The 5 Integrity Habits
Here are the 5 most
essential habits every business leader must cultivate to inspire and positively
impact his or her team.
How do you stack up?
As an entrepreneur, you're
very much under a microscope. Your team watches you closely; your customers pay
attention to small slices of their experiences with you and make up what type
of person and company you are in their own heads. And so do your vendors and
investors.
Business leaders
understand that habits matter. Here are what I consider to be five essential
"integrity habits," which will have you behaving at your
best and positively impacting your team.
1. Be on time, all the
time.
We have to start with
first things first. Be on time--all the time. This simple behavior demonstrates
to your team that you take your commitments seriously and live with integrity.
Sure it's easy to slip,
and your team always seems willing to wait. But the message that being late
sends hurts your credibility inside your company.
When you take appointments
and deadlines seriously, so will your team. It is one behavior with a huge
return on investment in terms of modeling accountability inside your company.
Too many companies implement
respect in a hierarchical manner. Your time is not more important than an
employee's time or a customer's time in their eyes. Being on time shows
respect, and it makes a big difference to the receiver.
And of course you can
rationalize why you didn't meet a stated deadline and no one will challenge
you, but they will model the behavior you show them. So model the high standard
of being on time, all the time.
2. Clarify all action
items and deliverables in writing at the end of every meeting.
One of the biggest reasons
things get missed is because they weren't handed off cleanly to begin with.
Many times the receiving party doesn't know just what they've been asked to do,
or in fact they may not know that they've been asked to do anything at all.
Hence the need to clarify
all action items and deliverables in writing. Not only does this make sure that
you've captured all your action items, but it is also a powerful way to role
model how you want your team to behave.
Wherever possible, number
the commitments so that they are absolutely clear.
At your next meeting, this
might sound like:
OK, summing up, here's
what I've committed to: I've got three action items here. Item one is to review
the Johnson Proposal and make a yes or no decision by this Friday end of
business. Item two is to give feedback via email to Carl about the new
orientation process. And item three is to send out the date of our next
quarterly planning session to the exec team by noon tomorrow. [I encourage you
to visibly write each of them down in your notes as your meeting progresses.] Now,
Cheryl, I have down that you've committed to two items...
Teach your team to employ
this same skill with their staff. It's a best practice that companies that
execute adopt.
3. Clearly state what you can't
commit to so that you don't lower the accountability bar in your company by
missing a "phantom deliverable."
"Phantom
deliverables" are those things that the other person thinks you committed
to but you didn't.
As a leader, you need to
exhibit great communication by making any phantom deliverables you see come out
of a meeting explicit. That way,
if you can commit to that
deliverable, you do so, and if you can't, you clarify that you are not
committing to it.
4. "Close" the
accountability loop.
It's one thing to meet
your commitments, but it's another to make sure that the other parties involved
get that you've done so. So "close" the loop.
Mark, as promised, here is
the Data Form Proposal due to you tomorrow...
5. Be aware of your stress
behaviors.
It's been said that
adversity and pressure don't so much make the person as they reveal the
person. What you do at stressful moments leaves a magnified impression on your
team, your customers, your vendors, and your investors.
So let stress be a trigger
for you to take a deep breath and behave at your best.
Source: The 5 Integrity Habits
Source: The 5 Integrity Habits
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