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.
Thursday, February 20, 2020
If you are a team leader you are responsible for ten things
Teams are integral to every organization. In fact, they are the building blocks of an organization so the health of each team is directly connected to the overall health of the enterprise. If you think of teams as the Lego blocks of your organization, think of half of those teams being unhealthy and the other half healthy. Each unhealthy team will impact those other teams that touch it, interact with it or collaborate with.
Thus the role of team leaders is integral to the health of the organization, more important than many organizations recognize. If they understood the significance of a leader's role they would invest far more in the training and development of their leaders than they often do.
What then is the job of a competent team leader? I would suggest that it involves the following:
One: Building a strong, aligned, results oriented, healthy and synergystic team under good leadership with accountability for results.
Two: Provide great clarity to the team on how they are to contribute to the overall mission and purpose of the organization.
Three: Create a healthy team culture where everyone's input is valued, where people can speak the truth to one another and to their leaders and where new ideas are encouraged.
Four: Ensure that team member have the necessary skill, tools and authority to do their jobs.
Five: Help team members understand their wiring, gifting and lane and help them grow professionally and personally.
Six: Develop new leaders who could take the leader's role or a leadership role elsewhere.
Seven: Be a champion and encourager of team members so that they are encouraged to be all that they can be.
Eight: Provide timely feedback in order to help team members grow.
Nine: Rather than micromanage, give freedom within boundaries for team members to accomplish their work in ways that may be different than yours.
Ten: Ensure that there are results that are consistent with the clarity of the team's responsibilities.
The investment in team leaders is one of the most important investments any organization can make. It will change the return on mission or return on investment dramatically.
Tuesday, February 18, 2020
Leaders who hurt others and the organization they lead
It is unfortunate but common to encounter leaders who hurt those who work for them and actually cause damage to the organization they lead. What is even more unfortunate is that these leaders don't realize what they are doing and often do not listen to feedback that could help them. If it is a business they generally will end up hurting the bottom line. If it is a non-profit they will hurt the very constituency that they are meant to serve.
What are the behaviors that end up hurting those we lead? They include a lack of empathy, an inability to listen, micromanagement, grabbing credit and blaming others for failure, seemingly capricious actions and changing of direction, unrealistic demands, dictating strategies without the input of those who must carry them out, putting subordinates down and a lack of encouragement.
These behaviors do not necessarily come from a bad heart. Sometimes they come from poor leadership training, family of origin issues or wiring. But they do have a negative impact on the organization and their staff.
How do these behaviors hurt the organization? First, it creates a toxic and unhealthy work environment. Second, it eventually drives out the best leaders who come to a point where they are unwilling to put up with unhealthy behaviors. That has a direct ripple affect on the rest of the staff and the mission of the organization. Both the people and the organization's mission suffer under this kind of leadership.
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