High-Trust Culture #3: Empower Everyone

When people think of their most rewarding professional achievements, what usually come to mind are their genuine accomplishments: the times when they faced challenges, beat the odds, or created something that stood the test of time.

Though our most meaningful work is often the result of intensive effort and focus, most of the time we don’t do it alone. Our best performances are nearly always spurred on by colleagues and leaders who have empowered us – that is, trusted us with the freedom and resources to excel.

Google executive Thomas Williams has a great image for grass roots empowerment. Rather than allowing people to be pulled into repetitive, “hamster wheel” tasks, he gives them the freedom to “build their own treadmills.” That way, he says, “No one's telling you you're not going fast enough – everyone is telling themselves that." This kind of respectful empowerment leads to more creativity and risk-taking, boosting the chance that people will enjoy their jobs and that the whole organization will benefit.

Low-trust organizations have trouble giving their teams the latitude to do much. Wary of everyone, they often don’t trust even their most trustworthy people. Instead, they rely on thick compliance manuals for even the most trivial matters, and reward tattlers as a way to prevent rule breaking. This suspicious atmosphere kills initiative and creativity, and worst of all, it stifles any potential for trust.

It’s true that neither trust nor power should be bestowed willy-nilly. As with trust in any area of life, it should be granted to people with the character and competence to make responsible use of it. But at the very least, everyone should have the opportunity to earn it.

The first two posts in this series focused on personal integrity and respect as foundational to a high-trust organization. Without empowering trusted team members, however, integrity and respect will remain inert.

Here are a few things to consider if you’re aiming to build a culture where people are empowered to do great work:

1) Bet on people. Allow people a chance to prove they can take on more responsibility. A leader who trusts others to grow – knowing they may stumble – exhibits a level of trust that generally inspires the best in people and can ignite sparks of trust in an otherwise mistrustful environment. Identifying and empowering the most competent, highest-integrity team members is a great way to start.

2) Take action. Stanford’s Design School teaches a "bias towards action.” That means a preference for trying out ideas, rather than sitting around planning and analyzing. In short, when people are actually doing things, iterating and refining as they go, they tend to get the best results. Empowering teams to act means missteps are less expensive and people learn faster.

3) Don’t forget the past. Ok, now forget the past. Many organizations do things because “that’s the way they’ve always been done.” Institutional knowledge and process can be a valuable source of wisdom; but it may also represent deeply entrenched inertia. An organization’s “best practices” are often just organizational scar-tissue, the codification of long-forgotten mistakes that are no longer relevant in the current world. High-trust organizations don't rely blindly on old rules. Instead, they trust their teams to figure out the new ones.

4) Expect foul-ups. Granting trust doesn't guarantee perfect results. In fact, the more latitude you give people, the more you may find that they miss the mark as they grow into their responsibilities. Part of trusting team members with power is understanding that even the best efforts can, and do, falter. When it happens, the team should examine the reasons for the misstep, distill some lessons, and move forward with renewed vigor.

5) Avoid the paraphernalia of paranoia. If trust-based organizations focus on empowering people to do their best, mistrustful ones fixate on preventing people from doing their worst. Trust-poor enterprises often assuage their fear of disaster with policy manuals, compliance committees, overactive legal departments, and even rewards for turning others in. These practices give rise to an anxious, worst-case mindset that can squelch confidence and creativity.

For some leaders, the idea of sharing power feels risky. They may never have experienced that giving up power is a great way to create more. That’s unfortunate because, in many organizations, those with the best information do not work at headquarters, but on the front lines. Organizations that don't trust anyone outside the inner circle are destined to disappoint and stumble, while their high-trust counterparts marshal talent and experience from deep within the ranks.

Next: Ensuring Trust with Accountability

****

To see upcoming posts from Joel in your LinkedIn news feed, connect to his account by clicking the "Follow" button at the top right of the page.

@JoelCPeterson's recent posts:

Photos: Thinglass / iStockPhoto.com

Efren Navarra

navy sailor at US Navy

10 年

I give an amen to this kinda trust-environment. More power amd growth to the team..

回复
Jay Griffin

Marketing Growth Specialist with B2B and B2C double-digit revenue making experience.

10 年

Bet on people to do the right thing

回复
Jay Griffin

Marketing Growth Specialist with B2B and B2C double-digit revenue making experience.

10 年

Keep creativity alive and thriving by empowerment - excellent read

回复
Mohsin Mohyudheen

Luxury Retail, Brand Management, Retail Operations, Qatar, UAE, Bahrain

10 年

It's two way traffic,

回复
Sreeni Chandra Bahudodda, MBA

Digital Transformation Leader @ Infosys Consulting | MBA

10 年

I believe that trust & empowerment keep creativity alive that leads to innovation.

回复

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Joel Peterson的更多文章

  • Power from Position or from Trust?

    Power from Position or from Trust?

    To lead, one must be empowered. Stanford professor Jeff Pfeffer, a leading expert in the dynamics of power, describes…

    3 条评论
  • ON CREDULITY

    ON CREDULITY

    Once bewildered by COVID’s origin, lockdowns, and restrictions, many have gone on to embrace once-contentious…

    3 条评论
  • .

    .

    Last week, I made a decision to give up teaching “MGE,” a signature second-year course at Stanford’s Graduate School of…

    82 条评论
  • Opinion: Time to cancel ‘cancel culture’ on college campuses

    Opinion: Time to cancel ‘cancel culture’ on college campuses

    Management guru Peter Drucker once observed, “Culture eats strategy for breakfast.” Since values are at the heart of…

    69 条评论
  • Growth Through Adversity

    Growth Through Adversity

    It was a delight to host Hamid Moghadam, Chairman and CEO of Prologis, on the Running Stuff podcast. As one of the…

    5 条评论
  • How to Ruin a Meeting

    How to Ruin a Meeting

    The granular work of entrepreneurial leaders comes down to running meetings and having difficult conversations. Every…

    12 条评论
  • In the Era of Big Data, are Job Interviews Passé?

    In the Era of Big Data, are Job Interviews Passé?

    Nothing is more important to the entrepreneurial leader than assembling the right team. In "Entrepreneurial…

    3 条评论
  • Revisiting the Minimum Wage

    Revisiting the Minimum Wage

    Many want to boost the minimum wage to help with lockdown recovery. Others wonder if a minimum wage hike will merely…

    25 条评论
  • Surviving COVID (and other disasters)

    Surviving COVID (and other disasters)

    Pandemics, wars, depressions, panics, natural disasters – each tests our preparedness, ingenuity and character. They…

    5 条评论
  • The World Needs More Entrepreneurial Leaders

    The World Needs More Entrepreneurial Leaders

    I love many things about teaching at Stanford, but one of my favorite parts of the job is spotting people who have the…

    16 条评论

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了