Mindset Shift on Accountability
Jeff Gibson
Principal Consultant at The Table Group; Founder & President, Gibson Consulting Group
Thoughts From The Field
Each month, we share insights from one of our colleagues about an important aspect of organizational health. In this issue of Thoughts from the Field, my colleague, Keith Hadley, challenges our thinking on what accountability truly is for a great team. We all need to make this shift.
Mindset Shift on Accountability
By Keith Hadley, Principal Consultant
Leaders of truly healthy organizations learn to simply think differently -- and it impacts every aspect of their decision-making and actions.?Therefore, the journey of Organizational Health involves a number of significant mindset shifts.?One of the hardest things a consultant or coach must undertake is the changing of a mind.?Heck - it’s hard to change our own minds about our tried and true methods let alone someone else's!?The accomplished people I’ve encountered attribute much of their success to their insight, hard work and cultivated relationships.?Continued success, we reason, involves using the muscle memory of the past approaches, methods and beliefs that got us here.?But, if we want to improve, we must embrace the process of unlearning and relearning what we thought we already knew.?This isn’t a one-and-done moment -- it’s a mindset shift.?
Perhaps the most challenging responsibility leaders carry is the need to hold others accountable.?Can I invite you into a mindset shift that will unlock the impact of accountability in your organization??
Normal Accountability
Mindset Shift Accountability
Punitive to Protective Accountability
Most understand and experience accountability as something negative and punitive — in reaction to a failure to meet objectives or behavioral standards, we must find the person at fault to inflict some blame or punishment. Therefore, accountability must be avoided at all costs, promoting an unhealthy fear of discovery.??
We all struggle at times in our work. A normal fear-based reaction is telling others "Everything's under control" and then managing the problem in isolation. We often see a whole team, each privately managing their functions and sharing various versions of "sunshine and lollipops" in team "report out" meetings. All the while, there is a growing sense of mistrust and misalignment as each member suspects that something is off in the business, but "out of respect" for each other, they keep their thoughts to themselves. This artificial posturing creates delay, sows discord, and promotes confusion. Worse, this modeled behavior is magnified and cascaded to next-level leaders and teams and sows cross-functional misalignment and discord. "Us vs. them" thinking takes root and creates ample space for unmet customer needs, disillusioned and cynical employees, and opportunities for competitors to leverage. Therefore, shifting your team's mindset on accountability can be a significant source of competitive advantage.??
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The whole point of accountability is to create the conditions for achieving results. If we see accountability first as protective and positive, we will act proactively — offering help, support, and the insight needed to get ahead of issues before we fail. In that sense, we can lean into accountability as something welcome - tapping into those in the best position to give helpful input. More often than not, this is our peers and our subordinates -- and yes, sometimes even our boss. When we give explicit permission to those around us to speak into our work, we don't abdicate our responsibility to get the work done. Instead, we create conditions in which we can do our best work. When we choose to address issues in real time, even publicly, we can close smaller gaps in performance or behavior more quickly.??
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Positive Accountability Requires More Courage
Some may fear this approach is too soft or indirect -- nothing could be further from the truth -- it requires courage. Any knucklehead can fire a salesperson for losing a key account (e.g., reactive and punitive.) It requires greater emotional fortitude to confront that salesperson months earlier to say, "What you're doing is not good enough." We are asking leaders to develop their team's emotional and professional maturity to the point where they can both give and receive feedback on the following:??
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Keys to Positive Accountability
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Putting It All Together
It may be helpful to practice what this could sound like -- here are some examples:
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In his book, The Motive, Patrick Lencioni reminds us that people who see leadership positions as a reward or a perk are more likely to avoid uncomfortable conversations. Responsibility-driven leaders recognize it as a duty that serves the people they lead and dramatically increases the team's potential. Positive accountability on teams means protecting the decisions and commitments we make to one another and protecting each other's reputations and potential for impact.