Facing it
Andrew Hollo
Turning complex ideas into reality | Director & Principal Consultant at Workwell Consulting
Being present
What does it feel like to truly pay attention to something?
And, are you ever in meetings where people aren’t? They’re there — but aren’t ‘present’?
I’ve seen this too, so when I run a strategy meeting, I set ‘rules of engagement’. There are just four:?
And, the last:?
This means don’t multi-task. Phones and devices are put away, so the meeting becomes a human interaction, without laptops propped up in front of us. I ask that if there’s something urgent that demands attention, people briefly leave the room to do so.?Then, we all know that you’re attending to something more important than our meeting (at least momentarily).
Why do I insist upon this?
Because one person at a table working on something else breaks the group’s circle of attention. It dilutes the depth of thinking and the willingness to speak up, because you know, deep down, not everyone’s listening.?So, both quality and quantity of insights are affected.
And, you know what? It hardly ever happens that someone does leave the room. I ran a meeting with 70 people today, across 5 hours, and I counted three people who did so. They dealt with what they had to, outside, and then returned, to participate.
Question: How do you get your people truly pay attention to what matters??
The top of the bottom
I heard someone in a client’s organisation say this last week: “You know, I’d rather be at the top of the bottom, than the bottom of the top”.?
His own role was at the upper echelons of line management in a large institution, but below executive level. He went on to explain that he liked the ‘top of the bottom’ because:?
It got me thinking, though, that creating mobility (and incentive) at the edges of levels is vital. The talent scarcity we’re experiencing is partly because we don’t know who to elevate, when, and how.
领英推荐
Question: How well do you understand the dynamics at the edges of levels in your organisation?
Hard conversations
What do you call a ‘hard conversation’?
For many, it’s where conflict might arise if people spoke honestly. For others, it’s a complex issue that resists resolution. In other cases, it’s something awkward or uncomfortable to talk about because people feel ignorant or incapable.
And, sometimes, it's all three.
Just recently, I’ve helped executive teams on the following strategic questions:
a) “How do we become realistic optimists?” (Context: An under-resourced and over-stressed public agency that is constantly being asked to do more).
b) “How do we create a culture that is both performance-oriented and humanistic?” (Context: A large institution that allowed people to run the show as they wished, with the result that publicly scrutinised performance slipped very visibly”)
c) “How can we solve the very big problems of loneliness amongst old people, at the same time as reverse the mental health epidemic amongst young people?” (Context: An agency that channels government funds to health services wants to identify where its ‘greatest bang for its buck’ might lie).
You’ll notice a pattern to these (italics help!).
One approach to such conversations that is simple, and very effective, is ‘reflective practice’. It involves holding a critical stance, as a group, to one’s work, in the interests of improvement. And, it requires three types of conversations, or dialogues, in sequence (you can’t skip these):
The value of this approach is that it prevents teams from defaulting to ‘premature understanding’ by ‘slowing down’ important decisions that rely on every member of a group to be on-board and active.
Question: What ‘uncomfortable conversations’ does your organisation need to have?
Let me know that you’re present — by simply taking a few seconds to click the ‘Like’. Notice how your attention in meetings ebbs and flows, and what you’re tempted to do when it wanes.
I’ll do the same, and look forward to being with you again next Friday.
Andrew
Strategic Simplicity?: Executive Advisor
9 个月1. Online meetings are harder for people to focus, especially when they're not on camera. 2. In both online / offline meetings, having breaks, exercises, and making it interactive increase focus.