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All Leadership Organizational Effectiveness Vision

The Big Picture: Leaders Ensure Alignment

This week I have been posting about attracting Top Talent. When Mark Miller and I wrote the Talent Magnet Field Guide one of the things we discovered the best of the best are looking for in an employer is, “A Bigger Vision.” In other words, they want to be a part of something great. Today Mark has agreed to guest post on one of the best practices from the Bigger Vision section. I hope you will read it and do a ‘vision alignment check’ in your organization.  

The Big Picture: Leaders Ensure Alignment

What’s the hardest thing a leader has to do? Honestly, I’m not sure.
For me, it varies with the circumstances of the day. However, if I pull up and stop fighting fires and escape the entanglements of growing bureaucracy, I think I might vote for Ensuring Alignment.
Having seen our organization grow from less than two dozen staff to almost 2,000, I can say the task of keeping everyone aligned is mind-boggling. However, regardless of the difficulty factor, I believe Ensuring Alignment is one of the leader’s highest priorities – and one with incalculable returns.
For these reasons, I was not surprised when we began sorting through all we learned from our Top Talent research project about their expectations for their leaders, and landed on this idea of Ensuring Alignment as a leadership best practice. No organization drifts toward a big vision – you drift out to sea or over a waterfall, but you don’t drift to greatness.
Here’s an excerpt from the Talent Magnet Field Guide on this topic…
When organizations work together, they set themselves apart. Clearly, alignment accelerates impact. Leaders who want to position their organizations to accomplish a Bigger Vision must Ensure Alignment; only then can they harness the collective energy of those they lead. Without alignment, energy, productivity, and impact will suffer.
[Tweet “”When organizations work together, they set themselves apart.” #TalentMagnet”]
[Tweet “”In high performance organizations, alignment accelerates impact.” #TalentMagnet “]
Picture a tug of war. If leaders can get everyone in the organization on the same side of the rope pulling together toward the vision, their competition is in trouble. When everyone is in sync, not only is the existing workforce energized, but potential talent will be drawn to the team.
Alignment permeates every aspect of a high-performance culture. Leaders know they must model the way and continually work to train team members to embrace the vision, mission, values, systems, and strategy if they hope to execute at a high level. If they succeed, everyone wins. Additionally, they position themselves to be an employer of choice for Top Talent.
As a leader, you must choose where to invest your time. You can thrash away neck deep in the weeds of busyness or you can make a strategic decision to build an aligned culture. Choose to Ensure Alignment and you will be a step closer to becoming a place so attractive, Top Talent will be standing in line to work for your organization.

About Mark Miller
Mark Miller is the best-selling author of seven books, an in-demand speaker and the Vice President of High-Performance Leadership at Chick-fil-A. His latest book, Talent Magnet: How to Attract and Keep the Best People, Mark unveils the three critical aspects of a true talent magnet, and explores the deeper meaning of each in a clever and entertaining business fable.
 

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All Leadership Organizational Effectiveness

How Do You Scale Culture?

For the past year I have spent a lot of time thinking about and attempting to scale my company, InteGREAT Leadership. The journey has been challenging, but very rewarding as we continue to expand our reach to organizations and teams.
I recently ran across a scale question that trumps expanding a business. Someone asked, “How do you scale a culture?” It is a great question. My friend Mark Miller has written a new book, Leaders Made Here, on building a leadership culture. You can pick up a copy at the bottom of the post. Today, Mark has agreed to tackle the question of scaling culture with the following guest post.
[Tweet “”Culture is what people actually do with a high degree of predictability.” via @leadersserve”]
How Do You Scale Culture?
Scale is an interesting challenge. It is the aim of countless organizations, but real scale is hard to achieve – not as unlikely as a finding a unicorn, but really hard to do well. My perspective on this topic is limited: I’ve worked for one organization for almost 40 years. Now, we have grown from about $150 million to almost $8 billion during that span, but I’m convinced scaling assets is not nearly the challenge as scaling a culture. This is something we work on daily.
What is a culture? My working definition for decades has been the same: the collective habits of the people. Not the aspirations of leadership. Our culture is not what we wish it would be, it is what it is. However, I do believe leaders can change a culture and this can certainly include aspirational elements, but a culture is what people actually do with a high degree of predictability.
Here’s a tangible example. One of the elements of our culture is that when someone says, “Thank you,” we say, “My pleasure.” No, we’re not perfect and we’re not robots – it doesn’t happen every time. But it happens a lot, millions of times every day. Why would I say this is part of our culture? Because it actually happens. I don’t say this because we want people to say “My pleasure,” it is only part of the culture because people say it with great consistency.
You may be wondering, what’s the point? Before I answer the question, please don’t miss the magnitude of this achievement. Our independent restaurant operators employ about 100,000 people, and the majority of them are under the age of 20. So, to have tens of thousands of young people saying “My pleasure” was really hard to accomplish. I didn’t even mention turnover. But, the really hard part is important. If you want to scale your culture across districts, divisions, states, territories, and even the globe, prepare yourself – it is really hard to do.
Here are a few ideas on how you can increase your chances of scaling your culture . . .
Be Clear – What are the key elements of your culture? How could you institutionalize these attributes? If life-long learning is a cultural norm, you could require everyone to have a personal development plan. Make no mistake, vagueness will scale and when it does, you have nothing but vagueness. Are you clear on the elements of your culture that matter most? Are you clear on the actions that can foster scale?
Be Selective – You can’t scale everything. I believe attempts to do so quickly look like micro-management. In his book, The Power of Habit, Charles Duggin talks about power of keystone habits – those habitual behaviors which have a ripple effect. Work to discover these for your culture.
Be Accountable – If you want to scale a certain behavior, determine how you’ll measure your progress. And by measure, I mean real numbers, not approximations or estimates. If you want people to say, “My pleasure,” find a way to measure it.
Be Relentless – We watched a video recently of our founder asking, reminding, and telling us the appropriate response when someone says thank you is … what? We practiced saying “My pleasure” in groups as large as 5,000 people. The interesting thing about the video – it was pieced together from clips over a ten-year period! What are you relentlessly and tirelessly communicating regarding your culture?
Culture is powerful – so powerful, Peter Drucker once said, that “culture eats strategy for breakfast.” If this is true, don’t you want to be the one creating the culture?
[Tweet “”Culture eats strategy for breakfast.” – PeterDrucker “]
If you are looking to build a leadership culture for your organization, I encourage you to pick up copies of Mark’s book, Leader’s Made Here, and read it with your leadership team.
 

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All Leadership Organizational Effectiveness

Hopefully You're not Beyond Crazy

Check out this week’s guest blog from my friend, Mark Miller. Mark is the best leadership thinker I know and has written a great post on how we can avoid being crazy leaders. Enjoy!
Beyond Crazy…
I’m crazy – yes, I admit it – and my family, friends, and colleagues can all confirm it. Like many leaders, I don’t live in the real world. We’re always pursuing and attempting to rally others to a future that does not yet exist. Our success is contingent on our ability to see what others do not see. I think that’s a really good kind of crazy! However, there is another form of crazy I want no part of:
Repeating the same activities and expecting different outcomes.
From my perspective, this is beyond crazy – it is certifiable insanity! The best leaders work diligently to avoid this situation.
Here’s one technique that may help you avoid this type of crazy: After-Action Reviews (AAR).
An AAR is a structured process in which participants evaluate what worked, what didn’t, and why. Football teams call it reviewing game footage, others a post-mortem, and some a project de-brief. It doesn’t matter what you call it, as long as you do it. There’s much you can learn from these sessions if they are approached with sobriety, candor, and integrity. The entire group must be willing to face the truth.
After you’ve done your best to sort out facts from fiction, reasons from excuses, and ideas for improvement, you can create a plan to ensure your next attempt — whether it be a project, a performance, a presentation, or a sales pitch — will be better than the last.
Learn from the past – don’t live there.
You will not drift to success; discipline will be required. After-action reviews, executed consistently, can accelerate your journey.
Stay crazy!
[Tweet “Learn from the past – don’t live there. via @leadersserve”]
[Tweet “”If you want something different, you must do something different.””]
 
If you need help building a leadership culture, pick up a copy of Mark’s new book, Leaders Made Here.

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All Leadership Organizational Effectiveness

Leaders Made Here

Yesterday, I mentioned the launch of our new book, UNSTUCK which comes out on Monday. Today I want to tell you about another book that launched this week. The title is Leader’s Made Here, and it was written by Mark Miller. The book is the #1 New Release on Amazon for business & organizational learning. When it comes to leadership, Mark is my hero. He and I have co-authored on a couple of projects and I have had the opportunity to view up close his work with Chick-fil-A. Leaders Made Here is about building a leadership culture. Below is a post from Mark on this concept. I hope you will read it and then pick up a copy of the book. A leader is the architect of the culture. Whether you lead an organization, team, department, or family, Leaders Made Here is a great resource to help you in your efforts.
Building A Leadership Culture
Almost 10 years ago, I had the privilege to co-author The Secret with Ken Blanchard, a book about Chick-fil-A’s point of view on leadership. It was a lot of fun doing the book with Ken and even more fun talking to groups all over the world about leadership. What I didn’t expect was the question that I received over and over again… “We’ve read The Secret, what’s next?”
In the beginning, I wasn’t really sure what people wanted to know. Were they asking about my next book? Did they want to know my career plans or what time my flight was going to leave? Most often, it was none of the above. Leaders around the world appreciated the lessons we tried to convey in the book, but they had an intuitive sense, informed by their experience, that the book was not the end of the conversation. They were right.
What organizations desperately need is not just a point-of-view on leadership, they need a leadership culture. I define a leadership culture as a place in which leaders are routinely and systematically produced. In a leadership culture, it is not unusual when there is a surplus of qualified leadership candidates for an open position.
Here are five keys to creating a leadership culture.
Define it – Does your organization have an agreed upon definition of leadership? If not, that’s the starting point.
Train it – Having a definition is critical but insufficient alone. Can your leaders deliver on your definition? Some can, I’m sure, but training is probably required – at least for emerging leaders. Leadership skills are not innate.
Practice it – Do you give emerging leaders the opportunity to lead? Most of what leaders learn about leadership they learn from leading. Give them the chance to practice by actually letting them lead.
Measure it – This can take many forms – Performance reviews; 360 feedback; “Readiness for Next Opportunity.” Then there’s always the “9 Box” popularized by G.E. which evaluates leaders on two dimensions – performance and alignment with organizational values. You can even measure participation in leadership training.
Model it – If your existing leaders are not showing people what great leadership looks like in your organization; if they aren’t working diligently to demonstrate the attributes outlined in your definition of leadership, none of the previous ideas will have much impact.
How deep is your leadership bench?
Mark Miller is the best-selling author of 6 books, an in-demand speaker and an executive at Chick-fil-A. His latest book, Leaders Made Here, describes how to nurture leaders throughout the organization, from the front lines to the executive ranks and outlines a clear and replicable approach to creating the leadership bench every organization needs.
Buy a copy of Leaders Made Here and use the following link for a free copy to give someone else.
[Tweet “”Nothing improves without measurement. Leadership is no exception.” #LeadersMadeHere “]
[Tweet “”Leaders must model the attitude, commitment, and leadership behaviors they are advocating for others.” –@LeadersServe #LeadersMadeHere”]

 
 
 

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Organizational Effectiveness Workplace Culture

The Future of Work

Leaders are responsible for seeing the unseen – it’s at the core of our job description – vision. I believe this is the most critical of all our responsibilities. Yes, I understand leadership is more than vision. However, I also know leadership always begins with a picture of the future.

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Organizational Effectiveness

Why Infrastructure Matters – Part 1

Leaders are usually great at seeing the next hill the team needs to take. Many are crystal clear on the vision and values of their organization. However, too many leaders fail to understand the critical role infrastructure plays in sustaining success.

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Engagement Organizational Effectiveness Workplace Culture

Today's Challenge: New Hire Orientation

Horst Schultze, the former president of the Ritz-Carlton hotel chain said, ”The most important time in an employee’s career is the first 40 hours.” How much thought have you given to this crucial period? Today’s Challenge: What to include in new employee orientation?

Categories
Engagement Organizational Effectiveness Teams

6 Opportunities for the New Leader

I’ve worked at one of America’s great companies, Chick-fil-A, Inc., my entire career. During my time here, I’ve had 7 different jobs… so far! My latest assignment came just a few weeks ago; I’ll be leading a new team: Organizational Effectiveness. In a recent interview, I was asked about my approach to a new role. Prior to that question, I’d never tried to capture my thoughts on this topic.

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Creativity Workplace Culture

Work Space Matters

I’ve long had a fascination with design – all types: architectural, graphics, products, interior design, all of it. I’ve also been a student of how work space affects our productivity and our creativity.