Monthly Archives: November 2014

Your Leadership Style might be holding back Continuous Improvement in your Organization

continuous imporovementMost leaders want continuous improvement to take place in their organization. But do you ever stop and question your own leadership style and whether it promotes or hinders people from making improvements? Last week I attended the Salon sur les Meilleures Pratiques d’Affaires Salon(Best Business Practices) organized by le Movement Québecois de la Qualité. The well attended trade show and conference was full of companies showcasing examples of their continuous improvement successes as well as vendors of all types of quality programs, consulting services and training courses. What was very clear from those promoting best practices was the importance of leaders adapting a participative leadership style. All the best practices for assuring quality standards and high performance are based on employee participation. This translates into empowered, autonomous employees and teams. participative leadership styleSo what is a participative leadership style and how to develop it? It means involving people in decision making and coming to consensus on decisions that employees are responsible for implementing. It means establishing expectations for performance and productivity and empowering teams to work together and solve problems on their own to continuously improve their work. It means listening and giving feedback but not telling. It means coaching people rather than ordering or ignoring. Participative leadership is just one style. On one end is autocratic leadership and the opposite end is democratic. There are times you must be autocratic in your style. For example the fire chief practices participative leadership when there is no fire. But when there is a fire he becomes the director and shouts orders. However, everyone accepts this because they understand the situation and trust the leader. They know this style is required under the circumstance. The same is true in business. Sometimes you need to practice participate leadership and at other times autocratic. But to promote teamwork and continuous improvement you need to adapt a participative style most of the time. This requires a shift in thinking and behaviour. The fundamental behaviors for the leader to put into practice to be a participative leader are:

  1. Maintain and grow the self-esteem of employees
  2. Listen and respond with empathy
  3. Ask for help to solve problems
  4. Provide support without removing responsibility

Zapp! The Lightning of EmpowermentThere fundamentals are well explained in the narrative book Zapp! The Lightning of Empowerment. In fact we use this book as part of our Style of Leadership and Team Development training program for leaders. Leaders must strike a balance between being and doing. In other words before doing the practices associated with quality programs and continuous improvement initiatives, they must start putting into practice the behaviors that foster trust, openness and engagement. The key is to start step by step. Develop an understanding by reading Zapp or get some training in interpersonal behavior skills aimed at coaching people and developing a participative leadership style. Hold problem solving meetings at the management level to eliminate problems that cause you to be fighting fires too often. If you can shift more time to plan, set goals, coach people etc. you will start becoming a participative leader. leadership stylesOur leadership styles and team development training program provides a foundation for developing the core competencies of becoming a participative leader and stimulating teamwork.

How to Manage People for Better Project Management

People are usually the biggest challenge in managing projects and keeping them on track.

make things happenIn my last video and article on what derails a project and how to fix it, I spoke about the essential elements that people need to do to keep projects on schedule.

In the following segment, that has a unique twist, I am having a project update discussion with Sonia the project manager.

As you can see I know that Sonia is the helpful, sensitive type and wants people to feel be happy and keep things harmonious.

I on the other hand am more concerned with results. So I need to consider my approach with her to not come across as too aggressive and pushy.

My goal is to get commitments in writing so we can be clear on expectations and problem solve together rather than resorting to excuses and blaming.

I will see how this unfolds next week and if the milestones and tasks get put in writing. Hopefully be able to film another session.

Again the 3 things to remember is

  1. Make sure people understand the importance of keeping commitments and how to keep others informed
  2. Put milestones and tasks in writing so people know what is expected of them and by when.
  3. Confrontation is essential but needs to be done well to not destroy trust and break team spirit.

I hope you found this segment helpful and please leave your comments and subscribe now to keep informed of new videos and blog posts.