Your First 90 Days: How to Start Your New Leadership Role Right.
Ben Lichtenwalner MBA
AI, Technology, & Servant Leadership Development Expert ?? Building Future-Ready Workforces Through Tech-Enabled Leadership ?? Better Boss Builder ?? Author ? Consultant ? Professional Speaker
Your first 90 days in a new leadership role are critical to your success. So, how do you do it right?
KEY POINTS
Linda Yaccarino Exemplified What NOT to Do
Linda Yaccarino is about to pass day 90 at "X" (formerly known as Twitter). She's exemplifies a bad approach. In a period when she should focus on learning the people, products, and processes, Ms. Yaccarino instead focuses on publicity campaigns and making promises with little to no supporting evidence.
Do not spend your first 90 days making promises, public proclamations, or setting visions. Instead, learn the people, products, and processes. Then you can plan the future.
3 Perspectives: People, Products, & Processes
In your first 90 days, you need to learn the organization from 3 distinct perspectives: People, Products, and Processes. You'll focus on specific areas of each at different periods in your first 90 days.
People
You want to meet and build relationships with as many people as possible. These include internal employees at various levels, external customers and partners, and other key stakeholders like regulators, consultants, vendors, and more.
Products
Products include the hard goods and services the organization provides. It also includes internal products like IT systems, manufacturing tools, data sources, and more.
Processes
Workflows, planning, and even politics follow under this perspective. We may not want to think about politics as we begin our exciting new role, but they are a reality best understood early.
领英推荐
3 Periods: Days 1-30, 31-60, and 61-90
You don't want to meet with key customers on day 1. Instead, begin by meeting the team, learning internal products and services as well as their strengths and weaknesses. Then you're prepared for external conversations.
Days 1 - 30
In your first 30 days, be a sponge. Soak up as much knowledge as possible. Ask lots of questions and simply listen. Focus on the people, products, and processes that are closest to you - we call these "first degree topics".
Days 31 - 60
Armed with a basic understanding of key products and personnel, you can look beyond the immediate circle. Meet as many internal people as possible and learn as much about products and processes across the organization as possible.
Days 61 - 90
With an understanding of products and services, plus internal relationships, you can look to external people, products, and processes. You can also begin developing and validating your year one plans.
7 Principles: Selflessness, Empathy, Resolve, Virtuousness, Authenticity, Nonpartisanship, and Thoroughness
Perspectives were the "who" and "what". Periods were when. Principles are how you lead during the 90 days. These 7 principles are based on the Acronym Model of SERVANT Leadership?. These principles have been taught and practiced by the greatest leadership teachers and practitioners for centuries. The model stems from 2 decades of study, encompassing dozens of leadership frameworks and hundreds of attributes. All principles should be applied throughout the 90 days (and beyond). However, there are periods where some principles are emphasized more than others...
Your 90 Day Roadmap
Below is a slide from our free 90 Day Onboarding presentation. It's an overview of the 90 days, with specific points of emphasis on People, Products, Processes, and Principles by Period. Of course, every situation is unique. If you or your organization is interested in 90 Day Coaching for greater success, contact Ben Lichtenwalner MBA .
#Leadership #HR #90Days #ServantLeadership
Leadership, intelligence émotionnelle et soft skills : des solutions pour vos équipes | Facilitatrice et formatrice
4 个月This is a great summarise of the keys aspects of life (work and private).
Senior Managing Director
1 年Ben Lichtenwalner MBA Fascinating read. Thank you for sharing