PART III
From the previous
article, you may now realize that your leadership is sending some messages that
need fixing. So, how can you improve your leadership? The solution is to go out
and LISTEN, listen to complaints about your support, messages of low standards.
Then correct that condition and do it to the receiver’s satisfaction. This
corrects the problem thereby making the worker’s job easier, corrects your poor
leadership from misleading others and provides living proof that you really
care about your people. In addition, this process of detection and correction
teaches workers how to solve problems, how to treat customers and how to use
value standards in the workplace. One stone can kill more than one bird.
Luckily for you, these
workers don’t use the value standards they got from you to judge what goes on
around them. What they use are their own value standards and all of their
values are good, for instance everyone believes in honesty. Since each worker
has different standards compared to the next worker, each will be bothered more
by one thing, and less by another. Taken collectively, they disclose most of
the problems, if not all problems. And by the way, if most of them line up
against one particular thing, rest assured that thing requires major fixing.
So, get out with your
people, listen to their complaints and suggestions, and take corrective action.
Corrective action may be just an explanation of certain details unknown by the
worker. Whatever it is, corrective action must be timely, of unquestionably
high quality and must include getting back to the originator to find out if
your intended fix is acceptable (don’t put the fix into action before getting
feedback). As I mentioned in the previous article on Leadership through Support,
this is your leadership and you want it to reflect only the highest standards
for every value. The values of significance are: honesty, industriousness,
confidence, positive attitude, compassion, humility, admission of error,
perseverance, fairness, forgiveness, forthrightness, trust, courtesy, grit,
heroism, knowledge, integrity, quality, loyalty and selflessness.
Listening itself must be
conducted in such a way as to reflect high standards of the above values. Your
tone of voice and attitude are crucial. You must make clear that you know you
are making the worker’s job more difficult than it should be, albeit without
intending to do so, but that you are willing to make needed corrections. Let
them know you are the supplier of support and they are your customers. Act like
it, body language, facial expressions, smiles, etc! The customer is always
right so, act that way and say it several times. In addition, you may have to
ask questions to flesh out the problem or to get the worker to talk. Suffice it
to say that bosses are scary people in general and you need to gain the
worker’s trust before they can really open up. Making clear that you are their
servant as concerns support issues is a big step in the right direction.
After you start hacking
away at the forest of your bad or low quality leadership, workforce performance
will improve almost in lockstep. Don’t be surprised, just keep at it. It makes
no difference if you are a lower or higher level boss, the effect on the people
for whom you are responsible is the same.
Listening has a large
number of associated positive effects as well as opportunities for superior
leadership not mentioned herein. The only additional effect I will discuss is
commitment.
Please stay tuned to tomorrow's article on Gaining Subordinate Commitment.
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