A Leader's Role in Accountability
This week I was involved in discussion with 40 senior level executives on the topic of a leader's role in accountability and creating an accountable culture. It was awesome. I thought today I would share my thoughts and conclusions from the events.
The goal of any direction is to have people fully engaged in getting the right work done.? There are, however, times when a team member does not do what is expected or flat out refuses to do what has been asked.? This is often referred to as a leader’s work of “holding people accountable.”
I really don’t prefer the word accountability. I prefer responsibility.
o?? Accountability is something you do TO me.
o?? Responsibility is something I do FOR you.
IT ALL BEGINS WITH A COMMITMENT TO PURPOSE
o?? Leaders exist to ensure their institution has a purpose and everyone in it is dialed into achieving the purpose.? At the?end of?the day, the purpose of an institution is to serve people; the people who have invested in it, its customers, the people who are its employees, the people in its community.? If it does not perform – it compromises the needs and potential of all those people. It's a significant?responsibility for leaders.
o?? If people knowingly and willingly join an institution they are accepting accountability to do all they can to help the institution achieve its purpose.? They are making a commitment to a partnership.? "Knowingly" implies full transparency on all relevant matters from both the company and the potential team member and "willingly" implies a lack of external threat and a free choice.
LEADERS MUST ACT FAST WHEN THERE IS A PROBLEM
o?? An important part of a leader’s job is to constantly monitor how well the institution is achieving its purpose as well as the degree to which their team members are acting on the accountability they accepted – both are required for success.? Fast action on variances is a hallmark of great leaders and institutions.
o?? When there is a negative variance from the plan the leader must solve for “why.” It is probably also good to problem solve for positive variances. Either can teach you something.? However, failure to address negative variance puts the good of the whole at risk. The success of the institution is a leader’s role.? If they do not act, then they are not acting accountably to the role they accepted – which is to ensure the institution achieves it purpose.
LEADER CAN’T LOOK THE OTHER WAY
o?? There will be times when a single person is the root cause of a negative variance. And, in my experience, it is in these cases where the true commitment to purpose and the commitment to culture are ultimately demonstrated by a leader. The more quickly a leader addresses the single issue the more likely they will find a healthy solution.
o?? On the darker side, when a leader does not address negative performance, they serve notice to all about their lack of commitment to their purpose. What appears on first?blush to be a matter of one person will quickly become an institution wide component of culture. Both the speed and the manner in which an issue is addressed will speak volumes to the?institution. John Stuart Mills once said “"It is the greatest happiness of the greatest number that is the measure of right and wrong." Spock paraphrased this in his famous Star Trek line “the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the one or the few.”? And this is where accountability becomes a challenge.
ACCOUNTABILITY IS NOT POWER
o?? If you think of accountability in terms of the leader’s authority to manage outcomes through the use of their positional power, you miss the entire point.? Accountability cannot be forced on a person - consequences?can. But if we want to?achieve the?potential of an institution or a person - accountability must be willingly accepted.? People don't want to be "held" accountable - that's being controlled.? In high performing institutions people are committed and act responsibly. This requires us to think a bit differently about shortcomings.?The use of power can get compliance, but never commitment.
PROBLEM SOLVE FOR ROOT CASUE – DON’T ASSUME
o?? As noted earlier, as soon as a negative variances is known, the leader must act. How they address the problem will determine the culture.? All negative variance can be traced to one of four root causes:
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a)?????? Lack of knowledge - I just don’t know
b)????? Lack of skill – I just don’t know how
c)?????? Lack of supporting environment – I don’t have what I need to do the work
d)????? Lack of engagement – my interest and the needs of the job no longer are a “fit”
o?? If the root cause is one of the first three listed above, it is the work of the leader to make changes to improve the outcome; a more clear plan, better training, time for practice, necessary tools, providing all the information required (all the things that leaders DO) And leaders must approach mistakes with dignity and grace, using them as opportunities for learning and development.? If there are negative consequences when these are the root causes – the entire organization watches and learns to be afraid.
o?? If the cause is “d” in the above list, then there is a qualitatively different problem to be solved.? This is where the phrase “hold him accountable” most often pops up and things get ugly.?For this cause the leader needs to address the issues that their expectation for elements like cost, quality, timeliness, behavior, culture and the team member’s are different.
ACCOUNTABILITY IS ALL ABOUT “FIT”
WHAT DOES IT MEAN FOR A LEADER TO SET AN ENVIRONMENT FOR RESPONSIBLE ACTION?
At one of my favorite companies the leadership team physically walks the entire facility each month, going from department to department, area to area, to give everyone the opportunity to present THEIR metrics, and how they are performing to THEIR metrics.? They have a strategic planning process that engages everyone to develop metrics – THEIR metrics – that align well with our overall corporate metrics and visions.? This has been a game changer for accountability.? Nobody likes to present poor results.
CONSEQUENCES
CHALLENGES TO AN ACCOUNTABLE CULTURE
Director of Engineering & Business Development at EBW Electronics
8 个月Thoughtful summary of a fantastic conversation.
I help Leaders Improve Performance using Process Improvement Solutions with Bottom-Line Results ?? Keynote Speaker | Shingo Award Winning Author | Podcaster | University Lecturer
8 个月There are many great nuggets here Paul I. Doyle! I especially keyed in on the section titled, “LEADERS CAN’T LOOK THE OTHER WAY.” Leaders must take responsibility themselves. If it’s not important to leaders, then it won’t be important to anyone else. Thanks for sharing!
President at Pliant Plastics Corporation
8 个月Great article, Paul - sorry I missed the discussion - thanks for the summary/ concluding thoughts!