior Vice President (SVP) and CHRO at
ABM Industries. “I don’t think many organizations are
mature enough to set team goals. You have to manage
all aspects of the team to encourage better team
outcomes.”
For those organizations that can lay the foundation
for accountable teams, the results can be impressive.
The CHROs interviewed spoke of great teams pushing
themselves to become exceptional by adopting the
key principles of accountability and putting aside their
individual goals in favor of the team.
“I think there is a confidence that comes from being able
to take ownership of team results and transcends being
primarily concerned about their own outcomes to help
others,” said Univision’s Margaret Lazo. “I think that
collaborating or feeling that sense of ownership of
a team or group outcome is how teams can contribute
to the larger enterprise success.”
Our conversations with CHROs helped to reveal some
intriguing insights into what works, what doesn’t work,
and where we can find the leverage to move mediocre
teams to good, and good teams to extraordinary.
7. 7ACCOUNTABLE TEAMS – EXTRAORDINARY PERFORMANCE
A VIEW FROM
THE FIELD:
SURVEY OF BUSINESS
EXECUTIVES
To complement the insights we gained from our
interviews with CHROs, we reached out to a broad set
of business executives with a survey. In total there were
87 respondents from the United States from various
sized companies representing more than 20 different
industries. We asked the executives to rate their existing
teams on a spectrum of 32 behaviors. We also asked
survey respondents to answer several open-ended
questions to better understand their thinking on team
performance. Here’s what we found.
The majority of teams are mediocre
Among the more startling results is the fact that most
teams are average at best. That is a concern because
it suggests that organizations are either satisfied with
mediocre performance, or they don’t know how to move
their teams from average to exceptional.
When we look at the breakdown of responses, only 6%
of respondents rated their teams as truly exceptional.
A whopping 88% of survey respondents rated their
teams as average, below average, or poor.
1
The foundational dimensions of team accountability2
As was the case with the CHRO interviews, survey
respondents kept returning to two foundational
qualities of high-performing, accountable teams:
clarity and commitment.
At first blush, these may seem like extremely simple
concepts. However, our research confirmed that these
qualities can be elusive for many teams.
Perhaps it’s because so many teams are thrown together
quickly, without proper planning and consideration.
Or it could be that a particular team includes a collection
of driven individuals who are working at cross-purposes
with each other, and there are not enough true team
players who are focused on the welfare and outcomes
of the group.
From the interviews with CHROs and open-ended
comments from our respondents, we were able to
come up with more robust definitions of both clarity
and commitment.
rated their teams as average,
below average, or poor
88%
Think about that for a moment. At a time when
organizations need their teams to be at their
strongest, we find that they are weak, aimless,
and underperforming. This is a problem that will be
allowed to continue unless the leaders of teams step
up and address the scourge of mediocrity head on.
CLARITY
A successful, accountable team must be a clear-
thinking team.
After looking at the perspectives of the respondents
and CHROs, it was evident that true clarity can only
come when every team member has an unambiguous
understanding of the business context in which it
operates. The team must be clear on its core purpose
and strategy as it relates to the overall organization.
The team must clearly understand the expectations
of key stakeholders, both inside and outside the
organization. Finally, the team has absolute clarity about
what needs to get done, how it needs to get done,
and when.
Team Clarity refers to the degree to which all team
members are clear on:
• their business context.
• the trends in the external environment and
industry dynamics.
• the strategy of the team, and
• the expectations of key stakeholders.
Team Commitment refers to the degree to which
team members are fully committed to:
• the mandate of the team.
• executing the team’s priorities.
• working with other teams across the organization and
• proactively addressing team issues in a direct and
timely manner.
8. 8 ACCOUNTABLE TEAMS – EXTRAORDINARY PERFORMANCE
Team members are clear on the needs of
external customers/consumers
3.8
Team members are clear on the collective
goals and priorities of the team
3.6
Team members are clear on the primary
obligation of the team in driving the success
of the organization
3.6
Team members are clear on what matters to
their key stakeholders
3.5
Team members are clear on the trends and
drivers in their external business environment
and industry
3.4
Team members are clear on the kind of
leadership culture the team requires to
succeed
3.1
Team members regularly communicate and
cascade the strategy to others
3.0
Team members are clear on how to influence
key stakeholders to drive the strategic
priorities of the organization
3.0
Team members are clear on where they stand
as a team (current strengths and gap areas)
3.0
Team members are clear on how to align work
across the organization
2.8
(The chart below presents the highest to lowest rated
items across all survey respondents.)
These results paint a clear picture of what matters most
across all teams when it comes to driving high clarity.
It also clearly shows where teams struggle the most.
The ability to work horizontally appears to be a gap
that must be addressed because companies are calling
on teams to work across organizational boundaries to
collaborate and innovate. If teams cannot align work
across the organization or influence key stakeholders in
other departments or businesses, then overall company
performance is eroded.
Remarkably, we learned through our research that a
great many teams simply do not have clarity on any of
those points.
They do not have a collective understanding of the
team’s strategy. They also do not fully appreciate how
everyone’s work contributes to the execution of the
team strategy. Without clarity, leaders and their teams
are flying blind, unsure of where they are going,
why they are going there, and what is expected of
them along the way.
COMMITMENT
A truly accountable team is also a committed team.
Commitment ensures every member is ‘all in’ and fully
engaged in the team’s mission. Team members show a
willingness to work with other people and teams across
the organization. They are committed to the idea of
collective leadership, both on their team and for others
in the organization. In short, team members demonstrate
a deep commitment to each other.
Team members are passionate about the
future of the organization
3.8
Team members deeply care about each other 3.5
Team members set high standards of
performance for the team
3.4
Team members demonstrate strong
accountability for executing the organization’s
strategic priorities
3.3
Team members demonstrate resilience and
resolve in the face of adversity
3.3
Team members consistently demonstrate an
aligned and united front
3.0
Team members demonstrate the courage to
tackle difficult issues with stakeholders
2.9
Team members demonstrate the courage
to tackle tough issues and have difficult
conversations with each other
2.8
Team members find ways to break down
silos and drive collaboration across the
organization
2.8
Team members hold each other accountable
and call out unproductive leadership behavior
2.7
(The chart below presents the highest to lowest rated
items across all survey respondents.)
The most important aspect of commitment is that
team members are passionate about the future of the
organization. This implies that the executives and others
need to paint a positive vision for the future as the
critical building block of commitment. Without this key
component, it will be difficult to obtain a high degree of
commitment from teams.
The next component is that everyone needs to fully
commit to executing the organization’s strategic
priorities. Once a team member is clear on the future
vision and the strategy, the team member can commit
to executing the strategy to achieve the vision.
These findings suggest strongly that the most important
determinants of commitment need to be provided
by the organization. With these in place, the team
can then drive the other components of commitment
including supporting each other’s development as
leaders, breaking down silos to collaborate across the
organization, and holding each other accountable by
calling out unproductive leadership behavior.
“High-performing teams need that “one-
company” mindset, and be willing to break
down silos and collaborate inside and
outside their team.”
9. 9ACCOUNTABLE TEAMS – EXTRAORDINARY PERFORMANCE
The findings revealed that industry-leading organizations
scored much higher than average to poor-performing
organizations on both clarity and commitment.
Furthermore, respondents in average performing
companies were also consistently higher than the
respondents in poor performing ones.
We then analyzed the areas in which the teams in
industry-leading companies outpaced the others.
The top five clarity characteristics where the net
difference between industry leaders and average and poor
performing companies was the greatest is shown below.
Again, as is the case with clarity, in our global work
we come across far too many cases where it’s obvious
that a team is not fully committed to its organization,
its colleagues, or its purpose.
Clarity and commitment are intertwined3
A key finding of our study is that clarity and
commitment are correlated to a highly significant degree
(r= +0.82). In other words, organizations with teams
that have a high degree of clarity also demonstrate a
high degree of commitment. This finding implies that
clarity is the foundation of commitment. The following
chart shows the trend line indicating the correlation
between clarity and commitment.
Drilling even deeper, a case could be made that without
exceptional clarity, you cannot have exceptional levels of
commitment. Most members of a team approach their
work with a moderate level of commitment. If there is
little or no clarity on the goals, mandate, and leadership
culture needed to succeed, then commitment will remain
at moderate levels or, in some cases, be eroded to
potentially dysfunctional levels. Either way, it leads to
underperforming, unremarkable teams.
This is a positive and important insight for team leaders.
This significant finding suggests that team leaders must
work both on clarity and commitment at the same time.
If you increase one, you’ll increase the other.
Looking at the findings overall, we see some patterns
as they relate to team clarity and commitment.
Successful companies are more likely to have
accountable teams4
The survey uncovered a direct relationship between
companies that scored high on team accountability
precursors and overall company performance.
In our survey, we asked respondents to self-identify
whether their companies were industry leading,
average, or poor performing relative to competitors
in their industries.
This next chart below shows the findings for the top
five commitment characteristics where we saw the net
difference between the industry leading and average and
poor performing companies were the greatest.
Even though industry-leading companies consistently
rated the dimensions of clarity and commitment higher
than average and below-average companies, we feel
strongly that there is room for improvement in every
organization.
In short, even strong teams can get stronger. In our
experience, when you help make a strong team even
stronger, the payback in terms of outcomes and
strategy execution is considerable.
1 Clear on the collective goals and priorities
of the team.
2 Understand how the team’s mandate aligns
to organizational strategic priorities.
3 Clear on changes and issues impacting
their organization.
4 Clear on the kind of leadership culture
the team requires to succeed.
5 Clear on how to align work across
the organization.
1 Are passionate about the future of the
organization.
2 Demonstrate strong accountability for executing
the organization’s strategic priorities.
3 Support each other’s development as leaders.
4 Find ways to break down silos and drive
collaboration across the organization.
5 Hold each other accountable and call out
unproductive leadership behaviour.
KEY BUILDING BLOCKS OF CLARITY THAT SEPARATE
THE MOST ACCOUNTABLE TEAMS
KEY BUILDING BLOCKS OF COMMITMENT THAT
SHAPE THE MOST ACCOUNTABLE TEAMS
10. 10 ACCOUNTABLE TEAMS – EXTRAORDINARY PERFORMANCE
BUILDING TRULY
ACCOUNTABLE TEAMS:
THE WAY FORWARD
The purpose of this eBook was to examine the state
of teams in organizations today. The overall findings
suggest that teams are mediocre and must develop
clarity and commitment to become more accountable.
The good news is that the findings confirm exactly what
an accountable team is, and the dimensions that matter
most to building them.
Accountable teams demonstrate both clarity and
commitment. Both dimensions are positively correlated,
and suggest that team leaders must work on both to
accelerate their teams’ success.
How can team leaders start making progress
immediately? Below we provide a way forward.
Set the tone as a truly accountable leader1
You must serve as an example of real leadership
accountability to get your team to embrace
accountability. The Leadership Contract presents four
terms that every leader must embrace and demonstrate
in order to be truly accountable at an individual level.
You can’t expect a team to be truly accountable if the
team leader is not setting the right tone.
Leadership is a Decision – Make it!
As a leader, you must make the deliberate decision
to lead. You must consciously commit to being truly
accountable. Real accountability never happens by
accident. You must set high expectations for yourself
and your team.
Leadership is an Obligation – Step Up!
You need to be clear on your obligation as a leader and
that of your team. You need to bring a “one-company”
perspective for your role and put what’s best for the
organization ahead of your own self-interest.
You must commit every day to making a meaningful
and impactful difference to your customers,
stakeholders, and employees.
Leadership is Hard Work – Get Tough!
Leadership is not for the faint of heart. As a leader,
you must have the courage to tackle the difficult
issues within your team and your work across your
organization. You need to demonstrate resilience,
resolve, and determination to drive your personal
and team success.
Leadership is a Community – Connect!
Leaders today need to connect to build relationships
and a sense of community within their teams and
across their organizations. You must focus on the
quality of the relationships you have with others.
You need to regularly network internally to foster
connections that result in high levels of trust
and mutual support. This, in turn, drives greater
collaboration, innovation, and speed of execution.
“To be successful, team members must be
willing to hold each other accountable and call
out unproductive leadership.”
11. 11ACCOUNTABLE TEAMS – EXTRAORDINARY PERFORMANCE
Conduct a team accountability assessment2
Conduct an assessment of your team’s level of
accountability. The questions below are taken from our
survey. Take time first on your own to complete your
evaluation of your team. You might find it valuable to
conduct an evaluation with your entire team as well.
Identifying your strengths and areas for development can
prove to be highly valuable in setting your team down
the road to becoming truly accountable.
Clarity of the Business Context
The team takes accountability for anticipating
external trends and understanding their business
context
(1 = weak, 5= strong)
My team is clear on the trends and drivers in their
external business environment and industry
My team is clear on the needs of external
customers/consumers
My team is clear on changes and issues impacting
our organization
My team is able to provide clarity on the business
context to others on our team
1 2 3 4 5
1 2 3 4 5
1 2 3 4 5
1 2 3 4 5
Clarity of the Strategy
The team takes accountability for understanding the
purpose and strategy of their organization
(1 = weak, 5= strong)
My team is clear on the links between the
strategy and external market trends and customer
expectations
My team understands how the team’s mandate
aligns to organizational strategic priorities
My team is clear on the primary obligation of the
team in driving the success of the organization
My team regularly communicates and cascades the
strategy to others
1 2 3 4 5
1 2 3 4 5
1 2 3 4 5
1 2 3 4 5
Clarity of Stakeholder Expectations
The team takes accountability to understand the
interdependencies that exist with other parts of
the organization
(1 = weak, 5= strong)
My team is clear on what matters to our key
stakeholders
My team is clear on the stakeholder relationships
needed to drive success at the organizational level
My team is clear on how to influence key
stakeholders to drive the strategic priorities of the
organization
My team is clear on how to align work across the
organization
1 2 3 4 5
1 2 3 4 5
1 2 3 4 5
1 2 3 4 5
Clarity within the Team
The team takes accountability to understand its
priorities, plans and efforts needed to ensure the
successful attainment of business results
(1 = weak, 5= strong)
My team is clear on our collective goals and
priorities
My team is clear on how to execute the team’s
strategy and priorities
My team is clear on where we stand as a team
(current strengths and gap areas)
My team is clear on the kind of leadership culture
we need to succeed
1 2 3 4 5
1 2 3 4 5
1 2 3 4 5
1 2 3 4 5
“You have to be excited about your work
as a team. You need passion, and you can’t
be afraid to celebrate successes and
key milestones.”
12. 12 ACCOUNTABLE TEAMS – EXTRAORDINARY PERFORMANCE
Commitment to Team’s Mandate
The team demonstrates an accountability to build
a deep sense of commitment to driving its success
(1 = weak, 5= strong)
My team is passionate about the future of the
organization
My team demonstrates strong accountability for
executing the organization’s strategic priorities
My team sets high standards of performance for
the team
My team consistently demonstrates an aligned and
united front
1 2 3 4 5
1 2 3 4 5
1 2 3 4 5
1 2 3 4 5
Commitment to Working Across the Organization
The team demonstrates the accountability to
effectively work with key stakeholders across the
organization to drive positive business outcomes
(1 = weak, 5= strong)
My team finds ways to break down silos and drive
collaboration across the organization
My team demonstrates the courage to tackle
difficult issues with stakeholders
My team invests time to build productive
relationships with key stakeholders
My team minimizes unhealthy politics and works
with stakeholders in the interest of the whole
organization
1 2 3 4 5
1 2 3 4 5
1 2 3 4 5
1 2 3 4 5
Commitment to Leading the Team
The team demonstrates an accountability to work
together and is committed to making the team as
strong as it can possibly be
(1 = weak, 5= strong)
My team shares high aspirations to be truly
accountable leaders
My team supports each other’s development as
leaders
My team demonstrates the courage to tackle
tough issues and have difficult conversations with
each other
My team demonstrates resilience and resolve in
the face of adversity
1 2 3 4 5
1 2 3 4 5
1 2 3 4 5
1 2 3 4 5
Commitment to Each Other
The team demonstrates a deep commitment to
each other
(1 = weak, 5= strong)
My team holds each other accountable and calls
out unproductive leadership behavior
My team deeply cares about each other
My team demonstrates high trust and have each
other’s backs
My team regularly commits to spending time to
get to know each other on a personal level
1 2 3 4 5
1 2 3 4 5
1 2 3 4 5
1 2 3 4 5
Once you have completed the assessment, it will be
possible to identify the elements that you can leverage
to drive overall improvements in team performance.
Meet with your team to share the assessment results
and put a plan in place. Consider conducting this
assessment two times per year to make sure your team
has strong clarity and commitment.
“Great teams have the resolve to band
together in the face of adversity and
demonstrate resilience.”
13. 13ACCOUNTABLE TEAMS – EXTRAORDINARY PERFORMANCE
Address the mediocre and unaccountable
leaders on your team3
We find, too often, that attempts to build accountability
at a team level are undermined by team leaders who fail
to address the unaccountable or weaker team members.
This failure to take action sends the message to other
leaders and employees that you are prepared to tolerate
mediocrity. It also disengages your high performers,
many of whom are truly accountable. These people will
feel strongly that their contributions are minimized or
undermined by weak leadership. As you sit down with
these individuals, explore whether they are struggling
because of a lack of clarity or commitment. If it’s about
clarity, then provide it. If it is commitment, explore the
reasons why it’s not strong. Create a plan of action
with clear timelines to see improved behavior. Check in
regularly to see if progress takes hold.
Reach out to teams across your organization4
As already explored above, your team needs to work
with other functions and departments across your
organization. Assess regularly the relationship between
your team and the others you work with the most.
Discuss with your counterparts the degree of team
accountability and where you can both become stronger
and, in turn, help each other be more successful.
Don’t wait or avoid having the challenging conversations
if a relationship with another team is strained.
Real accountability means taking on those tough
challenges head on.
Considering the current state of teams, it could be
easy to fall into a state of despair. How are companies
supposed to rely heavily on teams to help drive
performance and transformation if the problems seem
to outweigh the solutions?
Although it is the unvarnished truth about the state of
teams today — confirmed by our interviews, research,
and consulting experience working with teams globally —
there is another truth that must be acknowledged:
team performance can be improved.
With proper attention to the core principles of leadership
accountability and the foundational building blocks of
clarity and commitment, almost any team can improve
its overall performance.
CONCLUSION
The poorest performing teams obviously have the largest
opportunity for improvement. But even average and
strong teams can reach extraordinary performance levels
with careful attention to the principles of accountability,
clarity, and commitment.
Not all teams can be saved. But the good news is that
the vast majority of teams cannot only be saved,
they can be improved to an exceptional degree.
“There needs to be trust. You have to keep
personal politics on the sidelines and show
your team that you have their backs.”
14. 14 ACCOUNTABLE TEAMS – EXTRAORDINARY PERFORMANCE
APPENDIX I - RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
POLL RESULTS
Approximately 550 HR leaders/practitioners were polled during an HR.com event.
POLL #1
Teams are
critical to
success
98%
AGREE
POLL #2
My team
is highly
effective
46%
AGREE
POLL #3
Most teams
in my
organization
are:
11%
WEAK
12%
EXCEPTIONAL
77%
MEDIOCRE
SEMI-STRUCTURED INTERVIEWS
A total of seven interviews were conducted with CHROs from leading organizations. In each interview, respondents
were asked to provide their perspectives on the nature of truly accountable teams, the state of teams in their
organizations, the factors that help teams become truly accountable, and those that act as barriers to true team
accountability. The output from the interviews was analyzed to identify key themes and insights.
ONLINE SURVEY
PURPOSE:
To explore the foundations of leadership accountability,
clarity and commitment, as it currently exists in teams.
The study deployed a two-fold data collection strategy
that included an online survey and a set of semi-
structured interviews with a select group of CHROs.
Teams rated in their organizations along 32
described behaviors:
16statements assessed the clarity dimension
16statements assessed the commitment dimension
87 respondents:
18% 24% 34% 23%
C-Suite
executive
leaders
Vice
President
level leaders
Director
Level/Senior
Managers
Middle
Managers
12 industries (of various sizes in the U.S.) were represented: manufacturing, financial services, healthcare,
professional services, and education
Reflected a cross-section of company sizes:
48% 29% 6% 16%
< 1,000
employees
have between
1,000 and
5,000
employees
> 5,000
employees
> 15,000
employees
15. 15ACCOUNTABLE TEAMS – EXTRAORDINARY PERFORMANCE
ABOUT THE AUTHORS
Alex Vincent, Ph.D.
As LHH’s Senior Vice President of Leadership Transformation, Alex Vincent has spent
his career focused on the ways to maximize individual, team and leadership
performance. Employing an array of ground-breaking research, compelling keynotes
and dynamic workshops, Alex has traveled the globe to help leaders and teams from a
wide array of industries and sectors – including engineering, healthcare, financial and
professional services and the public sector – find the path from good to exceptional.
Alex is an acknowledged subject matter expert in many of LHH’s premiere offerings,
including The Leadership Contract, The Leadership Contract for Teams, Leading
Innovation, and Strategic Leadership.
Alex completed his Ph.D. in Psychology at the University of Toronto and went on
to complete post-doctoral studies in the Human Performance Laboratory at York
University. He is a Professional Certified Coach with the International Coaching
Federation, as well as a previous faculty member in the department of Psychology and
the John Molson School of Business, at Concordia University in Montreal.
Vince Molinaro, Ph.D.
Vince Molinaro, Ph.D., has dedicated his life to promoting both personal and
organizational accountability in leadership cultures around the world. He experienced
a defining moment early in his career when he saw a respected colleague and
mentor succumb to a cancer she believed was the byproduct of a stressful, toxic
work environment. As a result, Vince vowed to teach business leaders how to build
successful organizations by increasing the accountability of their leaders.
The author of The Leadership Contract (Wiley), a New York Times and USA Today
bestseller now in its third edition, and The Leadership Contract Field Guide, published
in January 2018, Vince has spent more than 20 years as an adviser to boards and
senior executives looking to improve leadership in their organizations.
Vince knows that leadership accountability is the key ingredient in building a strong,
vibrant organizational culture. As a successful senior executive in one of the world’s
top leadership development firms, Vince has made it his calling to confront weak and
lame leadership. He shows leaders at all levels in organizations worldwide how to step
up and fulfill their obligations and responsibilities as real leaders.
What sets Vince apart is that he’s no ivory-tower academic. As a forceful keynote
speaker at conferences and corporate retreats around the world, he translates first-
hand experiences from the leadership trenches into practical advice on how leaders can
confront and overcome their challenges and build strong leadership cultures.