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Leaders Motivate Teams with Norms

Topic: LeadershipBy Dave JensenPublished Recently added

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He marched down the hall towards me. He wore a black suit, white shirt, and a gray tie that matched his silver hair. Oh no, I thought to myself, it's Mr. McNulty, the executive director of this entire YMCA. Ten yards from me, he stopped and bent down to pick up a candy wrapper that had escaped from a careless child in our youth department. He then strode to the trash bin next to the desk where I was checking children into their afte oon classes. "You're Dave Jensen, aren’t you?" He barked. "Yes sir," I stammered. "I know it's your first day on the job and we’re happy to have you here." He stuck out his hand to shake mine. In a flash, he bolted through the glass doors and into the parking lot. As I reflect on that first day of my first job, one of the many lessons I learned about leadership at our local YMCA strikes me. Although it was the cleanest place that I ever worked, the leader never preached about keeping the facility clean. We just kept it immaculate because he did. The lesson of course is that the only way to create a positive culture with your team is to live it. The latest research tells us that Emerson was correct when he stated, "What you do thunders so loudly I can't hear what you say." Nicole Brandon reported that researchers at the University of Be in Switzerland trained rats to deliver food for one another by pulling a stick. (1) The researchers then divided the animals into two groups: some rats received food from other animals, whereas other rats did not. Researchers found that the rats that had received help were more likely to pull the stick for ‘unfamiliar’ animals (i.e., strangers). In other words, this was not the typical "you scratch my back, I'll scratch yours.” This was "if anyone scratches my back, I'll scratch someone else's back." Aristotle stated that children learn by imitation. So do people and rats. Here's how you can create positive norms on your team, which lead to a culture of productivity, accountability, and results. I facilitated an offsite meeting for a group of leaders from a public agency. My pre-work interviews indicated that they had a few dysfunctional norms that were lowering productivity and increasing turnover. To manage these issues, I recommended to the Executive Director that we establish positive norms to create the culture she truly desired. She agreed. Here's an exercise I facilitated during our retreat:
  1. Created a vision statement that everyone bought into. (It’s already on their stationary.)
  2. Identified values that support the vision statement.
  3. Brainstormed a list of the behaviors that they need to observe in order to be sure that each value is alive and well on their team. To generate this list of specific behaviors, we brainstormed the answers to this question: imagine you're on a team that does (fill-in-the-blank with a value) well, what might that look like? What behaviors might you see?
  4. The managers then took these values and norms to each of their own teams to be refined.
This is a simple, yet fundamental approach to creating a positive team culture. How surprised will you be when your team starts exhibiting the specific behaviors that lead to business results? Let me know what you think and how it goes. Keep on stretching, Dave
  1. Nicole Branon: Pay It Forward, Scientific American Mind, October/November page 9, 2007.

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About the Author

Dave Jensen is a leadership educator, consultant and coach. He helps leaders manage ambiguity, gain buy-in to any change, improve decision-making, and achieve difficult goals in today’s complex, competitive, and conflicting environment. For a FREE Chapter or to purchase his groundbreaking book, "The Executive's Paradox – How to Stretch When You're Pulled by Opposing Demands," or to receive his highly researched and practical leadership tips, sign up for his free eZine ("Dave’s microRaves"), visit: www.davejensenonleadership.com Transforming Proven Leadership Tools Into Your Success Stories

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