Posts Tagged ‘Culture Transformation’

Ain’t No Problem

Monday, June 28th, 2010

* Transcription

Thank God it’s Monday!™ That’s right. There ain’t no problems… only opportunities. The only difference is the results—results you will receive when you choose to see the situation differently.

Labeling something as a problem keeps you stuck. Everybody wants to whine about problems.
Now opportunities on the other hand… well, now THAT poses a great challenge to your intellect and character. That’s why people play games. To win. And now you can reframe your problem into an opportunity. Game on!

So, from now on, whenever that ugly little “problem” word sneaks out of your mouth, retract it and celebrate the fact that you have yet another opportunity to show the world what you’re made of.

Have a great Monday!

Roxanne

Roxanne Emmerich’s Thank God It’s Monday! How to Create a Workplace You and Your Customers Love climbed to #1 on Amazon’s bestseller list and made the New York Times and Wall Street Journal bestseller lists—all in the first week of its release. Roxanne is renowned for her ability to transform “ho-hum” workplaces into dynamic, results-oriented, “bring-it-on” cultures. If you are not currently receiving the Thank God It’s Monday e-zine and weekly audios, subscribe today at www.ThankGoditsMonday.com.

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How to Derail a Career (for Leaders)

Wednesday, June 9th, 2010
© Stillfx | Dreamstime.com

© Stillfx | Dreamstime.com

Tired of success? Keen on self-destruction? Looking for a way to run your career off the rails? I’ve got just the ticket. Here are ten sure-fire ways to end any hopes of advancement or future success:

1. Nurture fluffy integrity. Break your promises, gossip, lie, break confidence. Push legal and regulatory boundaries whenever possible.

2. Be passive. Always delegate upward. Refrain from showing initiative. Don’t see what needs to happen to get to the end result, and whatever you do, don’t hold yourself accountable for the results of the team. Favorite excuse: “Nobody told me.”

3. Get yourself a silo mentality. Don’t be a team player. Don’t bother to see how the team integrates with other departmental teams. Keep your cards close to your chest. Has “Every man for himself” embroidered on a pillow.

4. Generate unstable results. Get sloppy, miss numbers, and then sandbag. Make excuses.

5. Be a pain in the butt. Be an arrogant, demeaning, sarcastic know-it-all. Let disrespect be your sword and condescension your quiver!

6. Just don’t get it. No matter how many times something is explained, and no matter how clearly, keep saying, “I don’t get it.” Whatever you do, don’t go look it up on your own time.

7. Be a little Napoleon. Wax autocratic. Be a control freak. Don’t empower others. For good measure, keep one hand inside the front of your coat.

8. Spend all possible time admiring yourself in the mirror. Gawd, you’re fabulous. Put your own needs ahead of team results. You deserve it.

9. Surround yourself with mediocre team players. Keep your team full of “B” and “C”-list players. Never replace with “A”-listers, since they might outshine you.

10. Be a dirty politician. Smile in their faces, then stab them in the back. Word will get out, and you’ll be through.

Any one of the “Dirty 10” can wipe out tremendous results in all areas. So if you’re eagerly courting disaster, cultivate these ten characteristics.

If for some reason you are looking to AVOID disaster, be rigorous about not allowing any of these to creep into your world. Take a hard look at yourself to find out where you need to commit to an immediate and profound change.

Culture—The Ultimate Profit Tool

Friday, May 7th, 2010
© Madartists | Dreamstime.com

© Madartists | Dreamstime.com

For three decades, companies across the spectrum have talked about the need to convert to a sales culture.  Talk, talk, talk.  Yet for all the chatter, the number that has successfully converted to a sales culture is still well below five percent! Millions have been spent in an attempt to make the change.  So why have so many repeatedly failed?

Sales and service skills do little to change results UNLESS there is a strong base of people who love what they do.  It’s about the culture! Without the right spirit, no amount of training or hiring will get you headed in the right direction.

A survey by the Corporate Executive Board showed that employees who are “true believers”—who value, enjoy, and believe in what they do—displayed 57 percent more discretionary effort and were 87 percent less likely to leave, while Gallup says that for every $10,000 of payroll, $3,400 of productivity is lost due to “disengaged employees.”

That’s an ugly number.

So what makes people love their jobs, fully engage, and produce greater results? Contrary to what most believe, money has very little to do with it.  What does matter is the three overlooked “must haves” to rejuvenate your people’s passion for extraordinary results.

1.  Kick-butt Rituals of Celebration and Appreciation
Healthy cultures have appreciation as their cultural backbone. They create an environment where everyone, not just the managers, oohs and aahs over each other’s successes and contributions.  They create daily, weekly, and quarterly rituals of celebration and appreciate and coach their people to be positive coaches to each other.

Maybe you have a daily huddle before opening where each person briefly shares an accomplishment while the rest of the team cheers and claps.  Maybe you have a “positive” sharing at the beginning of each weekly strategy meeting and a quarterly awards ceremony filled with many awards and recognitions.  If you create a childlike energy of people high-fiving with joy, you can expect people to thrive under the recognition.

2.  Ironclad Values
Your defined values are your “true north” and a powerhouse of results IF you do them correctly. If your values could be listed as the values of any other company in the country, you haven’t done a good enough job of creating values that will guide you powerfully.  When you say “honesty” or “integrity” or “hard work,” you haven’t really said a thing.  And if people don’t have their quarterly project plans built around the values, guess what? They aren’t really your values.

3.  “We mean it” Behaviors
When an organization defines its behaviors well, then supports and coaches to those behaviors as if they really are to be followed consistently, miraculous transformations begin.

Besides sales and service behaviors, behaviors regarding how to treat and respect coworkers must also be defined, like “no excuses” or “no talking behind peoples’ backs” or “state things in the positive.”  When you are clear in expecting the best in others, people bring their higher selves to work—that part in all of us that knows the right thing to do and the willingness to do it.

Most of all, remember that EVERYTHING is a leadership issue. If you want people to thrive at work and bring their passion for extraordinary results, you must, as a leader, create the environment in which people can thrive.

Telling the no-kidding truth for no-kidding results

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010
© Devonyu | Dreamstime.com

© Devonyu | Dreamstime.com

What’s WRONG with you?

When I ask it that way, your defenses probably go up in a heartbeat. Nothing’s wrong with me, you’ll insist, thank you very much. And you’ll have lost a shot at self-improvement.

When it comes to their own problems, people don’t often tell the truth. That’s why people with weight problems keep struggling with their weight and alcoholics keep drinking. They’re rarely telling themselves the truth.

In business, most of the problems we encounter result from not telling the truth about our own problems, preferring to insist that everything’s groovy even in the face of the evidence. We put our energy into deflecting blame instead of finding and asking the questions that can lead to a genuine breakthrough.

If you ask a VERY important question, such as, “Why aren’t we twice the size we are?” there are many potential answers. “We don’t have enough salespeople.” “Our salespeople aren’t skilled.” “Our sales manager isn’t following a solid process.” “There are no consequences for inaction.” “Our marketing is ineffective.” And the list goes on…and on….and on.

All of the answers should be entertained. And once they are, the hard part kicks in. Now, figure out the number one reason and decide to have a breakthrough in that area—no matter what.

Much of the $110 billion spent each year on training is spent chasing solutions to the wrong problems—the result of a dishonest self-assessment.

As with all things, the question is not how much you invest, but whether you are aligning your training with dashboards and other business measurement tools to gauge the results. And the best way to invest that money in the right kind of training is to ask the hard questions up front AND to invite someone outside the management loop—and preferably outside the company—to ask the hard questions as well.

The prima donna—and the REAL star

Wednesday, March 24th, 2010
Amorimphoto | Dreamstime.com

Amorimphoto | Dreamstime.com

A friend of a friend of mine played varsity basketball in college.  Brian was never a star, but always a good solid team player with good stats.  Most of all, he could be relied upon, on or off the court.

He didn’t get much attention from the press or the fans because he was overshadowed by a hot shot I’ll call Troy.  Troy was the guy who’d make the three-point shot at the buzzer or do the bob-and-weave, dance-and-fake moves that dazzled the other team and put points on the scoreboard.

But as I watched them play, I began to notice a pattern.  If Brian got the ball, he would immediately look around to see who was in the best position to make the shot.  More often than not, he’d pass.  Once Troy had the ball, though, you knew he’d be taking the shot himself.  He saw even his own team members as obstacles to be gotten around on the way to His Big Moment.

When they both reached their senior year, it was time for the team to vote for Senior MVP.  Brian was sure Troy was a lock.  Troy was sure too.  And they were both wrong.  It was Brian.

The Most Valuable Player isn’t the one who puts the most points on the board.  It’s the one who did the most to advance the team’s goals as a whole.

The same is true in business.  Sometimes the last person to get on board in a culture transformation is the big shot, the star—the one who “knows” he or she is indispensible and is far too busy grooming in the mirror for the next close-up to give a thought to what’s good for the team.

Maybe he has twice the sales numbers of the second place salesperson.  Maybe she’s a genius at schmoozing clients.  But if they can’t get on board a positive culture transformation, I have news for you—he or she ain’t your Most Valuable Player.

Culture is everything.  Sales numbers don’t drive culture—culture drives sales.  Allow a prima donna to smirk on the sidelines while everyone else is hard at work building something new and the tail is wagging the dog. 

As your new culture takes root, your “star” will fast be eclipsed by the skyrocketing productivity of those who had been in his shadow—and you’ll have everything to gain and very little to lose by telling your star player, in no uncertain terms, to get on the team bus or hit the showers.