CREATING AGREEMENTS THAT WORK
Becky Henderson ??
Coaching Extraordinary Entrepreneurs to be Masterful Creators ? Follow, Connect & Work with me to Create MORE THAN ENOUGH of what matters to you.
7-Minute Read.
This article has been reposted from The Grip on plenteouslife.com.
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At both work and home, it is very common to have complaints and frustrations in relationships. What’s not so common, however, is understanding that the reason most complaints and frustrations in relationships exist is because effective agreements don’t. When effective agreements are missing, complaints and frustrations flourish.
To remedy complaints and frustrations in your everyday relationships, you must create what’s missing—effective agreements.
Today we’ll show you a simple format for CREATING AGREEMENTS THAT WORK through three critical steps. Additionally, we’ll integrate these steps into a natural conversation to give you a practical example of what’s possible for your own relationships.
Agreements are just as useful at home as at work. Once you get a sense for how to put effective agreements together, you’ll want to make agreements in every relationship that matters to you.
Let’s dive in!
AGREEMENTS THAT WORK: THREE STEPS
1. THE SPECIFIC REQUEST
The first step for creating agreements that work is to make a specific request. Requests move life forward because they create the possibility for new or different outcomes. Unfortunately, making specific requests has become a rare skill. Whether you think requests are unnecessary or that you “shouldn’t have to ask,” notice how unworkable your relationships become when you don’t make them. Failing to make specific requests is the breeding ground from which complaints and frustrations initially emerge.
A specific request will state that you’d like to make an agreement with another person and will identify what you would like for them to start/stop doing or to do differently. The request could also focus on what you will start/stop doing or will do differently.
Consider these additional details and include them in your request when relevant:
Here’s an example of the vague and relative language that is often employed around the office:
“Weekly reports are due Thursdays.”
Ambiguous language like this fails to identify important details that matter to the results. Compare that to what’s possible with a specific request:
“I’d like to make an agreement with you regarding the weekly report. I’d like you to have it completed and emailed to me by 3:00PM every Thursday.”
The language is concrete and clear. It reduces misunderstanding and increases performance. You’ll see a lot more of this concrete language in our final example later.
This principle of being specific applies not only to your request but also to whatever terms of the agreement you establish in Step 2, Collaboration.
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2. THE COLLABORATION
The second step for creating agreements that work is to co-create them. This is where the other party responds to your request with some form of yes, no, maybe, or that depends. This is a natural conversation to intentionally tailor an experience that works for both the Requestor and the Requestee.
I cannot stress this enough: people WANT to fulfill on the agreements that they have freely chosen to make. It is to your benefit, as the Requestor, to create an agreement where the Requestee takes ownership of its fulfillment as co-creator.
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Once you have made your request, there are several questions you can use in this step of collaboration to co-create and fine-tune the agreement you’re proposing:
As much as possible, make requests and collaborate on the details in real-time conversations; face-to-face or voice-to-voice. All in, most everyday agreements can be established in two to five minutes and, with practice, under one minute.
This capability to collaborate on agreements is a defining characteristic of highly effective leaders. It distinguishes between leaders that truly delegate responsibility from those that merely dump and offload tasks.
Most complaints and frustrations in relationships exist because effective agreements don’t.
3. THE CONTINGENCY AGREEMENTS
The third and final step for creating agreements that work is the key differentiator between an impotent agreement and a powerful one: make contingency agreements regarding the agreement. What will happen in the face of unforeseeable events that impact the agreement? How will you handle unexpected delays? What will happen if one of you doesn’t honor the agreement? By deciding and agreeing up front as to how these situations will be handled, you exponentially increase the probability of achieving your desired outcomes.
Use the following as a guide for establishing contingency agreements:
One of the contingency agreements I make with every coaching client is that if they cancel an appointment with less than 24 hours’ notice (except for medical emergency) they lose that session (it’s prepaid). And if I cancel with less than 24 hours’ notice (except for medical emergency), we reschedule the missed session as soon as possible and I give them an additional session at no charge.
Late cancellations almost never happen, and on the very rare occasion that one does, there is no weeping and gnashing of teeth, no surprise in what happens next. We each know the cost and have already committed to paying it to keep our agreement with one another.
It is important to point out that making agreements does not mean you are leaving every aspect of the agreement open to negotiation. Depending on the relationship and the nature of the request, there may be portions of your agreement that are non-negotiable, such as a project deadline or requirements in personal or professional conduct.
When that’s the case, being clear about the non-negotiable’s upfront allows the other party to say yes and proceed or say no and accept the consequences of NOT making an agreement. That may mean you don’t do business with someone, or an employee opts out of a promotion, or you stop spending time with a particular friend or family member.
I’ve had several prospective clients that I’ve declined to work with simply because they would not commit to showing up to our appointment at the agreed upon time due to their fluctuating schedule. Honoring appointments is non-negotiable for me, so I tell them, “Great. I hear that you want to keep your schedule flexible, and that doesn’t work for me at all. So that just means that you and I will not be working together.”
Now let’s put The Specific Request, The Collaboration, and The Contingency Agreements together into a conversation for creating an agreement that works.
In closing, one thing that will make or break any agreement is the integrity of the participants to honor the agreement. Without integrity, agreements don’t work.
As you practice creating agreements, and become more skilled at it, you will begin to see patterns and characteristics of people that do and don’t live from a commitment to integrity. It will help you identify agreement keepers and agreement breakers. Pay attention.
Repeatedly making agreements with agreement breakers is disastrous. Find the agreement keepers and build great things together.
Use today’s guide not only to train yourself but everyone in your world to operate by agreement. Refer to it as often as necessary to practice, refine, and master agreements that work. You’ll be glad you did.
May you prosper in every way!
Becky & TPL Team