SOLUTION SATURDAY: I WORK WITH A VERY NEGATIVE TEAM

Solution Saturday: I Work with a Very Negative Team

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Leaders monitor environments:

Congratulations for being aware of your environment. Leaders pay attention to the way people feel while they work together. You can’t control feelings. You can influence them.

David Foster Wallace writes, “There are these two young fish swimming along and they happen to meet an older fish swimming the other way, who nods at them and says “Morning, boys. How’s the water?” And the two young fish swim on for a bit, and then eventually one of them looks over at the other and goes “What the hell is water?

Leaders create environments:

It’s far too easy to notice what’s wrong than it is to do something about it. Taking responsibility for the way it feels to work together seems like trying to feel the water we swim in.

Paint a picture of what you want, after noticing what you don’t want. Move from generalities to specific behaviors.

  1. How do people treat each other in positive environments?
  2. What do people say to each other in positive environments?
  3. What behaviors will you honor?

Focus on simple behaviors. We smile and stand when team members enter our office, for example.

Cultural Meltdown: When Values Don’t Match Workers’ Day-to-Day Reality

http://fistfuloftalent.com/2016/09/cultural-meltdown-values-dont-match-workers-day-day-reality.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+FistfulOfTalent+%28Fistful+of+Talent%29

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A complete disconnect on values

The problem was that bank employees were pushed to sell products and services to customers whether they wanted them or not, in violation of the company’s stated values, and often this meant opening up accounts and issuing credit cards without customers knowing about it.

And to add insult to injury, even employees who called the company’s ethics hotline that was set up to report issues just like this one were fired for doing so.

Yes, Wells Fargo’s stated company values are 180 degrees opposite of what employees were actually told to do.

If you look at Wells Fargo’s statement of values, it all sounds pretty good:

Our values should guide every conversation, decision, and interaction. Our values should anchor every product and service we provide and every channel we operate. If we can’t link what we do to one of our values, we should ask ourselves why we’re doing it. It’s that simple.

All team members should know our values so well that if our policy manuals didn’t exist, we would still make decisions based on our common understanding of our culture and what we stand for. Corporate America is littered with the debris of companies that crafted lofty values on paper but, when put to the test, failed to live by them. We believe in values lived, not phrases memorized. If we had to choose, we’d rather have a team member who lives by our values than one who just memorizes them.

We have five primary values that are based on our vision and provide the foundation for everything we do:

  • People as a competitive advantage
  • Ethics
  • What’s right for customers
  • Diversity and inclusion
  • Leadership

Those values sound good, but in the case of Wells Fargo, they were total BS.

Chris Van Gorder on Scripps Health’s “no lay-off” philosophy

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Scripps Health CEO Chris Van Gorder talks about their “no lay-off philosophy.

 

Chris Van Gorder on 3 major themes of front-line leadership

Image result for Chris Van Gorder on 3 major themes of front-line leadership

AHL founder & CEO Dan Nielsen sat down for an in-depth interview with Chris Van Gorder, president & CEO of Scripps Health in San Diego, CA. This is a brief excerpt from that interview, during which Van Gorder describes 3 of the major themes of what he calls front-line leadership—the focus of his book, The Front-Line Leader: Building a High-Performance Organization from the Ground Up.