Be A Force For Change

The last 20 months has brought about unprecedented change. The business landscape is continuing to change and rapidly evolve without us being able to foresee what the future will look like.

When we don’t know what change is coming, how much, how fast, and when, how can we ensure we are ready and have the capacity for change?

The answer is to be a F.O.R.C.E. for change. There are actions every organisation and every leader within it, can take now to be always change ready.

Every organisation needs a focus (a sense of purpose); orientation (leadership positioning); resilience (personal resolve in the face of constant change); coaches (a competent and enabled change network); and empathy (understanding and compassion for each other). Let’s look at each of those aspects of an organisation that is a force for change.

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High Trust Hybrid

Trust is the foundation on which successful high-performing hybrid teams are built. Managers and bosses no longer have insight into their employees’ day-to-day approach to work. It is only leaders who trust their employees to make the right decisions about work and its priorities and provide the necessary support, that will build high-performing teams.

This week on LinkedIn, I was asked this question:

What are your recommendations to convert a low trusting dept into a high trust one? 🤔

So, if there is currently a low-trust base, how do you establish a solid foundation of trust in your team? What does it mean for the hybrid team?

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Lead Your Hybrid Team With Clarity, Not Confusion

My latest article for Remote Report.

Setting clear expectations is part of the bedrock of a successful hybrid team. You can empower and provide autonomy, but without clarity your efforts will be wasted.

Without clarity, trust will be diminished.

Many leaders assume they have set clear expectations and that their employees know what is required. However, this is often not the case, and the lack of clarity causes harm, damage to relationships and it diminishes trust.

Leaders providing clarity of expectations is even more important when change is volatile, uncertain and complex. Your employees need clarity.

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Leaders of hybrid workforces are great when they empower others, not because of their power

My latest article for REMOTE REPORT.

If you are a boss (note deliberate avoidance of term “leader”) and you continue to believe that productivity means “butt in seats” and that the best way to get results is through micromanagement, you are on the verge of following dinosaurs into extinction.

That’s because you are unable to adapt to the rapid changes in your environment. The catastrophic event that leads to your demise will not be an asteroid strike or a volcanic eruption, but a change in the way we work — a hybrid operating model.

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A Great Employee Experience Means A Great Customer Experience

I wanted to share with you my thoughts on a recent article for Forbes from Shep Hyken. In the article Shep shares six ways to create a better employee experience.

Why does employee experience matter? Let me refer to what Shep calls ‘The Employee Golden Rule’, which is do unto employees as you want done unto customers.

In the Forbes article Shep said, ‘what happens on the inside of the organisation is felt on the outside by the customer and he shared six ways to create a better employee experience.’

It follows what Richard Branson is quoted as saying, “If you take care of your employees, they’ll take care of your customers.”

The employee experience drives the customer experience. If you want your customer to love you, then you must love your people.

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Workplace Happiness

The pandemic has allowed employees to reflect on what is important to them – not only in their personal life but also their work life.

Indeed commissioned a 2021 Workplace Happiness Study conducted by Forrester Consulting which revealed that nearly 50% of people believe expectations around work happiness has increased over the last five years.

Whilst most people think pay is the most important aspect of work, when asked what actually makes you happy at work, the social elements of work proved to be more important than pay. For example, dimensions like being energised by work (17%), feeling belonging (12%) and having a sense of purpose (11%) all ranked higher than pay (5%).

This is a big wake-up call for employers who will have to make intentional and concerted efforts to not only retain their current talent but attract the talent they need to be leaders into the future. It is going to take more than just a large pay packet.

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Service Desk AI, Please Meet OCM

The introduction of new technology into your organization requires us to pay attention to the people side of change. New technology can impact policies, process and procedures, roles and responsibilities, resources, and ways of working which all impact people. When organizations invest time and money in organizational change management (OCM) they get a return on their investment through rapid adoption, less delays, reduced need for rework, and earlier benefits realization.

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ADPRI Employee Sentiment - The Analysis

A recent report from ADP Research Institute called “Employee Sentiment on Workplace” contained some interesting survey results. ADPRI surveyed 9,000 US employees who either worked remotely or onsite at workplace locations during the pandemic. They also surveyed employees who divided their work week between onsite and remote locations (hybrid workers) who said they experienced better social and manager dynamics that their fully onsite or remote counterparts – combining key upsides of both working arrangements.

My analysis of the result indicates that a hybrid working model is the best of both worlds. Hybrid employees rates stronger connection with teammates and colleagues higher than their remote or onsite counterparts. Both hybrid and remote workers rated team collaboration and support higher than onsite employees. Onsite workers rated the challenge of listening to each other and ensuring active participation of everyone higher than remote workers.

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Dump the baggage and the bias

When you are leading a hybrid team, diversity equity and inclusion - takes on a new challenge.

Whilst DEI has focused on identities such as race, gender, colour, sexual orientation, religion and so on, we are now adding two more - those in the office and those who are not.

Leaders must make sure that everyone is on a level playing field and there is no bias or preferential treatment related to where you work.

My latest article for Remote Report.

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Leadership Is Lacking - The CEO Report

The recent CEO Leadership Report 2021 from Development Dimensions International analyses responses from 368 CEOs and 2,102 human resource executives around the world to understand if they are positioned to deal with the one of the most challenging times ever experienced by businesses. Do they have the resilience, capability, and agility to drive a successful outcome for their organisation in these unprecedented times?

This article is my analysis and conclusion from the results.

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When leading hybrid teams, make the invisible visible

Capability invisibility is a term used to describe a situation in which employees’ skills, capabilities and competencies are not visible or known.

This can result in an employee being given a task for which they are ill equipped, or their skills not fully utilized.

While this incompetent leadership blindness can exist when everyone is colocated, it can be exacerbated when the team is hybrid and working across multiple locations.

Leaders and every member of a team should know what skills, capabilities and competencies exist so that they can be leveraged for the optimum performance of the individual, team and organization.

My latest article for Remote Report.

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The Real Reasons You Are Being Asked To Return To The Office

The researchers, the commentators, the surveys, the advisories, the consultants, and the experts, are all telling us the same thing. Employees do not want to return to the office on a permanent basis – they want flexibility to work when they want, where they want, and how they want.

The writing is on the wall. Try and force, threaten or coerce, your employees back into the office, against their will, and you will suffer the consequences.

We are already seeing the backlash. The question then is why?

The two repeated arguments from the return-to-the-office-brigade are concerns about maintaining the culture and collaboration.

This is absolute BS. These are what I believe to be the top five reasons for the return-to-office demand.

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Ready to Stop Your Great Resignation?

Employees are putting mental health and wellbeing programs at the top of their preferences list when looking at new employers.

Employees are in the driving seat. They have proved that they can work from anywhere and now have a choice of employer that is not limited by geography.

If you want to retain your talent, you must be an employer of choice. You must state and demonstrate that employee wellbeing is at the centre of all that you do.

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Can You Stop The Employee Mass Exodus?

Last week I shared the fact that we are now being faced with what is being termed The Great Resignation.

This week I wanted to explore four more actions you can take to stem the exodus of talent from your workplace.

You need to listen - really listen. You need to close the sentiment gap between executive and employee. Leaders need to be available - approachable, visible and accessible. The new ways of working have affected psychological safety as we move into a categorically different domain.

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Your Talent Is Leaving. The Time For Action Is Now.

We are now being faced with what is being termed The Great Resignation.

The term was coined by Anthony Klotz to refer to the significant number of people who will leave their jobs post pandemic.

In his words:

“The pandemic has made many realize their job does not contribute enough (or at all) to their pursuit for happiness and meaning, and they have decided to invest their energy elsewhere — in new jobs, new careers or in other aspects of their lives (e.g., family, travel, creative endeavors).”

Microsoft predicts 46% of employees globally are thinking of changing employers over the next year.

Can you afford not to act now?

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R WORDS TO PLAN YOUR HYBRID WORKING MODEL

There are 5 Rs that leaders need to get a grip on right now to determine their model of working.

Realise - wake-up

Reflect - learn

Rethink - leverage

Reimagine - make it different

Reinvent - its a journey

This is the time that leaders need to be brave, be bold and buoyant.

It is time to throw away assumptions and biases and move forward with an open mind that embraces the opportunities that are being laid out in front of you. Be curious and inquisitive and make informed- decisions.

Keep on listening and hearing the need of your employees. This must be an organisational-wide act of collaboration undertaken with mutual trust, respect, transparency, empathy and willingness to continually adapt to change.

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