|
|
Traveling Light Ezine |
September 5, 2008 |
|
Welcome to the twenty-fourth edition of Jennifer Selby Long's Traveling Light. Are you blessed with the talent and opportunity to lead? Traveling Light will skyrocket your impact and lighten the load in your life. It's based on the work of executive coach and management consultant Jennifer Selby Long. Copyright 2008 Jennifer Selby Long. All rights reserved. Please add lighten@selbygroup.com to your whitelist or address book in your e-mail program, so that you have no trouble receiving future issues. |
|
How to Create Shared Values so You Can Make Your Customers and Employees Happier |
|
The scenario is this: you've been tapped to lead the Our Corporate Values project. How bogus. You dread it. Nothing holds less appeal for the typical leader than being assigned a vague internal project which feels more like putting your hand in a bowl of Jell-O than building a successful, thriving business. Short of failed mergers and acquisitions, there are few projects which so consistently waste time and breed cynicism in organizations today. No wonder you don't want to touch it with a 10-foot pole. Still, you can turn this seeming dog of a project into a meaningful and pragmatic contribution (and do your career no harm, either) by following a few challenging, but ultimately simple, guidelines. Before all else: get crystal clear on the business purpose of the project. Answer the question, "Why?" Be prepared to introduce and completely guide the discussion. Amazingly, even the senior-most sponsors may not have really thought this through, in stark contrast to the thorough (and, of course, undeserved) whipping they gave your last budget proposal. Why does this shared values project exist? What prompted the CEO's decision to inculcate a set of shared values throughout the organization? How will the business be improved if this project is a success? Is this value substantial enough to warrant our time and attention? What would happen to the business if you did nothing? What will happen to the business if you don't do this well or if you let it stall and lose momentum? Is this the right thing to do, or would we get greater value by focusing on something else? Some common business reasons for creating shared values are:
On the other hand, if you really just want this assignment to go away, there's no faster way to kill it than to move forward without a business case. Unfortunately, you'll have to live with the political and career consequences of ruining the CEO's pet project. Darn it. Second: set up a process that will integrate these shared values with the organization you really have, not the ideal organization you wish you had. Guiding values and other similar projects are already at risk of being encumbered by excessive idealism. Their only hope for success is to connect them to the sometimes messy, uneven reality of the living, breathing creature known as your company. There are six keys to a successful culture change, all of which are necessary to make it real and keep it from becoming yet another dusty plaque on the wall that gets tossed in the trash the next time you move your office. If you want yours to be successful, make sure all six are in place in your planning and execution:
Likewise, look at the opposite end of the spectrum and you will see the factors that drive the downfall of these initiatives every time. Failed culture change initiatives were any or all of the following:
Set yourself and your team up for success by setting up the project right and closely monitoring these six attributes to keep it on track. Organizations held together by shared values, not just business success, make for happier employees and happier employees make for happier customers. |
| Upcoming Events |
|
I became interested in the subject after noticing different patterns between my male and female clients, even when they had achieved equal levels of financial and career success. I went in search of studies that explained why, but there weren't any, so I did one myself. What I learned was so important that I share it whenever and wherever I can. For more information, please visit http://www.portlandapt.org/. |
| ___ |
|
Contact us for further information at: Lighten@selbygroup.com To subscribe, go to www.selbygroup.com and click on the Free Ezine link. Past copies of this ezine are archived on our website: www.selbygroup.com © 2008 Jennifer Selby. All rights reserved. Please share the contents of this ezine with anyone at all. I ask only that you maintain the copyright and attribution. Jennifer Selby Long Email: Jennifer.selby@selbygroup.com |
| ___ |