WHAT DRIVES OWNERSHIP & ACCOUNTABILITY How to drive autonomy & unconscious competence

by Dan Gregory @DanGregoryCo @TheBehaviourRpt #Culture #Performance #Change #Leadership

Quite often, when being briefed for a keynote speech or training program, a leader will share with me that they just want their people to have a greater sense of “ownership and accountability.”

Of course, they’re not actually giving their team any REAL ownership - there is no exchange of shares or a stake in the business. In fact, what they really mean is, “Can you make my people more obedient and self-managing so I don’t have to work so hard at making them work hard?”

I tend to sound out this little observation with my “inside voice,” as I’m not so sure this level of radical transparency is quite what they’re after in that moment of time.

All that being said, it is actually possible to develop a team and culture that does seek personal responsibility, that will have a sense of pride and ownership in the work that they do and can hold themselves accountable to high standards and expectations. However, it requires rather more than the occasional inspirational keynote speech (no matter how awesome 😂).

So, how do we create a culture of ownership, responsibility and accountability? And just as importantly, how do we make it more than just lip service or corporate rah rah?

Link it to culture

Perhaps unsurprisingly, influencing a culture starts with culture.

One of the great things about culture is that it provides us with a level of unconscious competence or autonomous performance and behaviour. When cultural expectations and conventions are well understood and believed to be important, congruent behaviour tends to show up quite automatically. People who’ve been raised in a particular ethnic culture, for example, don’t typically have to think too much about how to “act that way.”

So, rather than telling people what to do or how to behave, demonstrate who you are helping them to become in the process. In other words, “Start with WHO.” The more this aligns with who they already consider themselves to be, the more consistently they’ll show up with exemplar behaviours that support their cultural identity.

ie. Cultivate ownership by linking it to who they believe themselves to be culturally.

Link your values to their values

Leaders have long understood that simply telling people what to do is neither an effective leadership model, nor does it typically lead to self-sustaining engagement.

Research out of the Universities of Pennsylvania in the US and Bonn in Germany suggests that rather than trying to create a sense of purpose, or a WHY that your people are expected to buy into (an ego-based strategy), rather, link your organisational purpose to their personal purpose as individuals and a community (a people-focused strategy).

In other words, demonstrate how the desired behaviour or performance aligns with what they already believe to be true or else hold in high esteem. The truth is, it’s actually quite difficult to make someone care about something new, and far more efficient and effective to show them how something new is congruent to what they already care about.

Allow for co-creation (actually, insist on it)

The corporate world often talks about co-creation as a tool for amplifying creativity and innovation, however, it’s also a particularly useful tool for increasing ownership.

A top-down leadership style where team members are simply expected to adopt a leader’s new ideas and strategies is far less likely to generate a sense of ownership and accountability than a culture where team members work with leadership to co-author strategy and executional details and metrics.

It also reduces resistance to new ideas and initiatives. It’s a lot harder to throw a spanner (or wrench for my North American friends) into the works, when you’re a co-creator of the program and your reputation is linked to its success.

Guiding questions and stories

There are two famous stories of success that both owe their origins to the same question - one is New Zealand’s “giant slayer” strategy to win the America’s Cup from the far better resourced US team, and the other, that of the British Olympic rowing team’s preparation for the 2000 Olympic Games in Sydney, Australia.

Regardless of who holds the greatest claim to the question in question, the results produced provide a valuable lesson in cultivating ownership and generating autonomous decision making and performance.

The question both teams embraced was, “Does it make the boat go faster?”

This “guiding question” was used as a strategic sense check and as a source of internalised permission to act. If what you were doing made the boat go faster, you were empowered to move forward. If not, you were probably not acting in alignment with the team’s strategy.

This strategy of guiding questions allows you both to impact strategy by providing clarity and responsibility, but more importantly, it allows your culture to be self-correcting and empowering - meaning the team goes faster also!

Giving responsibility to get responsibility

One of the reasons leaders often fail to get responsibility from their teams, is their reluctance to give it in the first place. The metaphor that is often used is that of helicopter or lawnmower parenting - where parents undermine their children’s resilience and decision making skills by removing obstacles in their path and micro-managing their environment and behaviour. The same holds true in how we manage our teams.

Often it can be difficult to trust a new team with responsibility - especially in critical or high-pressure situations, however, in the same way that they will grow through discomfort, so too does our capacity to lead in discomfort.

What this really boils down to, is the fact that in order to build a sense of responsibility, we need to give it and trust it and to then use the results as an opportunity for learning and growth.

Develop self-awareness around your leadership

Once in an interview, I was asked what I believed was the most critical skill or capability for leaders to develop. Whenever I’ve been asked this in the past, I’ve suggested investing in understanding what drives the people around us.

However, more recently, I’ve changed my opinion and now advise first seeking self-awareness.

My reasoning is this - your past and your personality show up in every aspect of your leadership. Every relationship pattern you’ve adopted, based on your place in your family, the role you played in your friendship group at school and even how you approach, or have experienced, more intimate personal relationships, shows up in your leadership style.

So, if your people aren’t showing up with a sense of ownership and accountability, it might be useful to consider what it is in your personal leadership behaviours that makes proactivity, taking responsibility and innovating a risky proposition for them.

The truth is, leaders don’t shape culture, we simply influence the social and physical environment in which it emerges. In other words, a team that doesn’t act with a sense of ownership and accountability, might just be responding to what we’re not saying, as much as what we say.

HOW TO WIN THE REPUTATION GAME Why impressions are formed before you even say a word

by Kieran Flanagan @ThinkKieranF @TheBehaviourRpt #Communication #Brand #PresentationSkills #PersonalBrand #Leadership

We often think of communication as a moment of information transmission and of our personal brands as being linked to a particular piece of content or social strategy, rather than being something that lives largely beyond our control, and yet, that is precisely how reputation works. Our reputations enter every room before us, set up expectations and shape our brands even beyond our presence.

Now, the fact that we don’t have absolute control over our reputations should not be taken as an excuse not to manage them or indeed to create influence around our influence. Rather, it means we should spend some of the time we devote to the nuanced word-smithing of our communication (which, to be clear, is still important), and apply a little more of our time to developing “behavioural communication,” which has an ability to live on as reputation without the need for our micro-management.

So, what is behavioural communication and how might it work in practical terms. Here’s 5 tips for getting it right and winning the reputation game.

1. Practice Story-Doing

By now, you’re probably familiar with the power of storytelling in communication and for establishing a powerful personal brand and it’s absolutely critical. However, “story-doing,” can be far more powerful. So, what’s the difference?

Storytelling is when you tell a story, be it personal, professional or public, that conveys a message, moral or myth and shapes perception through its telling. 

Story-doing is when you behave or perform an activity in such a unique or exceptional way, that it is story-worthy. In other words, you move from being the teller of the story, to being the lead character in someone else’s.

The reason that this is such a critical difference really comes down to trust and believability. When you tell a story about how good you are, or about your message or purpose, that’s one thing. However, when someone else tells that story on your behalf, someone that might already have earned the trust of the story’s recipients, that is quite another thing.

So, what kind of behaviours might be considered “story worthy?”

2. Pick a righteous fight

Human beings love a bit of conflict, don’t we? The old newspaper maxim used to be, “If it bleeds, it leads.”

Now, I’m in no way advocating for violence, aggression or even raised voices, what I am saying is that we can all advocate for positive change, and that the change we advocate for becomes all the more story-worthy when it is not a fight for personal gain.

A righteous fight might best be thought of as a call for justice on behalf of those you serve, those who may not be able to advocate as effectively on their own behalf, either through lack of necessary skills or access.

To choose your righteous fight, consider who you serve, what injustices or struggles they face and how you might make a contribution.

3. Lead by change and contribution

Over the years, I’ve helped many young leaders to become innovators and thought leaders in their fields by helping them develop projects, content and platform skills that have allowed them to shape the future of their businesses and industries.

  • To do this, first consider the failure points in your business, where communication, performance or productivity breaks down. 

  • Next, develop new systems, processes or products that either fix the problem or else offer an entirely new business or service stream to your offering.

  • Finally, learn the art of the pitch and get the leadership team on board.

Not only does this create a story about how you changed the industry and contributed to the content canon of your field, it also creates visibility with your leadership team as a thought leader and strategic asset in the business.

4. Be inconveniently honest and vulnerable

Of course, being honest and truthful are important, but if we’re really going to engender trust and build a reputation worth sharing, we need to exceed expectations - and expectations are experiencing the kind of rapid inflation that would make an economist sweat.

What this means is, being truthful is not enough. To impress others with a reputation for integrity and count-on-ability, we must speak with vulnerable honesty. 

In other words, share a truth that puts you at some kind of reputational risk. 

Now, this sounds counter intuitive. Does this even make sense? You’re probably thinking, “C’mon Kieran, isn’t this whole article about winning the reputation game?” The answer is yes… and yes. In other words, though somewhat contradictory, both concepts can co-exist and even support each other.

One of the reasons that sharing a truth that puts you at small reputational risk can actually build your reputation is that it exceeds our inflated expectations. We hear the vulnerably in the unexpected truth and we’re inclined to be more trusting of anything else that you say. After all, you’ve already told us the inconvenient truth, why would you lie about anything else?

5. Get absolutely clear on you WHO

Finally, and perhaps most importantly, consider who your stories are for. If you’re going to win the reputation game, its rather important that you know who that reputation is for and what they consider important markers of trust and capability.

So before you embark on a campaign of story-doing and reputation building, take the time to first consider the values hierarchy of those for whom your reputation most matters and whether that’s a reputation you’re happy to live up to.

DESIGN BEATS DISCIPLINE How to drive consistent performance by design

by Dan Gregory @DanGregoryCo @TheBehaviourRpt #Culture #Performance #Change #Leadership

If you’re in the business of high-performance and culture development, you’re probably familiar with the maxim, “Discipline beats Motivation,” however, I’d like to add an amendment to this maxim and suggest that “Design beats Discipline,” when it comes to consistent and sustained performance.

The truth is, none of us is motivated every moment of every day, nor is anyone disciplined in every aspect of their lives. They’re both great things to have, but they’re short term strategies.

What’s more, they’re more based on 1980’s pop psychology than robust behavioural science. 

One of the conclusions we might draw from the work of the Situationist School of Psychology and from Behavioural Economists such as Kahnemann, Tversky, Thaler and Sunstein, is that context, or environment, is often a better predictor of behavioural outcomes than character. Now, environment might be physical, or social as well as contextual or conceptual, but this is where design comes into play.

The other important factor to consider is that often, performance and success (or the lack thereof) are not a function of what we do, or fail to do, but rather come down to obstacles, hurdles or impediments we fail to deal with in a sustainable way.

A bias towards success… and away from failure!

We often think of biases as being exclusively negative, however, we can also create behavioural biases towards success, and just as importantly, away from failure.

What this means in practical terms is that we design a behavioural “bridge” that helps us to ameliorate the performance failure or gap we might be experiencing either individually or as a culture and team.

So what are the elements of failure that cost us success and performance? Often times, failure comes down to four critical issues - Biases, Blocks, Blindspots and breaks.

  1. Biases

Biases are often informed by our strengths (for more on this concept, see my article on The Weakness in your Strengths). Essentially what this means is that we have a bias towards solving problems based on our strengths - ie. When all you have a hammer, everything starts to look like a nail - good luck changing that light bulb.

Biases can cost us performance by blinding us to other opportunities or tools, but also by making us predictable and generic in our field, undermining any true competitive advantage.

  1. Blocks

I define blocks as being linked to our emotional responses to feelings such as fear. Fear, of course, is a particularly useful physical response that is designed to help us mitigate risk and to stay alive. However, an over sensitivity to fear-producing stimulus can be debilitating and rob us of success.

The fact that public speaking is a bigger fear for most people than death, is testament to this.

However, we can also learn to shrink fear by first identifying its type and how it shows up - ie. Fight, Flight, Freeze or fawn - and also by learning to rate it in terms of severity and developing tools and strategies to “dial it up or down” where appropriate.

  1. Blindspots

Blindspots relate to knowledge gaps - which are not always easy to identify. Sometimes, we just don’t know what we don’t know.

Of course, this is not always the case, occasionally we are aware that a knowledge gap is causing us to procrastinate or avoid a particular activity, and we also usually have some life experience that has taught us that “clarity equals velocity.”

So, what is the missing piece of knowledge that is costing your success (assuming of course that we can never have all of the information we might like), and more importantly, how much more do you need to know to get into action?

  1. Breaks

Breaks are typically linked to our weaknesses and often the greatest opportunity for our performance uplift.

Sometimes, these can be delegated or outsourced to those with more specialist skills, or else augmented or improved until our weaknesses become assets, but they can also be “hacked” behaviourally with a work-around or a behavioural “bridge.”

How Behaviour Design works

So, once you’ve identified the performance gap or the source of your failure in a particular activity or skill, what next?

They key is to use what Thaler and Sunstein refer to as a “nudge.” Now, this is a broad term that refers to a number of behavioural interventions that drive a particular behaviour, usually without conscious effort. For the purposes of this article, I’ll simplify the concept with a formula for building a behavioural bridge>

  1. BELIEF - Identify the behaviour do you believe should be showing up, but isn’t? eg. I believe I should wake up early in the morning to get a head start on the day.

  2. BEHAVIOUR - What  behaviour actually shows up? eg. I actually don’t get up because I turn off my alarm and go back to sleep.

  3. BEHAVIOUR FAIL - Determine the root cause of the behavioural fail. eg. The proximity and ease of the snooze button on the alarm

  4. BRIDGE - Create a behavioural bridge that helps you to “hack” the fail. eg. You might set multiple alarms so the initial alarm has some “back up,” or you might set the alarm and move your clock to the other side of the room so that the proximity and ease issue is removed.

The point here is that performance and not entirely determined by what we are motived to do, or disciplined in not doing, but also by how we use behavioural design to work-around the obstacles and issues that get between us and success.

So, why not build a bridge… and get over failure?!