Team Leadership: Does Your Leadership Team Really Talk? Part 2
Its the ability to engage in quality conversations that sets high-performing teams apart. And there are significant commercial advantages, too not least, better decision-making, improved efficiency and delivering organisational change more effectively. Team Performance expert Philip Houghton has come up with the key questions leaders must ask their teams.
SUMMARY OF THE ISSUES FROM PART 1
- Success Achieving Leadership Qualities At Church todays companies requires more than the brilliance of any individual.
- Leadership teams full of strong individuals do not produce high quality teamwork. If each individual just delivers on his or her own competencies, however effectively, the team is not truly functional.
- Synergy created between talented individuals tapping collective potential lies at the heart of successful leadership teams.
- Research shows: 70%1 of executive teams lack clarity on what they are aiming to deliver to customers, effective strategy implementation remains a key concern for most CEOs2, and trust is a real issue in 65% of teams3.
- Are you having the quality of conversations to make a significant difference in your business and markets?
- Does your team realise the commercial value of its collective thinking, or only its individual thinking?
- And, how could you ensure the time you spend How to Achieve Leadership Qualities within Self is transformational, rather than just transactional?
- The ability to engage in high-quality conversations sets high-performing teams apart.
- Teams who engage in regular, quality, focused debate about their strategy, capabilities and behaviours are significantly more successful than those that dont.
- The job of leadership is to ask and answer the right questions.
CONVERSATIONS ABOUT CAPABILITY
- What capabilities are needed to execute our strategy? Clearly any conversation about strategy, working practices and resources also needs some objective discussion of team and individual capabilities. However, How to Achieve Leadership Qualities teams fail to even consider these issues, let alone introduce objectivity into the process. This form of insularity, bred by a lack of self-evaluation and internal challenge, often lies at the heart of team underperformance. And even with the spotlight on How To Achieve Leadership Qualities As Asserting strategic capabilities, leadership and management teams rarely receive sufficient, targeted, development. While it is the leaders responsibility to bring the right type and quality of talent into the team, the ability of teams to subsequently identify and close important capability gaps, as business conditions change, is crucial to ensuring effective strategy execution.
- Do we have sufficient diversity in the team? Many leaders recruit in their own image, rather than positively seeking diversity. And many teams put the lid on acknowledging let alone actively discussing their differences. Both these approaches limit the potential for synergy. Whilst its a significant challenge for all senior teams to harness differences, the rewards are much Assuming Qualities In How To Achieve Leadership when they do. Diversity of thinking style, experience and perspective Delegating In How To Achieve Leadership Qualities lead to more competitive products, services, strategies and business cultures. In practice, teams will need to consider whether they have an effective balance of styles for example drivers (to push for results), more cautious thinkers (to play devils advocate), creative problem-solvers (to help with unexpected challenges), detailed planners (to re-adjust operational requirements) and relationship builders (to help manage stakeholders). A diverse team working collectively not only creates a balanced business but one with many more opportunities.
- Are we at the Assuming Qualities In How To Achieve Leadership of thinking? Winning teams retain a high degree of strategic and tactical awareness that ensures they continually question their own approach and thinking. This type of self-challenge enables a team to determine whether its the right time to invest heavily in a new opportunity, withdraw from declining markets or continue its current approach. Teams that become too insular and self-absorbed can fail to recognise potential threats, challenge the status-quo or judge themselves by wider industry best-practices. A lack of up-to-the-minute commercial awareness can also contribute to teams losing touch with what actions drive results, and lead to a slow but inevitable decline in performance.
Part 3 will discuss conversations about behaviour, and how a leader can create the environment for high performance.
REFERENCES
1: Kaplan & Norton: Having Trouble With Your Strategy, Then Map it? (2004)
2: Monitor Research Analysis: Survey of over 300 Senior Executives Across Industry Sectors (2006)
3: McKinsey: Teams At The Top (2004)
Philip Houghton (philip.houghton@cavendish2.com) is a founder Partner of Cavendish2 (http://www.cavendish2.com). This Bristol, England based partnership consults to leading brand organisations on team performance issues including Deutsche Post, DaimlerChrysler, Axa Life, Whitbread and Inbev. After studying Business Administration Philip worked within B2B services with a leading recruitment brand and subsequently DHL International. At DHL he held positions in Sales and Country Management and spent three years in the middle east; including Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Kuwait. On his return Philip joined PA Consulting and operated as an Executive Head-hunter. Subsequently he moved into Organisation Development and held positions with Coutts, Deloitte & Touche and Sibson Consulting, working in all areas of Leadership development, culture improvement, talent consulting and team performance.
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