WHY YOU NEED TO CREATE A CULTURE OF COURAGE IN YOUR BUSINESS

WHY YOU NEED TO CREATE A CULTURE OF COURAGE IN YOUR BUSINESS

Earlier this year The World Economic Forum published its Future Jobs Report and the research listed Complex Problem Solving, Critical Thinking and Creativity as the most valuable skills for 2020. Nurturing these skills will enable your business to adapt and thrive in an era of unprecedented fast paced disruption. Here are several behaviours you can implement in your business to create a culture wherein people volunteer and challenge ideas.

Shift away from adversarial thinking

If you want to find a competitive, angry battlefield to hack your way through, business certainly offers that. However, you will find it exhausting and isolating to see everyone as an adversary. It is also impossible for you to grow personally. The business may get bigger, but you will not grow. 

The first step to not fighting is to stop picking fights. See problems objectively as something to be solved together rather than immediately looking for who is at fault.

Hire on principle

An individual should fit the values and purpose of an organisation, not the look and personality. If you can find people you can disagree with, hire them.  Then create a culture together wherein all members hold each other accountable to the values and purpose of the organisation. The people who agree with the principles of the organisation and are willing to challenge the execution of them are the people who open up the doors of opportunity for the business. The business is now open to possibilities outside your perspective.

Collaborative or competitive culture

Collaborative behaviour is not always superior to competitive behaviour, or vice versa. At the highest level, though, the organisational culture must be a collaborative one which uses the adrenaline of competition in bursts when it serves the greater good. The danger of too much competition is that the levels of adrenaline are too high for too long. This leads to stress and individuals regressing into a self-centred, fear driven, self-preservation mode of operation.

Facilitate the creative instinct

Everyone has a creative instinct. It drives our desire as a social species to contribute. When collaborators contribute ideas and the rest of the team expand on them, everyone is highly tuned and focused. If a brainstorm is facilitated well and judgment is truly suspended by all members then everyone feels energized. Working collaboratively for half an hour reinforces how productive we can be when we have access to resources beyond our own.

If the brainstorm is run badly people feel exhausted, dismissed and undermined their instincts to contribute are extinguished by fears of standing out, failing, embarrassment or cynical thinking that believes no one would listen or expand on their ideas. Circumstances like these have the opposite effect on engagement, productivity and confidence.

Swap compliments for encouragements

Encouraging someone requires you to focus on the individual qualities unique to them that you are actually appreciating. This affects the person you are encouraging in a profound way that compliments and praise do not. Telling someone that they are “correct” or “smart” directs their attention away from their personal contribution and toward some system of assessment or metric outside of themselves. To increase the amount a person participates direct the encouragement into their heart by saying, “I love the way you think, specifically the way you…”. This will lead to them thinking more and fearing less.

Value passion over experience

When choosing what role is best suited to each team member, assign responsibility for a goal to the person who is most passionate about its achievement. Place more importance on passion than experience. If you hire people who have the most experience, you will often find that they lack the desire to challenge themselves and experiment with new ways of achieving the goal. They prefer to do it the way they have done it before.

Implement these behaviours one at a time and let the team know that its important that all members hold each other accountable to them. That includes you too. Ask them to help you become more aware of when you are encouraging people to participate and when your behavior might be unintentionally shutting them down. When team members see the leader commit to personal growth they are inspired to do the same.

This article was originally published in Dynamic Business, June 3, 2016. To read more published articles visit www.mjhjackson.com

Matthew Bailey MAICD

Founder and Owner of Diesel Geeks Pty Ltd

8 年

Great article, thanks.

Ellen Woods

Strategy Consultant

8 年

The hardest part about being a change agent or even a person with an idea is that critiques and conversations don't happen in the form of a discussion but rather water cooler chats that align people toward warding off the things they find threatening or disruptive to their routine. Well run companies facilitate think tank sessions on a regular basis and encourage people to think BEYOND the box. Human nature though, encourages people to create routines. There is a tendency to shoot the messenger rather than think strategically, so it takes a person who is confident and willing to fail to generate true change. When you create a successful change, everybody is on board and willing to take some credit but in a failure it is all on you. Still, you find that either way, the next step becomes clear. In a failing company, you have to be backed by management or it will not work. In a company treading water you have to be willing to drive a point from inception to execution and you have to show value at every step. In a successful company, your efforts are appreciated no matter how radical. The thing though is that taking a chance builds confidence and makes you stronger so you are always getting better. Too many people avoid a chance of failure, when in fact it is the catalyst for success. Not everybody is cut out to be a leader but a change agent is never a follower and always a contributor. It is a great asset for a company if the right people listen. If they don't you're out and that is a win anyway because you aren't going to be happy treading water.

Natasha Nicholas

Oncology Exercise Specialist | Lymphoedema Clinician | Integrative Therapist | RYT500 | Clinician & Corp Wellness | High Performance Hospital Executive | Clinical Implementation Specialist

8 年

Love the concept of a culture of courage!

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