Go on Tour
Josh Dietrich
Executive coach leveraging neuroscience, ontological coaching, and software executive experience within higher education and EdTech.
Throughout my leadership career, one of my staples was regularly connecting with the people I worked with, whether my boss, my direct reports, or my peers across the organization. Years later, I read Scott Eblin 's? The Next Level , and he described this technique beautifully when he talked about going on a listening tour. Today we’ll talk about when, why, and how to use this strategy.
Why Go on Tour
Why does a band go on tour? Often, they are promoting a new album. Perhaps they want to grow their popularity in a particular world region. Or maybe this is their farewell tour, where they want to thank their fans and give them one last incredible experience. They may play different venues and craft different set lists depending on the tour strategy.
Similarly, there are numerous reasons for going on a listening tour, which impact who you plan to meet, what questions you ask, what information you convey, and how you share it. Some examples:
Choose Your Venues
With the tour’s purpose in mind, you must choose your venues. For example, I remember when Pearl Jam decided to only play small, intimate venues to be closer to their fans. For our purpose, the “venues” are the stops on your listening tours, specifically the people you will connect with. Considering the same examples:
Plan Your Set List
Just like a band plans out the set list for the show, you want to plan what information you want to convey and what questions you want to ask.
Possible items for a new leader reporting to you:
Possible questions for skip-level meetings (talking to the direct reports of your direct report):
Possible questions for strengthening your network
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Possible items for rebranding:
I’ll close with two of my favorite tours.
My New Leader Tour
I had a new leader move under me many years ago who was well-respected across the organization. He had (and still has) an incredible work ethic and great integrity, and I was excited to be working with him and his team. I conducted a listening tour with each of his direct reports to understand the team’s current state. 30-minute meetings, three simple questions. What is working well? What needs improvement? What questions do you have for me?
Overall, things were going remarkably well. That being said, every direct report cited their daily morning meeting as an area for improvement. The team met for an hour each morning to review the status and work through any hot issues. Typically the hot issues didn’t require the entire team, just a few individuals. Even though everyone on the team felt this way, no one had given the leader this feedback. He pivoted to a 10-minute daily standup but asked everyone to keep the full hour protected on their calendar. After the standup, if there were critical issues, he’d keep only the people needed to resolve that issue and let everyone else depart. Investing four hours of my time in the listening tour earned back more than four hours of productivity across the team every day. Their satisfaction with the leader climbed even higher.
My World Tour
In 2012, my company combined with our most significant competitor to form a new organization. This was a radical change for me. Overnight I went from leading an R&D organization of 150 based almost entirely in a single office to a group of 400 working at offices around the globe, with a much larger remote employee population.
I needed to engage with my new leaders and teams. I wanted them to understand my values and know that I was serious when I told them my door was always open, literally and figuratively, if they wanted to talk. I wanted to do what I could to put people’s minds at ease and understand that this combination was a good thing for both companies and all of us.
Over two months, I visited all our major locations – Fairfax, VA. Malvern, PA. Rochester, NY. Frisco, TX. Salt Lake City, UT. Vashon Island, WA. Puebla, Mexico. Bangalore, India. At every location, I held a town hall where I introduced myself, shared my values and style, walked the team through the current state of the union both for R&D and the company, and answered many questions. I met with every key leader in each office and separately with each team. I had a set list for each meeting. I listened, learned, took notes, and answered questions. To this day, I have a vivid memory of each one of those visits. I learned so much and built some incredible relationships.
Is it time for you to go on tour?
CHRO Navy Federal Credit Union
2 年Great advice Josh! Just went on a tour myself and this works to reinvigorate your team when driving transformation - always listening, learning and coaching.
Chief Human Resources Officer | Khoros | A Vista Private Equity Portfolio Company
2 年I still vividly remember your first world tour to Bangalore. We enjoyed knowing you and sharing all that we did from our Bangalore office:)
Maniacally focused on human experience and building psychologically safe communities.
2 年Love this! This is the same technique I use in change management, especially when developing new programs. If I develop in a silo and launch, I can miss the mark for the employees and customers. This actually happened even after partnering with marketing and a few others. I delivered the new pitch deck to senior sales, marketing & product leadership and one front line sales leader attacked stating this would not work with our customers. It was a real ah-ha moment that I missed the field perspective. Why didn’t I include them? It was nearing end of quarter and that’s when enablement leaves sales alone. This leader apologized for the delivery and then said to call him anytime because getting it right is important. We spent at least 3 hours recrafting the talk track. Slow down to go fast!
Great summary, looking forward to catching up soon!
Chief Client Officer @ Ferrilli | Higher Education Expert
2 年Josh, this is insightful! Thank you.