Why leaders need to develop productive superpowers

Recently another negative report came out confirming the continued decline of Jamaica’s productivity. In a recent speech, IDB official Therese Turner-Jones understated that “firms in Jamaica are not particularly efficient” and “private sector workers are as inefficient as the Government.”

As a business leader, this is a song whose tune is probably familiar. But it is frustrating, because as far as you know, you are working as hard as you can. However, it’s obviously not enough because there is considerable empirical evidence that we are almost as far as we can be from being the Usain Bolts of productivity in the world.

To state the obvious: closing the gap means doing things differently from ways we have ever done before

It won’t be easy. There are only a handful of local companies who treat their operations like finely tuned machines. They are vigilant: always looking for first indicators of an incipient problem. In addition, their leaders treat their own individual systems in the same way. Seeking to be as personally effective as possible, they perform like Formula One Drivers.

Why We Need a Change of Mind

Culturally, we prefer to favour the underdog. Just listen to us re-tell the story of the “likkle guy on his push-cart” flying down Mount Diablo past a “big man in a Benz”, skating on just two wheels the whole way. However, this propensity to “big up” the unsophisticated shouldn’t be taken too far. Lewis Hamilton, multiple Formula One Champion, didn’t become a winner by luck. He spent years perfecting his craft and mastering his equipment, continuing to develop his skills every day.

During a 100 mile per hour race, he has learned to track a tremendous number of changing variables using sophisticated instruments. Off-track, he’s trying to find ways to save a few grams here and there, or cut wind resistance with the slightest of alterations.

Too many of our executives settle for much less in their personal productivity, as if they are push-cart men or women. They run late, forget commitments, allow their email to pile up and let their lives drift dangerously out of balance. In other words, their employees view them as cautionary tales rather than role models. While they may dress the part, speak well or have the house and car which befit their status, they don’t view personal productivity in the same vein.

It’s optional.

In this respect, our local executives are satisfied being moderately better than the worst employees. They fail to hold themselves to a high personal standard; instead they are happy to barely beat a low social standard.

However, the best executives view their personal productivity as an extension of their company’s operations. As a result, they tackle it with high effort and rigour, developing two superpowers along the way.

Superpower #1—Detect Early Warning Signs of Trouble

The most productive leaders have a kind of “spidey-sense”: the ability Spiderman has to sense trouble before it occurs. In like manner, they can detect the moment when their personal system first starts to fail.

For example, if you had this skill, you would be able to see when it’s time to upgrade your technique for managing email. All it would take is the disappearance of one or two messages into the proverbial cracks; long before an actual complaint is received.

This ability to detect early warning signs of trouble is rare, much in the way Hamilton has the kind of foresight other drivers cannot even imagine. It gives him an edge in a close race.

In a tough economy, companies need leaders who demonstrate these abilities while actively teaching them to others.

Superpower #2 – Develop Diagnostic Skills

Once a problem is detected that’s just a start. Few take the next step: discovering why the issue exists in the first place.

For example, the challenge of email overwhelm is hardly solved by purchasing an expensive smartphone. In fact, it often makes the situation worse. The person with weak diagnostic skills would commit this error without understanding why.

The few who have developed superpowers waste little time scouring the internet, talking to friends or polling their colleagues. Instead, they know how to scrutinize their current practices and tools. If you have ever watched an episode of “House,” the television show about a doctor with fantastic diagnostic expertise, you may understand. These skills are hard to develop, but they save tremendous amounts of time and energy, enabling someone to make precise interventions.

When Jamaican executives start behaving like Formula One Drivers, we may produce role models with superpowers. Rather than Parliamentarians who are perpetually late, or CEO’s whose lives are unhealthy and unbalanced, we would live to see something new: leaders who take their personal productivity as seriously as their most recent haircut, watch or shopping trip to Miami.

Francis Wade is the author of Perfect Time-Based Productivity, a keynote speaker and a management consultant. Missed a column? To receive a free download with articles from 2010-2016, contact columns@fwconsulting.com.

http://jamaica-gleaner.com/article/business/20170521/francis-wade-why-leaders-need-develop-productive-superpowers

The Cure for Listless Employees

It’s remarkable how quickly a new employee, once excited by the job, becomes just as ordinary as others who have been in the company for years. As a leader, what difference can you make before the rot sets in? In this article I share one practice suggested by psychologists which works.
 
Managers shake their heads in bewilderment. There’s a disappointment they feel when they realize that a fresh new hire, in whom they have invested a modicum of hope, has lost his way. All of a sudden, when compared to his listless colleagues, he is just as disengaged and lackluster. What happened?
 
There’s usually more than a single cause, but an employee can benefit from learning how to remain resilient. As a supervisor, you can fill the gap with the right lessons. If you intervene early and equip him with the skills and awareness he needs, you can help him keep his optimism intact.
 
Consider one powerful practice which has emerged from the research of Harvard Business School professor Teresa Amabile. In an effort to distinguish the elements which make for a great day on the job, she discovered that people’s satisfaction and productivity are strongly tied to the belief that they are making progress. She noted that if you can help them notice their positive movement towards their goals and stay present to it, they are more satisfied.
 
However, the average manager is quite unaware of this finding, often acting in a careless, if not reckless way. Here are a few things he/she fails to do which are quite damaging, but can be easily remedied.
 
 
1. Train Employees to Wake Up
New employees eventually adapt the cynical mindset of those around them. They divide the week into two phases with respect to their time: “mine”, which I experience on weekends, holidays and vacations, and “theirs” which consists of every working weekday. It leads them to act as if “A bad day on my own time is better than a good day on their time.” Before long, this mantra becomes their modus operandus.
 
A more useful focus would be to look for progress towards meaningful goals. When taught this lesson, employees can instantly recite their daily accomplishments on demand. For example, The Ritz Carlton is famous for including acknowledgements in its daily mandatory huddles. Keeping your achievements top of mind becomes a habit in this environment.
 
Employees also must learn that humans have a lopsided reaction to failure and success. According to the research, a setback has a greater impact than a win, when measured in emotional terms. This remarkable fact can be used to train employees to be extra-vigilant during moments when their results are poor.
 
However, managers who don’t know the importance of these elements leave employees to discover them by chance. The result is predictable: they don’t have a clue which leads them into a deep sense of resignation.
 
 
2. Teach Employees to Practice Daily Accomplishments
The few managers who try to wake employees up sometimes overuse trite clichés or sermons. These put people to sleep. There’s a more effective alternative: uncover the physical activities which guarantee results.
 
For example, instead of telling employees to “focus on the positive” it’s far better to give them a diary on the first day of the job, along with specific questions to answer each day which help them capture their progress. Don’t stop there. Also set up one-on-one meetings in which the first order of business is a report on their most recent accomplishments.
 
3. Stop Making Unforced Errors
Most managers have given little thought to the above two actions, but they still make mistakes which dent employee enthusiasm. They share casual stories, jokes and anecdotes which don’t help: they end up robbing and undermining employees of any sense of progress. The same happens when an employee’s work is reassigned, her ideas are dismissed or when her attempts to improve the way she does the job are rebuffed.
 
These minor, daily occurrences don’t register as important events for most managers, but they burden employees. When the manager is the cause of the damage to an employee’s progress, the wound is double-deep and likely to scar the psyche of even the most motivated employee. Over time, a negative track record is built which drives out high performers who can get jobs elsewhere. When they leave they explain “I’m getting more money” when in fact, they just want to feel as if they are not wasting their careers.
 
Managers need to more disciplined, and less cavalier, about their utterances and actions so that they don’t create unintended setbacks. The best are aware of these dynamics and use them as leverage to achieve results, starting with the very first day on the job.
 
Francis Wade is the author of Perfect Time-Based Productivity, a keynote speaker and a management consultant. Missed a column? To receive a free download with articles from 2010-2016, send email to columns@fwconsulting.com.
 
http://jamaica-gleaner.com/article/business/20170507/francis-wade-cure-listless-employees