From The Blog
Aug 26th
Undercover Boss
posted by Jules and is very lonely with no commentsIf, like me, you are one of the 2.5 million viewers of the Channel 4 programme Undercover Boss I wonder how many of you reflect on this programme in relation to your own workplace? I’m sure you do. The comparisons will be really easy to make.
I love the fact that someone deserving gets something nice at the end of the programme. I usually think ‘oooh how lovely’ and have a bit of a cry.
However, if every CEO and Managing Director in the country really wanted to know what was happening on the ‘coal face’ in their organisation it’s extremely unlikely that they would be able to disguise themselves sufficiently with a new haircut and a pair of glasses if there were only 20 people in the company.
Good CEO’s and Managing Director’s recognise that without their people not a lot actually happens in their organisation and it’s in their interest to know how staff feel and what it’s really like to work for the company. However, how do they find out if they can’t get an offer of a TV crew and some plastic surgery?
My experience tells me that the only sure way to know how your people are feeling is to ask them. I don’t mean staff surveys that give people limited choices in what they’re allowed to answer or suggestion boxes that can be percieved as paying lip service to listening. What I’m suggesting is that each person in the organisation is given the opportunity to express their views about how they feel and what they would like to see improved and what follows is an active exploration of those views with some clearly owned actions and some resulting activity.
Resulting action is critical to ensure, again, that you haven’t conducted a ‘lip service’ activity. ‘Actions speak louder than words’ is a great maxim to live by.
There may be things that we don’t want to hear, that make us feel uncomfortable but we all know that a ‘clearing of the air’ is generally a good thing to do. Obviously this needs to be done with respect, care and compassion but adopting this approach will pay huge dividends. There may be issues raised where it’s just not possible to effect change but if you know about it you can at least provide an explanation of why it can’t be changed.
As your organisation expands and a few more layers of management structure become necessary it becomes even more essential that you, as the leader of your organisation, have fostered an open, honest and direct culture.
I have been working with a manager recently who told me about his team of ‘complainers and whiners’. When I asked him to write down what they were complaining about the piece of paper I gave him stayed blank. He explained that he didn’t know one thing they complained about because he had learned how to cut the conversation short assuming that all they were doing was complaining. Further exploration revealed that there were actually some real, if fairly minor, business issues that needed to be addressed. Even if the eventual outcome wasn’t what the individual was looking for they would at least be able to see that a genuine attempt at finding a resolution had been made. This improved relationships dramatically.
One of the greatest gifts we can give another human being is to listen to them. Really listen. How often have you felt that you wanted to get a really important point across but you knew the person that could make a real difference wasn’t listening? From a human perspective it’s soul destroying. From business perspective it can build a culture of mistrust, demotivation and stress.
How does your organisation ensure that you know how your staff feel? I would love to hear your views and hopefully you won’t have to go undercover to know how your people feel about working in your company.
Jules
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