Total Pageviews

Saturday, February 23, 2019

8 Questions to Ask Before a Difficult Conversation














Tough conversations.You know, the ones we need to have, but are concerned about.The ones that remind us of the similar conversations that didn’t go so well in the past.

And, as a leader (Or spouse, parent, friend), they are often necessary.

Perhaps as a leader we find ourselves needing to have them more often due to the nature of our job. And perhaps, sometimes you put them off because they are hard; but you also likely know from experience that avoidance isn’t a good strategy either.

Here are eight questions for you to ask as a part of your preparation for these difficult conversations.These questions will challenge you to think in new ways about the situation and your preparation for it. 

What is your goal? Determine the outcome that you hope for from this conversation.

Am I in the right frame of mind to discuss this now? If you know you aren’t, wait, but don’t wait forever. If you must discuss it now, change your mindset first!

What are some options to solve this problem? There is always more than one way. Make sure you have options in mind going into the conversation.

What information do I or we need? Sometimes the right information will make all the difference in the world in creating better outcomes.

What role did my behavior play in this situation? This is always an important question, but as a leader it is critical.

How do you think they view the problem? This question puts you in the mind of the other person. You may not know the answer, but thinking about it first will make you far better prepared for a successful conversation.

Am I ready to apologize or take responsibility? (and for what?) Well, are you? If not, the conversation may be harder than you are even speculating.

How can I contribute to a better outcome? If you have answered the first seven questions, you likely have some ideas here. Don’t go into a difficult conversation without an answer to this one.

Perhaps you hoped that these questions would magically make difficult conversations easier – they will not.

But they can be magical. If you take the time to ask yourself these questions, and answer them, you will be better prepared and it is very likely that while the conversations might not be easier, they will arrive at far better outcomes.


To your greater success and fulfillment,
Peter Mclees, Leadership Coach, Trainer and Performance Consultant
SMART DEVELOPMENT

Take the Next Step... 

Interested in learning how leadership coaching and training can benefit your organization? We begin with a collaborative discovery process identifying your unique needs and business issues. To request an interview with Peter Mclees please contact: 
Email: petercmclees@gmail.com  or  Mobile:323-854-1713
Smart Development has an exceptional track record helping service providers, ports, sales teams, restaurants, stores, distribution centers, food production facilities, nonprofits, government agencies and other businesses create a strong culture, leadership bench strength, coaching skills and the teamwork necessary for growth. 



Having worked with several companies throughout their growth cycle, we have valuable insights and strategies that would help any late stage startup, small or medium sized company achieve sustained growth and prosperity.

The Case for Progress or Perfection When Coaching Employees











Coaching success as a leader ultimately rests on answering one question: Did the person being coached reach the level of performance or behavior desired at the start of the coaching? Reaching the objective is one thing, yet the process of coaching is more nuanced than that. And there is often much time between the setting of the goal and the achievement of it.

There exists a question, often unexamined, but always felt in the day-to-day of working, leading and coaching. Your perspective on this question, as a coach, can make a big difference on your ultimate coaching success with your team members. The question is this:

Are we seeking progress or perfection?

Let’s examine the case for each and come to some conclusions about what will lead to the greatest coaching success.

The Case for Perfection

First, I realize that perfection is a very high bar. And while some may argue that is the goal, my point in making the case for “perfection” is suggesting that our focus as a coach should be solely on the desired outcome, performance, or behavior. The case for perfection starts and ends with this question: Is the person meeting the goals? If not, the coaching hasn’t yet been successful.

After all, we are coaching to reach that goal. So, until that goal is reached, there is work to do. The case for perfection is a snapshot, binary view of the world: either the person is meeting the expectations, or they are not.

It is hard to argue with this case. Except when taken to the extreme, it may have some consequences that aren’t intended.

The Case for Progress

Consider someone who at the start of coaching isn’t meeting a performance standard. At some time period in the future, there has been marked improvement, but they haven’t yet reached the performance standard. Assuming the performance standard isn’t related to something legal (“Congratulations, you aren’t breaking the law as often as you used to”) or a similar black and white standard, where should the coach focus their attention?

The case for progress centers on this question: Is the person getting closer to the performance standard in a meaningful way?  The case for progress is a video of performance overtime: is the person making progress towards the standards that are in place?

This sounds like a good perspective, yet the person still isn’t doing the job they’ve been asked to do.

My Suggestion

The answer isn’t perfection vs. progress, it is perfection and progress – the best coaches consider both.  Yes, in some cases, as mentioned above, the standard should be the sole focus.  If the standard is absolute and isn’t being met, the person might need to be relieved of this work without additional coaching.  In far more cases though the standard is a relative one, and that is the situation I am addressing.

First, people must know what the performance standard is, and there must be a way to objectively measure it.  Without these two factors it is impossible and completely unfair to hold anyone to the perfection standard. But if the standards are clear and objectively measured and someone isn’t achieving that standard then what?

Since this is the situation most all coaching happens in, the coach must be clear on their purpose.

My suggestion? Make sure that the performance standards are clear and measured, and people always know where they stand.  Performance should also be tracked over time.  If the trend is consistently in the right direction, this progress should be the focus of the coaching, using questions like:

• What is allowing for the progress?
• What else can you do to continue the progress?
• How can I (as your coach) help?
• What resources do you need to continue to improve?

None of these questions excuse the performance gap or lower the standard. Rather, these questions provide encouragement and a continual focus on reaching the standard as quickly as possible.

Having a perfection and progress approach allows you as a coach to have more patience without lowering your standards.  When you approach your work as a coach with patient persistence you will likely gain greater results and respect from your team members at the same time. This approach will grant you greater coaching success in the short and long term.


To your greater success and fulfillment,
Peter Mclees, Leadership Coach, Trainer and Performance Consultant
SMART DEVELOPMENT

Take the Next Step... 

Interested in learning how leadership coaching and training can help you create a high performance culture and drive results? We begin with a collaborative discovery process identifying your unique needs and business issues. To request an interview with Peter Mclees please contact: 
Email: petercmclees@gmail.com  or  Mobile:323-854-1713
Smart Development has an exceptional track record helping service providers, ports, sales teams, restaurants, stores, distribution centers, food production facilities, nonprofits, government agencies and other businesses create a strong culture, leadership bench strength, coaching skills and the teamwork necessary for growth. 


Having worked with several companies throughout their growth cycle, we have valuable insights and strategies that would help any late stage startup, small or medium sized company achieve sustained growth and prosperity.



Monday, February 11, 2019

Empathy at Work










Developing Skills to Understand Other People

Learn how to really connect with someone.

Many people are confident that they can develop new technical skills and knowledge through training and experience. However, there's a common belief that "you are how you are" when it comes to "soft" skills (interacting with other people) – and that there's little or nothing you can do about it.

Fortunately, this is far from true. And a great place to start improving your soft skills is by developing the ability to empathize with others.

What Is Empathy?
Empathy is simply recognizing emotions in others, and being able to "put yourself in another person's shoes" – understanding the other person's perspective and reality.

To be empathic, you have to think beyond yourself and your own concerns. Once you see beyond your own world, you'll realize that there's so much to discover and appreciate!

People who are accused of being egotistical and selfish, or lacking perspective, have often missed the big picture: that they are only one person in a world with billions of other people (although, yes, this can be overwhelming if you think about it too long!)

If you've been called any of these things, then remind yourself that the world is full of other people, and you can't escape their influence on your life. It's far better to accept this, and to decide to build relationships and understanding, rather than try to stand alone all of the time.

Using Empathy Effectively

To start using empathy more effectively, consider the following:

1) Put aside your viewpoint, and try to see things from the other person's point of view.
When you do this, you'll realize that other people most likely aren't being evil, unkind, stubborn, or unreasonable – they're probably just reacting to the situation with the knowledge they have.

2) Validate the other person's perspective.
Once you "see" why others believe what they believe, acknowledge it. Remember: acknowledgment does not always equal agreement. You can accept that people have different opinions from your own, and that they may have good reason to hold those opinions.

3) Examine your attitude.
Are you more concerned with getting your way, winning, or being right? Or, is your priority to find a solution, build relationships, and accept others? Without an open mind and attitude, you probably won't have enough room for empathy.

4) Listen.
  • Listen to the entire message that the other person is trying to communicate.
  • Listen with your ears – what is being said, and what tone is being used?
  • Listen with your eyes – what is the person doing with his or her body while speaking?
  • Listen with your instincts – do you sense that the person is not communicating something important?
  • Listen with your heart – what do you think the other person feels?
5) Ask what the other person would do.
When in doubt, ask the person to explain his position. This is probably the simplest, and most direct, way to understand the other person. However, it's probably the least used way to develop empathy.

It's fine if you ask what the other person wants: you don't earn any "bonus points" for figuring it out on your own.

For example, the boss who gives her young team members turkey vouchers for the holidays, when most of them don't even cook, is using her idea of a practical gift – not theirs.

Practice these skills when you interact with people. You'll likely appear much more caring and approachable – simply because you increase your interest in what others think, feel, and experience. It's a great gift to be willing and able to see the world from a variety of perspectives – and it's a gift that you can use all of the time, in any situation.

Here are some more tips for an empathic conversation:
  • Pay attention, physically and mentally, to what's happening.
  • Listen carefully, and note the keywords and phrases that people use.
  • Respond encouragingly to the central message.
  • Be flexible – prepare to change direction as the other person's thoughts and feelings also change.
  • Look for cues that you're on target.
Key Points
Developing an empathic approach is perhaps the most significant effort you can make toward improving your people skills. When you understand others, they'll probably want to understand you – and this is how you can start to build cooperation, collaboration, and teamwork.


To your greater success and fulfillment,
Peter Mclees, Leadership Coach, Trainer and Performance Consultant
SMART DEVELOPMENT

Take the Next Step... 

Interested in learning how Smart Development can help your company address these issues? We begin with a collaborative discovery process identifying your unique needs and business issues. To request an interview with Peter Mclees please contact: 
Email: petercmclees@gmail.com  or  Mobile:323-854-1713
Smart Development has an exceptional track record helping service providers, ports, sales teams, restaurants, stores, distribution centers, food production facilities, nonprofits, government agencies and other organizations create a strong culture, leadership bench strength, coaching skills and the teamwork necessary for growth. 


Having worked with several companies throughout their growth cycle, we have valuable insights and strategies that would help any late stage startup, small or medium sized company achieve sustained growth and prosperity.


Saturday, February 9, 2019

Sales objections are usually just questions















Objection is a funny word as it’s applied to sales. 

The buyer objects to your price? Not really. 

The buyer has an objection to your system features? Not really. 

Your buyer doesn't care enough to object. 

“I object!” 

The trouble with using the word “objection” is that it doesn’t accurately portray the buyer’s perspective. 

Objection implies that the buyer somehow feels more emotion about your pricing, features, product color, packaging, on-boarding, etc. than they actually do. 

Remember, the buyer is just trying to solve a problem and achieve a business outcome. 

They have a lot of options. They don’t care whether they buy from you or a competitor. 

However, they can’t make a purchase decision if they don’t understand how the product or service they are evaluating will help them achieve their desired outcomes. 

Here’s THE THING to keep in mind as you work with a prospect. 

Their objection usually is not a protest. It’s just a question. 

An objection is an effort on the part of the buyer to seek clarification on some aspect of your offer. 

They don’t object to your price. They just don’t understand it. 

Your buyers do object to the fact that they are being pressed to make a decision about something they don’t completely understand. 

So, rather than get defensive or nervous when your buyer raises an “objection” ask yourself this: “What’s the question they are trying to answer?" 

An objection is your cue to ask the buyer your own questions. 

Find out where the gaps are in their understanding. 

Do some additional discovery. And when you have more facts, then do some additional qualification. 

The result of your additional questioning may be that once you’ve clarified your offer, your price is too high. Or perhaps the buyer is no longer a fit for your product. 

That’s ok. Disqualify that prospect and move on. 

Want help working with your buyers through their “objections?" 

Contact me at petercmclees@gmail.com

Good selling,


Peter C. Mclees, Sales Coach and Trainer
Smart Development
Mobile: 323-854-1713


We help sales reps and sales organizations accelerate their sales. 

Empathy: An Essential Leadership Skill


A few weeks ago, I saw a bumper sticker that said: "I am not good at empathy. Will you settle for sarcasm?" The humor in the bumper sticker led me to think of the slight unease or self-conscious discomfort that many people feel when a term such as "empathy" is introduced in a business environment. Notions of "touchy-feely", spring to mind. 















While empathy is a right brain activity, it is far from being a touchy-feely topic. At its core, empathy is the oil that keeps relationships running smoothly. The fact that empathy is an important component of effective relationships has been proven: In studies by Dr. Antonio Damasio (outlined in his book: "Descartes' Error: Emotion, Reason, and the Human Brain."), medical patients who had damage to part of the brain associated with empathy showed significant deficits in relationship skills, even though their reasoning and learning abilities remained intact.

Indeed, empathy is valued currency. It allows us to create bonds of trust, it gives us insights into what others may be feeling or thinking; it helps us understand how or why others are reacting to situations, it sharpens our "people acumen" and informs our decisions.

A formal definition of Empathy is the ability to identify and understand another's situation, feelings and motives. It's our capacity to recognize the concerns other people have. Empathy means: "putting yourself in the other person's shoes" or "seeing things through someone else's eyes".

There are numerous studies that link empathy to business results. They include studies that correlate empathy with increased sales, with the performance of the best managers of product development teams and with enhanced performance in an increasingly diverse workforce. A few of these studies can be viewed on the site of The Consortium for Research on Emotional Intelligence in Organizations

Yes, increasingly, the topic of empathy is encroaching on the business world. We are now even seeing terms such as "empathy marketing" and "empathy selling". Not long ago, I came across the term "user empathy", referring to user interface.

Along those lines, in his book, A Whole New Mind: Moving from the Information Age to the Conceptual Age, Daniel Pink predicts that power will reside with those who have strong right-brain (interpersonal) qualities. He cites three forces that are causing this change: Abundance, Asia and Automation. "Abundance" refers to our increasing demand for products or services that are aesthetically pleasing; "Asia" refers to the growing trend of outsourcing; "Automation" is self-explanatory. In order to compete in the new economy market, Pink suggests six areas that are vital to our success. One of which is Empathy; the ability to imagine yourself in someone else's position, to imagine what they are feeling, to understand what makes people tick, to create relationships and to be caring of others: All of which is very difficult to outsource or automate, and yet is increasingly important to business.

Empathy is also particularly critical to leadership development in this age of young, independent, highly marketable and mobile workers. In a popular Harvard Business Review article entitled "What Makes a Leader?", Dr. Daniel Goleman isolates three reasons for why empathy is so important: the increasing use of teams, (which he refers to as "cauldrons of bubbling emotions"), the rapid pace of globalization (with cross cultural communication easily leading to misunderstandings) and the growing need to retain talent. "Leaders with empathy," states Goleman, "do more than sympathize with people around them: they use their knowledge to improve their companies in subtle, but important ways." This doesn't mean that they agree with everyone's view or try to please everybody. Rather, they "thoughtfully consider employees' feelings – along with other factors – in the process of making intelligent decisions."

Empathy, then, is an ability that is well-worth cultivating. It's a soft, sometimes abstract tool in a leader's toolkit that can lead to hard, tangible results. But where does empathy come from? Is it a process of thinking or of emotion? 

From my perspective, I believe that it is both: We need to use our reasoning ability to understand another person's thoughts, feelings, reactions, concerns, motives; This means truly making an effort to stop and think for a moment about the other person's perspective in order to begin to understand where they are coming from: And then we need the emotional capacity to care for that person's concern; Caring does not mean that we would always agree with the person, that we would change our position, but it does mean that we would be in tune with what that person is going through, so that we can respond in a manner that acknowledges their thoughts, feelings or concerns.

So this leads me to a question that I am sometimes asked: "Can you teach someone to be empathetic?" We all know some people who are naturally and consistently empathetic – these are the people who can easily forge positive connections with others. They are people who use empathy to engender trust and build bonds; they are catalysts who are able to create positive communities for the greater good. But even if empathy does not come naturally to some of us, I firmly believe that we can develop this capacity.


Here are a few practical tips you might consider to help you do this:

1.      Listen – truly listen to people. Listen with your ears, eyes and heart. Pay attention to others' body language, to their tone of voice, to the hidden emotions behind what they are saying to you, and to the context.
2.      Don't interrupt people. Don't dismiss their concerns offhand. Don't rush to give advice. Don't change the subject. Allow people their moment.
3.      Tune in to non-verbal communication. This is the way that people often communicate what they think or feel, even when their verbal communication says something quite different.
4.      Practice the "93% rule". We know from a famous study by Professor Emeritus, Albert Mehrabian of UCLA, when communicating about feelings and attitudes, words – the things we say – account for only 7% of the total message that people receive. The other 93% of the message that we communicate when we speak is contained in our tone of voice and body language. It's important, then, to spend some time to understand how we come across when we communicate with others about our feelings and attitudes.
5.      Use people's name. Also remember the names of people's spouse and children so that you can refer to them by name.
6.      Be fully present when you are with people. Don't check your email, look at your watch or take phone calls when a direct report drops into your office to talk to you. Put yourself in their shoes. How would you feel if your boss did that to you?
7.      Smile at people.
8.      Encourage people, particularly the quiet ones, when they speak up in meetings. A simple thing like an attentive nod can boost people's confidence.
9.      Give genuine recognition and praise. Pay attention to what people are doing and catch them doing the right things. When you give praise, spend a little effort to make your genuine words memorable: "You are an asset to this team because.."; "This was pure genius"; "I would have missed this if you hadn't picked it up."
10. Take a personal interest in people. Show people that you care, and genuine curiosity about their lives. Ask them questions about their hobbies, their challenges, their families, their aspirations.
Empathy is an emotional and thinking muscle that becomes stronger the more we use it. Try some of these suggestions and watch the reactions of those you work with. I believe you will notice some positive results.

Years ago, I had come across a saying that went something like this: the measure of a man [or woman], is how they treat someone who is of absolutely no use to them. Empathy should not be selective: It should be a daily habit. If I were to create a bumper sticker, I would say: Empathy: Don't Leave Home Without It!


To your greater success and fulfillment,
Peter Mclees, Leadership Coach, Trainer and Performance Consultant
SMART DEVELOPMENT

Take the Next Step... 

Interested in learning how leadership coaching and training can help you create a high performance culture and drive results? We begin with a collaborative discovery process identifying your unique needs and business issues. To request an interview with Peter Mclees please contact: 
Email: petercmclees@gmail.com  or  Mobile:323-854-1713
Smart Development has an exceptional track record helping service providers, ports, sales teams, restaurants, stores, distribution centers, food production facilities, nonprofits, government agencies and other businesses create a strong culture, leadership bench strength, coaching skills and the teamwork necessary for growth. Having worked with several companies throughout their growth cycle, we have valuable insights and strategies that would help any late stage startup, small or medium or large sized company achieve sustained growth and prosperity.

Why Accountability Is So Important












Accountability is consistently on the Top Ten of my Hit Parade. Leaders regularly ask me questions about it, hoping I will have the magic answer. They ask:
  • “How can I get my people to be more accountable?”
  • “Why aren’t people accountable anymore?”
  • “Can I coach accountability?”
  • And more.
I can answer those questions, but the foundational question is, “Why are people so concerned with accountability, and why is it so important?”

It is understandable why people desire greater accountability from others, because it helps some good things happen. Those “good things” tend to fall into two big areas for leaders – personal reasons and organizational reasons.

Personal Reasons

Let’s start by being a bit selfish. When there is greater accountability among your team members, your life as a leader gets easier. Who wouldn’t want their work to be a little easier? Here are three reasons why things will be easier:
  • Less blame. Accountable people spend less time and energy blaming others. The root of blame is “it is their fault, not mine,” and accountability starts with “what can I do?” Imagine a work day where you dealt with no blame…
  • Less conflict. Conflict grows in waiting. When you do something to upset me, and I wait for you to fix it, apologize, or change, it can be a long wait. When people are accountable, they think about their part in the exchange, but are also willing to reach out and try to fix or improve the situation.
  • Less frustration. One of the reasons I get asked so many questions about accountability is that people are frustrated with others. Read the questions in the opening paragraph again. Do you hear the frustration with others? When we are accountable ourselves, we take a step to improve matters, or, at a minimum, change our perspective about the situation.
Organizational Reasons

Greater accountability isn’t just a nice to have attribute in a team. After all, it is nice if things are easier with less frustration. But can greater accountability make a difference in organizational results? Here are just three examples that prove the answer is a resounding “yes”:
  • Better customer/stakeholder experience. Think about your worst personal Customer service situation. What percentage of the problem was a perceived lack of accountability in the people you talked to? Did you hear blame about other departments (or your own actions)? Did you get “You will have to talk to that department”? And conversely, think of a situation that started poorly, but the company recovered well. Chances are, someone took responsibility to help get you a better outcome.
  • Higher quality. Quality improves with good work processes, but it also improves when people care, take ownership, and are accountable for their work and products. While solid processes are needed for high quality, the best processes alone cannot overcome a lack of accountability among those doing the work.
  • Higher productivity. Simply stated, when people are accountable for their work and actions, they will get more done.  The reasons are many, but the facts are irrefutable. When you raise accountability, you raise productivity.
While I have framed this for leaders, the reality is that accountability has a 3-D effect – it impacts results for the leader, for the team (and individual team members), and the entire organization. Regardless of which reasons are most important to a person’s perspective, time spent raising your personal accountability, influencing others to raise theirs, or creating a cultural norm of accountability are some of the most powerful things you can do to improve organizational results.

Check out these posts for tips on elevating accountability within your teams and organization:

Six Words for Stopping Blame and Increasing Accountability

9 Accountability Questions to Ask Your Team

Transform Empty Accountability Into Real Accountability

To your greater success and fulfillment,

Peter Mclees, Leadership Coach, Trainer and Performance Consultant
SMART DEVELOPMENT

Take the Next Step... 

Interested in learning how leadership coaching and training can help your organization create a culture of high accountability, trust and performance? We begin with a collaborative discovery process identifying your unique needs and business issues. To request an interview with Peter Mclees please contact: 
Email: petercmclees@gmail.com  or  Mobile:323-854-1713
Smart Development has an exceptional track record helping service providers, ports, sales teams, restaurants, stores, distribution centers, food production facilities, nonprofits, government agencies and other businesses create a strong culture, leadership bench strength, coaching skills and the teamwork necessary for growth.



Having worked with several companies throughout their growth cycle, we have valuable insights and strategies that would help any late stage startup, small or medium sized company achieve sustained growth and prosperity.

The Secret to Developing Team Members When the Clock is Racing (A Must-Read for Restaurants and Retailers)














Retailers and restaurants move fast. Long before open and well after close, the clock is always racing and every second represents revenue lost or gained. How efficiently and quickly an operation can prepare itself to serve customers on an hour-by-hour basis defines its sales -- and, ultimately, its success.

In these service industry organizations, speed equals revenue. But it creates a costly management problem: There's little time to conduct the kind of coaching conversations that engage and develop Team Members. Employee engagement and development correlate with profitability, productivity and retention -- but they take time.

This time crunch focuses managers on the very immediate, and it's usually what a team member did wrong: how they screwed up an order, forgot to upsell the customer on the warranty, mishandled food or made an angry customer angrier. It's an understandable managerial reaction, but it's also punitive and negative. Eventually, that kind of management can lead to an unwelcoming customer experience -- and research shows that it can create a disengaging employee experience too.

Disengaged team members either stay and do a bad job, which increases costs and decreases customer engagement, or they quit and require replacing. So managers get stuck running an operation with either too many rookies or too many low-engaged Team Members, losing money in the process and with little time for the coaching that employees need to learn and grow -- and to produce the kind of customer experience that generates profit and earns loyalty and boosts NPS scores.

According to Gallup research, food service has an average annual turnover rate of 103% to 150% (and an average 3% to 5% profit margin). Customer-facing retail's turnover is over 60%.

It seems like an intractable problem in fast-paced industries. It is not. It's a profit-sucking cultural problem related to perspective, not pace. And it can be fixed.

Why a Grow With the (Work) Flow Approach Is A Great Solution

A Grow With the (Work) Flow strategy is vital when there's little time for lengthy development and coaching conversations. Of course, managers can do a deep dive into theory and data, but it's not necessary for a working knowledge of how to lead, how to be heard, and how to best connect with their teams and guests.

The most powerful and valuable development experiences involve hands-on, in-the-moment learning. There’s no substitute for being confronted by and having to address real business challenges. And, given the number of challenges we face in business, the opportunity to leverage them is limited only by the imagination.

However, development activity is only that—activity—until it is properly unpacked to reveal its lessons. In fact, many Team Members become so engrossed in the experience that they don’t take the time to reflect on how they’ve benefited from it. Yet again, conversation becomes the key to genuine growth. And simple questions help you launch the dialogue.

Call it what you will: In the moment. On the spot. Context sensitive. Instant. Bite-size. On the fly. Impromptu. Nano-coaching. Stealth development. It works!

Growing with the flow means development isn’t limited to scheduled meetings and is less burdensome in many ways. It can be quick—as short as one or two minutes. It can be casual—right on the sales floor or hanging over a cubicle wall. It can be completely unplanned—no notes or agendas to contend with. Hardly sounds like work, right?

But in life, there are always trade-offs. When you grow with the flow, you save time and there is less planning involved. But you’ve got to be willing to give something as well. And that something in this case is a little more of your attention. When you help team members grow and progress you elevate their mental and emotional engagement. And engaged team members will engage customers. In order to do this effectively managers need to form new habits and increase their social and conversational intelligence.

According to Gallup research, fully engaged customers represent a 23% premium in terms of share of wallet, profitability, revenue and relationship growth over the average customer. Fully engaged casual-dining customers make 56% more visits per month to their favored restaurant than actively disengaged customers do. Fully engaged fast-food customers make 28% more visits.

These higher engagement levels result from the emotional impact that employees invent fresh for every customer. That impact springs from engagement -- the disengaged won't bother -- and authentic talent. Talent can't be faked. Not well, and not for long.
Developing employees improves the team's profits and earns their loyalty. 

Grow with the flow based development also improves the brand's employee value proposition. That's what attracts and retains team members who exceed expectations and provide consistently excellent performance.

And when the clock is racing and every second represents revenue, those employees make all the difference. They decide what kind of experience their guests or customers will have. Coaching Team Members to know a to create an engaging customer experience is an extremely effective use of managers' time -- especially when they have no time to waste. 

Learn how Smart Development can equip restaurant and retail managers to coach employees to deliver an exceptional guest/customer experience with a Grow With the (Work) Flow development strategy.

To your greater success and fulfillment,


Peter Mclees, Leadership Coach, Trainer and Performance Consultant
SMART DEVELOPMENT

Take the Next Step... 

Interested in learning how Smart Development can equip your store and restaurant managers to help their team members Grow with the (Work) Flow. We begin with a collaborative discovery process identifying your unique needs and business issues. To request an interview with Peter Mclees please contact: 
Email: petercmclees@gmail.com  or  Mobile:323-854-1713
Smart Development has an exceptional track record helping service providers, ports, sales teams, restaurants, stores, distribution centers, food production facilities, nonprofits, government agencies and other organizations create a strong culture, leadership bench strength, coaching skills and the teamwork necessary for growth. 


Having worked with several companies throughout their growth cycle, we have valuable insights and strategies that would help any late stage startup, small or medium sized company achieve sustained growth and prosperity.

Sunday, February 3, 2019

Leaders Need to Focus On Engagement AND Culture


















People often ask, “Is employee engagement the same thing as culture?” The answer is no. But they heavily influence  each other.

Fundamentally, employee engagement centers on meeting essential employee needs. It helps leaders and managers focus on the actions that matter most to their team members and aims to create employees and teams that are poised for high performance. In this way, achieving high employee engagement is an important method for driving a high-performing culture and accomplishing the goals of the organization.

Culture, on the other hand, is a pervasive force  that influences the way people work together, how decisions get made, which behaviors are rewarded and who gets promoted. Culture sets the tone for a workforce and can be a major influence on whether an employee is attracted or not attracted to a company. In short, engaged employees are the  fuel for your  organization. Culture — driven by purpose and  brand — sets the  direction.

When their basic needs are not met, employees can be a barrier to changing a culture. On the other hand, when employees are engaged, they are more willing to buy in to changes and well- communicated messages.

Check out the following 3 posts for tips on elevating culture and engagement.

Three Ways to Create a Vibrant Culture

Building and Sustaining Engagement in Volatile Times

Want to Improve Engagement? Learn from Jimmy Fallon


To your greater success and fulfillment,
Peter Mclees, Leadership Coach, Trainer and Performance Consultant
SMART DEVELOPMENT

Take the Next Step... 

Interested in learning how leadership coaching and training can elevate engagement and strengthen your organization's culture? We begin with a collaborative discovery process identifying your unique needs and business issues. To request an interview with Peter Mclees please contact: 
Email: petercmclees@gmail.com  or  Mobile:323-854-1713
Smart Development has an exceptional track record helping service providers, ports, sales teams, restaurants, stores, distribution centers, food production facilities, nonprofits, government agencies and other businesses create a strong culture, leadership bench strength, coaching skills and the teamwork necessary for growth. 


Having worked with several companies throughout their growth cycle, we have valuable insights and strategies that would help any late stage startup, small or medium sized company achieve sustained growth and prosperity.