Growing health and effectiveness

A blog centered around The Addington Method, leadership, culture, organizational clarity, faith issues, teams, Emotional Intelligence, personal growth, dysfunctional and healthy leaders, boards and governance, church boards, organizational and congregational cultures, staff alignment, intentional results and missions.
Showing posts with label characteristics of healthy staff. Show all posts
Showing posts with label characteristics of healthy staff. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 13, 2021

Seven characteristics of your best staff members


There are many things we look for in key staff. Some of those things are obvious, such as whether someone can do their job, whether they have the needed expertise, or whether or not they fit in our culture. 


The best leaders and staff have another set of common characteristics as well. We don't always think a lot about these, but as you will see, they are powerful personal characteristics.


One: They are evangelists for the cause they represent - they don't just buy in; they live the mission. There is a difference between believing in a vision or mission and being an evangelist for it. The former is a given, but the latter attitude brings others into the organization's work with energy and enthusiasm. Evangelists sell the vision and mission to everyone around them in an infectious way. They embody the cause and live the cause in ways that others don't. To be around them is to be influenced by their passion.


Two: They believe that great things can happen - they think big. There is a difference between those who believe something can happen through their efforts and those who think big things can happen. Your best staff don't dream small dreams, but they dream big dreams. They may start small, but their vision is significant because they want to see the organization accomplish big things. Too many staff are easily satisfied with the status quo, and too few believe that much more is possible.


Three: They are optimistic and realistic simultaneously - they see what can be and what is. In light of the last characteristic, you might think that the best staff members live in an unrealistic world. That could not be further from the truth. They live with both optimism and reality in equal measure. They are highly realistic about what is, but they also believe that much more is possible with leverage, the right people, and the right strategies. And they are realistic about how they can get added momentum and what it will take.


Four: They have an action bias - they get stuff done. Your best staff are not dreamers but doers. They can get things done because they have a bias toward action. They think strategically but are always doing something to move the ball forward. The status quo is where one may be today but won't be where one is tomorrow. Change, innovation, new ideas, and new strategies are a part of their everyday focus. This is why the best staff will only work in highly empowered organizations where they can act, try new things, and experiment with new strategies.


Five: They believe it takes a team - they develop a highly synergistic team. Your best staff are not lone rangers - no matter how brilliant they are. Instead, they believe in teamwork and always work synergistically toward agreed-upon goals. Too often, we hire brilliant people but must ensure they work well with teams. In the team, the best ideas are generated, and the best momentum and leverage happen. Teams multiply the power of any one individual in a quantum way.


Six: They empower and release - they give away opportunity liberally. Those who control others also "control forward progress" because they don't release others to do what they can do well. Momentum comes when progress is driven by multiple empowered and released individuals. Staff who control rather than empower hurt the individuals they control, and they hurt the organization's forward momentum.


Seven: They always leave the organization better than they found it - they improve continuously. A sign of a great staff member is one who is always committed to helping the organization get better. This is not about creating a better space for themselves but a better space for the organization as a whole. When thinking about their job, they always think about the organization as a whole and seek to improve it.


We should look for these characteristics in the staff we hire, but we should also be training our current staff to live out these commitments.