Leaders must encourage their
organizations to dance to forms of music yet to be heard. – Warren Bennis
Nothing will
make or break the momentum of your organization faster than the collective sum
of the attitudes within it. Pause for a moment and inventory the attitudes of
those around you (beginning with yourself) and ask if the prevailing attitudes
are positive or negative.
Each person
within your organization has a lens through which they see themselves, their
work, and its leadership. And that lens says much about the ability of the team
to move forward.
It reminds
of the story of noted English architect Sir Christopher Wren was supervising
the
construction of a magnificent cathedral in London. A journalist thought it
would be interesting to interview some of the workers, so he chose three and
asked them this question, "What are you doing?" The first replied,
"I'm cutting stone for 10 shillings a day." The next answered,
"I'm putting in 10 hours a day on this job." But the third said,
"I'm helping Sir Christopher Wren construct one of London's greatest
cathedrals." Each worker had a lens-everyone does.
Building a
strong team and culture within your organization hinges upon many factors but
none so powerful than attitude. Our actions tend to reflect our attitudes. Our
words do the same. So the conversations that take place in the hallway, the
whispers in the break room, the secret emotions that no one is aware of all
come together each day to form either a powerful bond of momentum or something
far more sinister.
If you could
select the attitudes of the people in your organization, ones that would propel
you to be your best, achieve more, and be stronger as a team, what would they
look like? Here are four that I believe would be worthy of consideration. It’s
as we embrace a “we” mentality and attitude we can move our teams forward.
We go the extra mile
With this
attitude your success is multiplied. With this attitude you will see your colleagues not as
adversaries but as valued teammates with talents, gifts, and abilities that may
look different than yours, but used for the same goals.
With this
attitude you will go the extra mile in doing whatever you can to ensure your
mutually shared success. We go the extra mile for each other and with each
other for the good of the team not just our individual agendas.
We have each other’s backs
With this
attitude your commitment is compounded. Your culture is your people. How that is framed and played
out will vary from company to company, but your people make up and determine
its culture. When your people possess and take to heart this attitude it will
transform your culture.
Think how
different your organization would be if the people in it had each other’s backs
instead of stabbing it? How different would your culture be if your people
stopped talking behind one another’s backs and started talking to each other?
Teams that move forward are healthy ones that treat each other with respect.
We hold each other accountable
With this
attitude integrity is solidified. The only way going the extra mile with each other and having
each other’s backs works is with accountability. For too long in many
organizations a culture of back stabbing, back biting, rivalries, and pettiness
has been tolerated with too few held to account. The by-product is low morale,
high turnover, bullying, and a toxic culture.
The
attitudes that work and will move your organization forward are ones by which
you hold each other to a higher standard and you hold each other accountable.
When team members are accountable to one another the team moves forward with
trust.
We value our people
With this
attitude relationships take priority. It’s a simple rule of leadership- people are your priority
and relationships matter. The health of your organization is determined by the
breadth and depth of your relationships. If you want strong and healthy
attitudes build strong and healthy relationships. If you want to stop the back
stabbing on your team try back patting instead. Rather than words that tear
people down, use words that build them up. It’s not complicated.
When your
organization understands the basic rule of creating momentum and moving forward
it will be intentional about placing value on relationships.
Righting the
ship with healthy attitudes can be a slow and painful process within your
organization. In the end there may be those who for whatever reason won’t take
the journey with you. Let them go. But never give up in embracing the healthy
attitudes that can be yours. Too much is at stake to turn back now.
© 2016 Doug
Dickerson
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