April 17, 2010 ( PowerHomeBiz.com )
Upon completing a
recent project I took my client to lunch to thank him for his business. We
reminisced about how we first met at my End Procrastination NOW! Workshop
and how he realized at that time he was tired of tolerating things in his
business.
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Among the problems with which he was becoming increasingly frustrated
were senior team members and frontline employees who…
- Were not taking responsibility for their jobs
- Needed constant prodding to get things done
- Were not responsive to client requests
- Did not return phone messages
- Were throwing their fellow employees “under the bus”
- Were having shouting matches in the office and on project sites
- Using profanity when communicating with co-workers, clients and
vendors
- Procrastinated on following through on business opportunities
- Were showing up late or leaving early with no explanation
- Had negative attitudes
- Complained about customers and co-workers
- Were “disappearing” during the day
I began my project searching for the real underlying cause of these
issues by:
- § Interviewing the entire staff of 25
- § Holding a series of focus groups
- § Observing interactions and conversations between the business
owner and his people.
What I learned in just two weeks could fill a book. My new client was
violating virtually every leadership communication mistake.
To simplify the project I categorized them into what I now call “The 7
Deadly Sins of Organizational Leadership Communication:”
- Communication Sin #1: Lack of Specificity
This causes people on
the receiving end of a communication to have to mind-read or guess as to
what is being requested of them. Details are left out or are at best,
vague. The recipient for many reasons fails to ask follow up questions
to get specifics and have to figure it out on their own.
- Communication Sin #2: Lack of Focus on Desirable Behaviors
People
are great at saying what they don’t want or what they don’t want others
to do, but have challenges identifying the behaviors they want instead.
Where your focus goes, grows. As such, people are getting more of what
they don’t want because they continue to focus on it.
- Communication Sin #3: Lack of Directness
This is where people in
organizations go behind the backs of their co-workers, peers, bosses and
subordinates with water cooler gossip. Another example is the leader who
tries to fix a problem that should be addressed to one person but calls
a team meeting to offer a blanket directive. A third is when co-workers
tell managers the mistakes co-workers make hoping to make themselves
look good at the expense of someone else.
- Communication Sin #4: Lack of Immediacy
This is procrastination.
This is when communication is avoided because the conversations are
difficult and leaders don’t know how to approach the offending party, so
they choose not to.
- Communication Sin #5: Lack of Appropriate Tone
Ever had someone in
a professional setting raise his or her voice at you in a condescending
or threatening manner? How about responding in a sarcastic manner? These
are just two of the ways inappropriate tone ruin relationships and trust
in company cultures.
- Communication Sin #6: Lack of Focused Attention
In this day of
technology and multi-tasking too many office conversations occur passing
in the hallway, while one person is checking/responding to e-mails on
their smart phone, or talking to us while on hold waiting for someone
they will likely deem more important once they come on the phone. This
fosters disrespect and low trust in organizations.
- Communication Sin #7: Lack of Respectful Rebuttals
This may be the
most common, yet subconscious of all seven leadership communication
sins. It’s the conversations when someone agrees or provides positive
feedback in the first part of their sentence, only to be followed by
“but.” After the “but” comes the other shoe and you end up feeling
misled and unfulfilled.
These behaviors had caused significant damage to my client’s 25-year-old,
$15 million business with 25 employees over the past ten years. My client
actually estimated that allowing these communication issues to build up over
ten years had cost him about $5 million. That’s real money for some people.
If you are making these same leadership communication mistakes I invite
you to go to
www.HowToImproveOrganizationalCommunication.com and get my free
special report “The 7 Deadly Sins of Organizational Leadership
Communication” where I will show you how to fix these sins and build a
championship organization.
Skip Weisman works with organizational leaders to improve personnel,
productivity and profits by helping them “Create a Champion Organization,”
one that communicates effectively and takes action with commitment towards a
shared compelling vision. His latest White Paper Report is “The 7 Deadly
Sins of Organizational Leadership Communication” available free at
www.HowToImproveOrganizationalCommunication.commmmm