Building Organizations Where People Contribute Their Best (because they love working there!) | 050

by | Jul 23, 2021

Building Organizations Where People Contribute Their Best (because they love working there!) | 050

Lean Leadership for Ops Managers

It’s one thing to “keep” team members. It’s another to keep them while they’re also fully engaged and contributing their best. Creating a workplace culture that helps people thrive is the answer to the current challenge: how do we compete in the employment market. 

In Episode 049, we talked about a model that makes organizations “best places to work” – what team members want in their workplaces. In this episode, we talk about the same model but from a leadership point of view – what executives want for their respective organizations. Notice how we can achieve both in this episode.

What You’ll Learn from this Episode:

  • How to compete in the employment market through organizational culture
  • Key elements that inspire an engaged, aligned team
  • The two necessary components for a culture of systematic improvement and sustained agility
  • Why putting people at the center to achieve success is important, particularly when it comes to attracting and retaining great employees
  • Moving Past Tradeoffs: Serve People PLUS Deliver Results

How to Compete in the Employment Market

Take note of one of the challenges executives are working on: How to compete – not just in their service or product market, but in the employment market as well.

To do that, leaders need to build organizations where people want to work . . . and tell everyone how great it is. This will, of course, make retention and recruitment easier and better.

The four quadrants in our model are: Purpose. Participation. Performance. Progression.

Head back and listen to Episode 049 to hear the details of why these four elements are important from an employee perspective.

Now let’s dig into why these exact same four quadrants make up what organizations need to achieve operational excellence.

Inspiring an Engaged, Aligned Team

Let’s talk about the right two quadrants of the model, starting with PURPOSE. From an organizational point of view, we’re looking for alignment where everyone within the organization is working toward common goals. That is where purpose comes in.

Additionally, purpose provides the opportunity to enable fit. Note that your organization is not a good fit for everyone, nor is everyone a good fit for your organization.

The thing here is that most “wrong fits” aren’t recognized until late in the process. Integrating purpose throughout the organization will allow us to better see fit at the early stage. This will also make those individuals who are a good fit feel more connected.

In our previous episodes, we often mentioned that leadership is a relationship. But that’s just the core interpersonal interactions. Leaders want engagement from their team members. And engagement means active PARTICIPATION. It’s not enough just to reduce turnover and have people stick around. Because they might stick around and be disengaged. Active participation means that team members share ideas and work toward common goals.

When we effectively combine purpose + participation, the outcome is an engaged, aligned team.

Creating a Culture of Systematic Improvement and Sustained Agility

Now let’s move over to the left side of the model. The third quadrant is PERFORMANCE. This is what you talk about most of the time. How we get results matters because it is not all about the outcome. It’s about how we deliver the results continually and how we can improve. So, it is important to look at the inputs, the procedures, and role that team members play in achieving outcomes. Engaging the team in the process of delivering performance yields better results.

In the fourth quadrant, we have the PROGRESSION. In progression, we’re moving beyond the day to day, month to month, year to year typical performance goals and results. Progression is where we sustain improvements through systems, we build agility for the future, and deliberately challenge the status quo to achieve a whole new level for the organization.

When we effectively combine performance + progression, we get a culture of systematic improvement and sustained agility.

Putting People at the Center to Attract and Retain Great Employees

These are the four quadrants:  Purpose, Participation, Performance, and Progression. This is what executives want for their organizations. 

To get it, we have to add a little bit more to our model.

People are the heart of our organizations. So right in the center of our Plus sign – right where the horizontal and vertical lines meet. We have a heart. 

You see, we can’t manipulate or fake our way through the four quadrants. We have to authentically care about people. We lead with a servant’s heart. And so we keep that front of mind by placing a heart right in the middle of the model.

Moving Past Tradeoffs: Serve People PLUS Deliver Results

Purpose. Participation. Performance. Progression. All enveloped in Personalization. With People – Caring for People –  at the center.

When we do this . . . this is what we get . . .
Purpose + Participation gives us an Engaged, Aligned Team
Participation + Performance gives us Systematic Improvement
Performance + Progression gives us Sustained Agility
And Progression + Purpose gives us Legacy

Legacy is the gift we give to the world – to our team members and their families. To our customers. To our communities. Legacy is the lasting impact we have.

Here’s what’s great about all of this. It is absolutely possible to align what team members want with what you want as an operations executive. These are not contradictory or competing things.

They’re the same things. In fact, you can head back to Episode 49 and listen to the team member perspective and viewpoint on these four quadrants.

Purpose, Participation, Performance, and Progression – are the way that we come together to serve people plus deliver results.  Individual + Team.

Take Action:

Scroll up and listen to the episode for more details on how this model helps organizations create long-term agility and operational excellence.

Your next step: Consider what future state vision you have – for your organization or department or team. 

What is your highest intention or vision when it comes to each quadrant:

Purpose
Participation
Performance
Progression

What would that look like for your organization or team? Map it out. That’s your one next step.

Mentions & Features in this Episode:

FULL EPISODE TRANSCRIPT:

Building Organizations Where People Contribute Their Best (because they love working there!) | 050

Can engaged, aligned team. Systematic improvement. Sustained agility. Legacy. Achieving these outcomes is exactly what we’re talking about on today’s episode.
Welcome to Lean Leadership for Ops Managers, the podcast for leaders in Ops Management who want to spark improvement, foster engagement, and boost problem solving – AND still get their day job done. Here’s your host, Leadership Trainer, Lean Enthusiast, and Spy Thriller Junkie, Jamie V. Parker.
>>>>
[00:00:43] We are in interesting times. Organizations across the country are trying to figure out how to attract and retain people, and when I talk with executives, this is one of the top challenges they’re working on right now. How do we compete not just in our service or product market, but in the employment market? They have unfilled positions and they’re worried that the people who do work there are going to burn out or that they’re going to have to tell customers no and lose business or that they won’t be able to sustain the current conditions for too much longer.
So they’re asking, how do we build an organization where people want to work and they tell everyone how great it is, which of course means more people want to work here?
Well, let’s talk about it. Last week, I introduced you to a model outlining what makes our organizations best places to work, what people, what employees, what team members, what people want in their work experiences. If you missed it, then head back and take a listen.
Now, if you like visuals, you can see a visual of the model at our shows just had to https://processplusresults.com/podcast/ And this is going to be episode 50, by the way.
While you’re there, you might just want to go ahead and sign up to be on the email list because everyone that is on the list got the model visual emailed to them.
All right, here we go. Let’s jump in.

[00:02:15] Today we’re talking about the same model as last week. But instead of looking at it from the team member perspective, we’re going to look at it from the organizational or leadership perspective. In the last episode, we talked about what team members want. In this episode, we’re talking about what executives want for their organizations. As we talk through this, pay attention to how we achieve both what team members want, plus what organizations or leaders want and notice how they overlap.

Speaking of plus, remember, with our model, we start with a plus sign right in the middle. We draw a plus sign and then we draw a circle around it. So we end up with a circle that has four quadrants. Now, let’s talk about this real quick. Here’s what’s in your quadrants of your circle. In the upper right, we have purpose. In the bottom right is participation. In the bottom left is performance, and in the top left is progression.
And that’s where we start today. Purpose, participation, performance, progression.

[00:03:24] Let’s talk about purpose first. From an organizational standpoint, we’re looking for alignment that everyone throughout the organization is working toward common goals. The decision making is done purposefully based on purpose and values and priorities. That’s where purpose comes in.
The other thing that purpose allows us to do as an organization is to enable fit. Your organization is not a good fit for everyone, and everyone is not a good fit for your organization. And that’s good. That’s the way it’s supposed to be, because we have diversity and we want diversity and people have different priorities and perspectives. This is perfect. We don’t want this to be a good fit. Diversity means it’s supposed to not be a good fit for everyone. The thing is that too often this wrong fit isn’t found out until late in the process. And now you might feel stuck with someone and they might feel stuck in the organization. But for either party to do something about it takes effort. And there are so many competing demands for that effort.
Here’s the thing, when we embrace purpose and integrate it throughout our organization into our every day, in our recruiting processes and everywhere as to who we are, then we’re better able to recognize fit earlier. Plus, the people who are a good fit, they feel so much more connected, which leads to greater commitment.
Purpose.

[00:05:00] Next up is participation. Leadership is a relationship. Leadership happens between people. When I originally mapped out this model, I started with the word partnership here to kind of capture this relationship piece. But as I continue to dig into what this really means, I realized that wasn’t quite the right word because this is more than a state of being. It’s really action, and participation is action based. Organizations want active participation. They want engagement.
Oh, that magic word engagement. We’ve seen the stats. We know what a difference it makes when people are engaged. Gallup studies show that compared to disengaged teens, engaged teams deliver 22 percent greater profitability, 41 percent fewer quality defects, 37 percent less absenteeism, 48 percent fewer safety incidents and 25 percent turnover compared to 69 percent. Engagement means active participation.
Oh, and a side note. I can’t mention these engagement stats without saying it, because this is at the core of why I do what I do. Ready for it?

[00:06:17] Managers account for 70 percent of the variance and engagement.

Hear that. Managers account for 70 percent of the variance in engagement. This is why we have to develop our leaders. It’s also why this participation quadrant is really predicated on relationships.
Participation.

[00:06:42] The third quadrant is performance. Ops folks, you don’t need to hear this from me. This is what you talk about all the time. It’s the bulk of your job- delivering on performance expectations, delivering results. This is what you’re paid to do. Right. And we know results matter.
Here’s the key. It’s process plus results. How we get results matters because in the performance quadrant, it’s not just about the outcome. It’s about how can we deliver the outcome consistenty? How can we continuously improve? And that means we have to look at the inputs, the processes, the routines, the systems and the role that people play in achieving performance goals year after year.
Performance.

[00:07:31] Finally, in the fourth quadrant, up in the top left of the circle, we have progression. Because so many executives and senior leaders I talk with are on a quest for this progression- it’s moving beyond improvement. It’s sustained improvement. Yeah, that pesky word sustainability. But not just to sustain.
It’s like next level stuff. It’s system integration that creates ongoing agility, not just for today, but for tomorrow. It’s kind of next level. It’s purposefully tackling the really hard stuff that most organizations, frankly, just don’t get to.
That’s progression.

[00:08:14] So these are your four quadrants: purpose, participation, performance and progression. This is what executives want for their organizations.

To get it, though, we have to add a little bit more to our model. You see, people are the heart of our organizations. So right in the center of our plus sign, right where the horizontal and vertical lines meet, we have a heart because we can’t manipulate or fake our way through the four quadrants. We have to authentically care about people. We lead with a servant’s heart. And so we keep that front of mind by placing a heart right in the middle of a model.
There’s another piece we need to add around the circle, we add an outer circle, just a little narrow outer circle, and this outer circle represents personalization. Personalization is how we consider each individual in our organization because priorities and needs and desires are different from person to person. So we just want to envelope the whole thing and keep that in mind. But as leaders in our organization, we’re building relationships with individuals.

[00:09:32] Whew! All right, here we go. We went through this model and what it looks like from the executive, the organization, the leadership standpoint. So let’s talk a little bit. Let’s kind of summarize some of this.

[00:09:44] Purpose, participation, performance, progression, all enveloped in personalization with people caring for people at the center.
Why does this model work? What do we get when we achieve this?
Well, here’s how it works.
Purpose plus participation give us an engaged, aligned team.
Participation plus performance give us systematic improvement.
Performance plus progression give us sustained agility so that we can continue to be competitive and continue to grow and continue to have flexibility and respond well into the future.
And progression plus purpose give us legacy. Legacy is the gift we give to the world, to our team members and their families, to our customers, to our communities. Legacy is the lasting impact we have.

[00:10:48] And here’s what’s great about all of this. It’s absolutely possible to align what team members want with what you want as an operations executive. These are not contradictory or competing things. They’re the same things. In fact, you can actually head back to Episode 49 and listen to the team member’s perspective and viewpoint on these four quadrants: purpose, participation, performance and progression. It’s the way that we come together to serve people, plus deliver results.

[00:11:23] It is time to take action. So what’s your next step? Here’s what I want you to do. Consider what future state vision you have either for your organization or your division or department or team. What is your highest intention? What is your vision when it comes to each quadrant? Purpose, participation, performance, progression.
What would that look like for your organization or team? Map it out, map out your future vision for each of those quadrants. That’s your one next step?

[00:11:59] Finally, if you’re finding the podcast helpful, please share it with at least one other person and stay tuned. Next week, we have a guest joining to talk about how leaders can actually take vacations for real. And then after that, we’re coming back to this model.
I’m going to talk about the specific levers. So when you think about not just the four quadrants, but within each quadrant, what are the levers you need to pull in order to achieve participation and performance and purpose and progression and all of these four different things?
So what we’re going to do in these coming episodes is we’re going to move from the overall concept to what you need to do. So stay tuned, put it on your calendar.
If you haven’t subscribed to my email list yet and go ahead and do it. That way, you’ll get notifications, you’ll get the visual aids, all of those things.
Until next time.

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Meet Jamie

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I’m a recovering Command-and-Control Manager who’s now on a mission to make the world of work more human. With a soft spot in my heart for Ops Managers, this Lean blog gives you the straight talk combining Lean, Leadership, and the real challenges of operations management.

Contact

Email
jamie@processplusresults.com

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