5 Key Trends Leaders and Teams Must Embrace
Colette Carlson, CSP, CPAE Hall of Fame Speaker
Leadership Speaker| Stress Resilience Speaker | Communication Speaker| Women's Leadership Speaker| Hall of Fame Keynote Speaker | Human Connection Expert|
Has it only been a few years since the pandemic? Pretty much. In that time, we have changed the way we meet, the way we communicate, the way we schedule, our work culture and in the process our work mindsets.
The whirlwind brought to us by an infinitesimally small viral particle has changed us as leaders and employees. No one has been spared. The times have tested our resilience, personalities and inner-strength. The stress of adjustment, abrupt changes in opportunities, dashed hopes and new approaches left us all to wonder, what’s next?
Microsoft modern work team leader Jim Spataro reporting on data from Microsoft’s 2022 Work Trend Index stated those “who embrace a new mindset and shift cultural norms will best position their people and their business for long-term success.” No surprise these same trends hold true years later.
What are the 5 Key Trends? I want to briefly explore these trends from the dual standpoints of leaders and workers.
Takeaway: When leaders make time for one-on-one’s and create connection rituals amongst team members, deeper relationships are formed allowing leaders to draw out individuals’ purpose and create meaning within the team. Meaning and purpose make even the smallest of tasks worthy of our time. Teams that care and support one another are best positioned to bring out each other’s best.
Takeaway: If the work gets done, does it really make a whoop if the report is written “9 to 5” at a faux Oak desk or at the kitchen table near a pot of spaghetti sauce slow-cooking for dinner? Trust your managers to work with your valued employees. It may make for greater productivity and happiness. Please.
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Takeaway: If managers want their workers to come into the office and occupy offices and cubicles, they need to explain what it will accomplish that a remote environment cannot. Managers need to know that for years, unnecessary commutes and pointless in-person meetings added to worker stress. Workers will need to understand that if properly structured and with directed purpose, meetings can be very useful, team empowering and vital social interaction.
Takeaway: Both managers and workers need to ask themselves the following questions: Why is this meeting necessary? Are we going to decide, debate, collaborate or celebrate? What outcomes must occur as a result for this to be the best use of our time? How can we structure the meeting so everyone feels included whether they’re remote or onsite?
Takeaway: Management must see their workers as people and build in water-cooler moments. They must create systems to encourage collaboration with other departments. Workers must find ways to get to know team members personally, ask for assistance when they need it, and we all must reach out to one another.
Since we cannot change history, let’s embrace the future that COVID-19 accelerated. It has led us to a new age, and perhaps we can make it a better one.