The
Rainmaker Group has had the privilege of working
with many organizations to help transform their
culture. One topic that always comes up during
the course of our work with an organization is
the issue of politics.
Every organization has politics - it is unavoidable.
However, one must remember that politics can be
both good and bad. Good politics are rooted in
personal accountability and promote innovation
and performance excellence. Bad politics on the
other hand are characterized by a lack of personal
accountability and the acceptance of poor performance
by team members and are often the result of a
phenomenon that we refer to as "The Who matters
more than the What."
This
phenomenon is seen most often in manager/subordinate
relationships where a low performing manager is
unable to gain the respect of his or her team
without exhibiting favoritism towards chosen team
members. This can be especially devastating on
employee morale and invariably diminishes the
performance of the team and the organization as
a whole.
Below
you will find five signs that poor management
and a lack of personal accountability are damaging
employee morale and destroying Possibility in
your organization.
-
When the WHO matters more than the WHAT
- Meaning that who a team member
is matters more that what they
contribute when it comes to performance reviews,
project assignments, raises, and promotions.
In these situations how well an individual performs
has no impact on their career aspects as the
favored employees always seem to get the best
opportunities to advance their careers regardless
of whether they deserve it or not.
This display of favoritism is often a two-way
street as a manager will curry favor on a team
member in return for an acceptance this manager's
poor performance. Ultimately the manager and
subordinate will work in concert to help conceal
their poor performance and blame others for
missed opportunities and team shortcomings.
This ultimately has the effect of driving the
real high performers to other organizations
and teams where personal accountability is embraced
and employee performance is judge objectively.
-
Information is distributed on a "need
to know" basis - In cultures that
lack personal accountability organizational
knowledge and information is guarded as a form
or power and currency. Managers abstain from
transparency and only share information with
team members that they feel have a need to know
about it. Low performing and insecure managers
often do this to give themselves a sense of
power and control and give off the impression
that they are important members of the organization.
One way you can tell if this is an issue in
your organization is that numerous employee
team members are heard asking a manager the
same or similar questions aimed at retrieving
a given piece of organizational information.
Personally accountable managers recognize the
need to share information with others and do
so proactively.
-
Trivial issues must be handled by management
- This can be a particularly troublesome
destroyer of employee morale and organizational
Possibility. Poor managers want control over
issue - even when it could be best handled by
establishing a company system or policy to empower
employees to make routine decisions. Low performing
managers use this as a means of displaying their
power and exerting control over their employees.
Not surprisingly, this diminishes morale among
employees who are intelligent enough to make
on their own and do not need to be coddled by
their supervisor.
-
Top performers leave for greener pastures
- Poor management that lacks personal accountability
will consistently drive the best performers
within an organization to companies (often competitors)
that embrace personal accountability and reward
high levels of performance. High performers
quickly recognize a manger that is inept and
quickly become frustrated with their lack of
performance. You might say the two are like
oil and water. The truth is that lousy managers
don't want high performers on their team whose
performance will ultimately shed light on their
own incompetence.
Remember… People most often leave their
manager, not their position. If you have carefully
hired a team member using a validated personality
profile assessment and compared the results
to a job benchmark for the position, the chances
are overwhelmingly good that the top performer
has left in response to a lousy manager.
-
Management places blame on their team
for poor performance - This is a clear
sign of a lack of personal accountability and
creates considerable employee morale problems.
The truth is that the "buck" stops
with the manager of a team or department and
he or she must be personally accountable for
the results the team achieves. After all, it
is the manager who must assure that the right
people are hired onto the team and placed in
the right seats on the "bus". It is
the manager that must ensure that each team
member knows what is expected of them and does
their job well. And ultimately, it is the manager
who sets the bar for job performance with the
level of personal accountability they exhibit.
An
organization's culture is critically important
to both its identity and its ultimate success.
Furthermore, it provides the foundation for high
levels of employee morale and job engagement.
The
choice is up to you: Mediocrity of Performance
Excellence.
It
all starts with Personal Accountability.
Give
us a call. We can help make personal accountability
a core cultural value in your organization.
Now go
maximize possibility!
1-866-988-RAIN
Copyright 2008
The Rainmaker Group, Inc.
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