How to a Lead a Fast-Growing Team

How to a Lead a Fast-Growing Team

How to Lead Well, When Your Team is Growing Fast

One of the biggest challenges we hear from human-centered leaders in our leadership development programs, is "how do I maintain my influence and connection as my team size grows?"

If this is a challenge for you, here are a few tips that can help.

5 Ways to Scale Your Leadership for Bigger Impact

1. Invest deeply in developing leadership skills in every role

Leadership is a team sport. As your team size grows, your biggest priority is developing other human-centered leaders whom you can trust to do the right thing for the business, their teams, and one another.

Here are 6 leadership competencies to grow in every member of your team.

2. Translate your leadership vision to tactical, measurable behaviors.

If you want to scale your leadership, you’ll want to ensure that employees at every level understand what success looks like in their role, but also the daily behaviors needed to make it happen.

For example, something as simple as “hold regular?one-on-one meetings,”?can be open to a wide range of interpretations. What does “regular” mean? What happens in those one-on-ones?

Or, suppose “We are highly responsive to our customers” is vital to your vision. What does that mean for your managers and front-line employees? Does responsive mean you return the call within one hour, or 24? How do you balance responsiveness with productivity? How do you distinguish the truly urgent and important from the noise? What do you do with a chronic complainer?

Playing through these scenarios helps to make your vision real, and makes it easier for your team to provide a consistent experience no matter who is watching.

3. Teach your team how to think.

When you’re a strong, influential leader, and things are going well, it’s easy to overestimate the leadership capacity of your team.

It may seem like they’re leading well, but they may just be following your lead. As your team is growing resist the urge to solve problems FOR them and teach them how to think.

Our "9 What Coaching methodology" can be really helpful as you do this.

And I love this approach from Thomas Wedell-Wedellsborg on reframing problems to find better solutions.

4. Build an infrastructure for courage and innovation.

One of the real joys and benefits of having a large team is all the hearts and minds you include as you work to improve the business.

To lead well as your team is growing you will want to build a deliberate approach to asking for and responding to ideas (note: sharing this article with your team can help).

5.?Find, develop and encourage informal influencers.

In addition to your direct report team, if you want to build your influence as your team is growing, seek out (and build relationships with) the informal opinion leaders and change agents on your team.

As my teams got larger and larger, I found this was absolutely vital to creating buy-in for our change efforts.

For example, when I was leading a 2000 person sales team, we consistently held operational excellence rallies where our highest performers were not only recognized for their contributions, but also served as?teachers of best practices.

We also pulled a dozen front-line sales reps out of their day jobs and turned them into change agents for our key strategic initiatives. This worked like magic because they were well-respected, fun, and less intimidating than those of us with bigger position power. Their fellow reps could be real with them about their challenges and concerns, and then they could roll up their sleeves together to try out the new desired behaviors.

Each year, I also led a skip-level mentoring circle of high-potential store managers where we worked on real business challenges together.

When we needed to make a change, communicate a new priority or gather candid feedback, I had a whole network of trusted relationships beyond my direct report team to help quickly engage with the larger team.

Not only was this a great way to scale my leadership as my team was growing, but also enabled me to grow leadership bench strength at a very deep level.

Your turn. What advice do you have for someone whose team is growing fast?

Don't miss this week's episode of Asking for a Friend with Special Guest Whitney Johnson (register here).

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Manu D.

Director of Etech Insights | NLP & DSML Expert | Driving Growth through Strategic Data-Driven Decisions

2 年

Very well thought out recommendations, Karin. Thank you! We often forget how important it is to "Translate your leadership vision to tactical, measurable behaviors.". Without a measuring stick, and a clear goal, all you have is an idea not a vision.

Ali Anani, PhD

Columnist at BIZCATALYST 360

2 年

Avery thoughtful and practical recommendations for scaling up not only the team size, but more importantly the leadership and its tasks. Thank you for sharing them Karin Hurt. It does not HUrt to follow your five recommendations. In contrast, it shall be of great help/ I am thinking of fractal scaling of responsibilities as the team size gets bigger. Delegation and creating new leaders who can think for themselves and encourage other team members to think stand out as areas worthy of scaling uo.

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