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Sunday, December 18, 2022

Why Santa Claus is NOT a Good Role Model for Managers

 









There are lessons to be learned from Santa Claus. Truth is, like most managers, his heart is in the right place. But as a leader, there’s room for improvement.

His performance review system is shallow. Naughty or nice. That’s it? Boys and girls worldwide are expected to perform by standards that really amount to just “good or bad” for the entire year without any feedback or definitions. How naughty was he? Under what circumstances? To whom? How many times was she nice? Was it sincere? Did it have any meaningful results? C’mon, Santa, the kids are in the dark. A little more clarity would go a long way to improving behavior.

His answers to tough questions are condescendingly blunt. “How do reindeer fly, Santa?” “Magic,” he says. “Ho ho ho.” One-word answers to a person who wants a little more explanation, depth or perspective are lame. “Hey, boss, how did we do on that Simmons contract?”  “Great. (Now get back to work.)”  You see where this is going?  Put a little tact in your communication.

He doesn’t help out in the trenches. The great delegator that he is, Old St. Nick lifts nary a finger in the production of the goods he distributes. Elves, toiling for what could be low or no wages (it’s never been discussed), take on all the grunt work, including loading the sleigh. It would be nice if Santa himself put down his pipe once in a while to show the staff that he’s a team player.

He hogs all the credit. One night of hard work and few weeks of taking children’s orders and he’s featured in all the songs, cards, displays and Coco-Cola bottles. Santa Claus is coming to town! The heck with everyone else who made it happen.

He’s mired in tradition. For centuries, the jolly old CEO has run things pretty much the same way. Where’s the innovation? Progress? Growth? Can presents be delivered  more  efficiently? Maybe Santa should team up with Amazon...just saying.  Can the sleigh  be  updated?  How about an easier way to get inside of a home? Maybe Santa can get away with the “if it ain’t broke” model, but you can’t.

He offers no promotional opportunities. It’s all about the star performer Rudolph. Does Prancer have a shot at leading the team? In fact, it might be beneficial if Santa brought an elf or two with him on the big night as part of a coaching and mentorship program.

Santa could learn something about shared leadership by observing a flock of geese. (Check out our blog WHAT GEESE CAN TEACH US ABOUT LEADERSHIP & TEAMWORK)

Seriously, Santa does have one great quality that every manager covets: He can make everyone smile.

How?

That’s magic!

While Mr. Claus may not use the best management practices, the incredible spirit of Santa embodies some of the greatest human virtues like kindness, caring, and generosity. 
















 Click here to a related post: Life Lessons from the Film, It's a Wonderful Life

Wishing you the best of the Holiday Season and in the New Year.


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

 

Take the Next Step...
Interested in learning how to develop your organization's leadership capability, culture, and employee engagement? 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, wealth management services, third-party maintenance providers, real estate services, 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.

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, December 11, 2022

How to Focus on the 'Right' Things In A World Full of Distractions


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In a world full of distractions, how do you focus on the ‘right’ things?

This is a pervasive problem in our remote and onsite workplaces. Qualtrics surveyed 1,600 people about their ability—or rather inability—to focus. Here’s how the respondents answered: 

  • Two of three respondents said they struggle to be fully focused on a single task or person. 
  • Sixty percent said the longest they can focus on a task without getting distracted is about 20 minutes. 
  • A third of respondents said they can only focus on a task for ten minutes before getting distracted. Ten MINUTES! 
  • Of the respondents who said they struggle to focus, 73% said they feel overwhelmed and drained and 72% said they feel stressed and work slowly. 
  • Half of them also said that at the end of a busy day they feel unfilled, like they’ve let themselves and others down.

When people think of distractions, they typically think of phone notifications, email notifications, and people walking into their office. But I have learned from coaching people in different professions and industries that the most detrimental distractions are self-inflicted. Yes, it can be helpful to minimize those external dings, but I’ve seen people get distracted while trying to work in silence in their office.

Sound familiar?

Here are few tips that should help.

Clear Your Mind

If you don’t clear your mind, you won’t feel focused no matter how quiet your surroundings. You’ll feel distracted, confused, compelled to multitask—all because of the conflict in your mind. The mind easily releases completed tasks, freeing it to generate ideas and focus on present stimuli, but it cannot let go of unfinished tasks. We are literally wired to get things done, and we can’t rest easy until we do.

The best way to clear your mind is with a “mind sweep.” Grab a paper and a pen and set a timer for five minutes. During that five minutes, write down everything that’s pulling at your attention, any would- or should-do items. These might be errands you need to run, calls you need to make, emails you’ve been meaning to send, projects you want to start or finish.

Don’t worry about quality, go for quantity; write down as many items as you can. Most people scratch down a list of 20-30 items, but this really only touches the surface. There is so much more we hold in our heads. Then, review what you’ve written down. How do you feel about those ought-tos and to-dos now that they’re on paper? You probably feel a little better. 

You may have a sense of greater control or feel a little less stressed. Why? Did anything about those items change? Did you complete the tasks? No. You merely moved them from inside your mind (sitting as amorphous weight) to in front of your eyes (definable tasks).

Prime Your Eyes

Focus begins when you first wake up. Most of us get sucked into email or some form of media first thing in the morning. Don’t make this mistake. Take two to three minutes each morning to review your calendar and to-do lists before diving into email or work. When we begin the day by looking at email, we put a lens of “latest and loudest” over our eyes. This is a major contributor to those “busy but unproductive” days. Begin your day by quickly reviewing what you want to get done and you’ll find yourself working on your more important projects and tasks more often.

Plan Time for Work

You need to set aside time each day for doing work, determining what work you’ll need to do later, and handling work you didn’t plan for (all separately). And don’t say that you don’t have the time; you’re already working in these modes, but you’re likely doing so all at once, which is incredibly inefficient. For example, instead of grazing on emails all day, spend 45 minutes once a day processing your email inbox to determine what work you need to do as a result of those emails. Then populate your calendar and to-do lists and focus on doing that work in the coming days.

Say No

It’s hard to focus when you’re drowning in opportunities of what you could do. Get in the habit of saying no to things that are not aligned with your long-term goals. The best way to say no is to share your good intent and explain why. 

Try this: “My goal is to be a solid contributor and help the team where I can, but I also don’t want to overcommit myself. If I agree to your request, I’ll be at a high risk of not meeting my other responsibilities and deadlines, which wouldn’t be fair to you, me, or the team. I think it’s best for me to not commit to this right now.” In the end, you can spend your time on anything, but you can’t spend your time on everything.

Check out a related blog post: How to Say No When You Can't Say No

And last but not least…

Minimize External Distractions

When it’s time to do meaningful work, close your email and other communication apps. Don’t kid yourself into thinking you’ll be able to ignore those dings and notifications—your brain is conditioned to respond to them in search of dopamine hits. And ditch your smartphone when possible. I know that might sound scary. But what’s worse—going without your smartphone for an hour here and there, or failing to achieve your goals because you can’t focus? If you don’t need your phone for the activity you are doing or the conversation you are having, put it elsewhere.

When it comes to distractions, you are in charge. Don’t blame everyone else (“My boss keeps…”) or everything else (“My notifications keep…”). Take ownership of your focus. I've worked with busy people who focus on what’s most important to them even though they have numerous opportunities for excuses to get distracted. I share that to say that true focus is within your grasp. It’s less about what’s happening around you and so much more about how you engage with what’s happening around you.

Click here to download our e-book on how to eliminate distractions.

To your greater focus and success!



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


Take the Next Step...
Interested in learning how to develop your organization's leadership capability, culture, and employee engagement? 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, wealth management services, third-party maintenance providers, real estate services, 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.

 

Sunday, December 4, 2022

Coaching is A Super Accelerant to Achieve Business Results

 


The transformation of rubber from a useless substance to a resilient product was a simple as adding a missing process—heat, in the form of steam. Charles Goodyear named the process vulcanization after the Roman god of fire, Vulcan.

Today it’s hard to imagine life without Goodyear’s rubber. There would be no electricity, no cars, no computers, no bicycles, no radios, or televisions, no phones. We wouldn’t have airplanes, washing machines, or toasters. We wouldn’t even have our favorite pair of old sneakers.

Scientists have known the secret of accelerants for decades, adding them to speed up chemical reactions, achieving results more quickly. Accelerators work the same way in business, making the things you’re doing work better, faster, and more smoothly, without throwing you off balance.

The relationship between a management accelerant and improved business results is highly predictable. In the workplace, there are few accelerators with more impact than individual and team coaching.

Solid coaching skills are a valuable asset for leaders and managers at all levels.

A 2021 study found that leaders who frequently coached their employees and teams improved their results by 21 percent.

The 4 Realities That Compel Leaders At All Levels To Be More Coach-Like

Reality #1: Change is inevitable. Even the most successful organizations cannot rest on their laurels. They must continually remake themselves or risk falling from glory. Because today’s excellence is not a guarantee for tomorrow’s success, leaders who bask in complacency are due for rude awakening. 

Reality #2: People must learn and adapt quickly. Your people’s skills will become obsolete—in the same way technologies become outdated—if you rely solely on today’s capabilities to lead your company into the future. You cannot just hire talented people, teach them to do their jobs, and leave them alone. To cope with the inevitability of changing work demands, you need a work force that can learn new skills and adapt quickly. 

One way or another, most people figure out how to do their jobs. But development by default is too passive to achieve the standards of excellence and versatility that you must meet. Because the world refuses to wait for those who say “slow down while I gain more experience,” organizations are looking for better and faster ways to achieve breakthrough performance with their people. Experience and time alone are slow and inefficient teachers. You need to jump start learning and make sure it runs full speed in the right direction. 

Reality #3: Employees want to grow. Lifelong employment in the same job is a career path found only in the history books. Millennials at 33 percent, now represent the largest generation in the U.S. workforce, surpassing the Baby Boomer group, which has declined to 31%. And Millennials are not just pursuing job satisfaction they are pursuing development. 
  
Reality #4: People are the real source of competitive advantage. Versatile people—those who learn better and faster than your competition—sustain you edge in the marketplace. Because your people are your most important assets, coaching is your investment vehicle for long-term payback. 

How Coaching Benefits the Entire Organization 
The benefits of coaching seem to be very employee-oriented; however, looking at the bigger picture, your organization as a whole gains from having effective coaching sessions. Workplace Psychology, a website which covers areas of the workplace and workers from a scholarly perspective, offers some advantages of integrating coaching in your organization. I have elaborated their top three reasons: 

1. Overcome costly and time-consuming performance problems: many companies still rely on their annual performance to evaluate their employees’ performance. By integrating coaching in your organization, you can identify performance problems easier and quicker, and take the appropriate measures to overcome these hurdles such as re-aligning the employees’ objectives, or offering training/mentoring to help your employees succeed. 

2. Strengthen employees’ skills and results: Coaching allows employees to gain valuable skills and knowledge from their coach – whether it is you or a senior employee – which will eventually increase the productivity of your organization. Coaching also provides you with how the employees are performing; by following up with their progress, you may discover that they possess skills that you were not aware of. Therefore coaching helps you identify the competencies of your team and you may then take the initiative to strengthen these skills by encouraging them to take advanced classes or/and attend seminars. 

3. Improve retention: when employees are coached, they feel supported and encouraged by their manager and their organization. Coaching is a two-way communication process. You provide feedback to your employees and they are able to use this opportunity to also give feedback. Employees are more likely to stay in your organization if they feel that their voice is being heard by you and senior management. By integrating coaching, you are encouraging your managers and yourself to be more present among your employees. Coaching also allows you to identify employees who fit with your succession planning. 

The Secret of the 5% Solution

Many managers when exhorted to coach more and boss less will rightly say, “But my plate is already full. I can’t handle one more obligation. I rarely see my people because I’m so busy and they are scattered all over the place. There’s no way I can do all this.” 

Managers don’t need to add coaching to the role, they just need to learn to be more coach-like. Leaders can learn to ensure that the activities they are already engaged in are infused with a coach-like attitude and approach. The simple, moment by moment interactions that happen every day are the places that good coaching occurs.

You face a dilemma: Simple solutions don’t work for development, yet you don’t have time for complex solutions. So you need a coaching process that attacks the true challenges of getting a variety of people to change and yet is still manageable in light of available time and resources. That process is the 5% solution. 

You can be effective and efficient if you focus 5% of your energy and attention on coaching and development. Working smarter—not harder—helps you make the best investment of your time. The secret of efficient coaching is to know your priorities and then to create and seize coaching opportunities that arise in the course of your everyday work. If you are prepared, you can leverage a relatively small investment of your time into a walloping payback.

Remember, that the time you spend coaching is “high-leverage time.” By coaching, you engage the productive capacity of your people. For every, say, twenty-minute coaching conversation you have with an employee, you should be engaging hours or maybe days of the employee’s productive capacity. If that twenty-minute conversation is effective, that twenty minutes of coaching should substantially improve the quality and output of the employee’s work for hours or days. That’s a good return on investment—that’s why it’s called “high-leverage time.”

Check out these related posts:

 
 
 
 To your greater fulfillment and success!



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


Take the Next Step...
Interested in learning how to develop your organization's leadership capability, culture, and employee engagement? 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, wealth management services, third-party maintenance providers, real estate services, 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.