rom the author of the Rich
Dad's Advisors book Sales Dogs comes a guide on leading a team to greatness.
Great champions have one thing in common: They know how to work as a team.
The ABCs of Building a Business Team That Wins offers a set of simple, powerful
rules to govern the internal behaviors of businesses, organizations, families,
and individuals, and will guide readers to create championship results any time,
any place.
Excerpts:
Chapter One
Why Do You Need a Code of Honor?
In the absence of rules, people make up their own rules. And some of the
biggest collisions in finance, business and relationships occur because
well-meaning people are simply playing by different sets of rules. By the same
token, the most miraculous results come from "like-minded" folks who band
together under some invisible bond to achieve greatness.
By experience and default we all formulate our own sets of guidelines, rules
and assumptions. That's natural. But when we start coming together with other
people, organizations and cultures, we sometimes have a tough time figuring out
why "those guys" don't understand, or how they could so blatantly turn their
back on our feelings, our way of doing things and our rules. In most respects,
"those guys" feel the same way about us. Why? Because we assume that certain
basic rules are the same. Bad assumption.
This book is about revealing the process for eliminating one of the biggest
causes for financial loss, frustration and heartbreak. It is about surrounding
yourself with folks who subscribe to the same sets of rules and how to establish
them so that you can ensure peak performance, fun and incredible results in all
you do.
For about twelve years now, I've actively studied teams, looking at what
makes them successful and how they are able to operate at peak performance. And
after all this time, I can tell you this: You cannot have a championship team,
in any facet of your life, without a Code of Honor.
Team Tip:
Sometimes the easiest way to avoid upset, collisions and disharmony in any
group is to take the time to make sure that everyone is playing by the same
rules.
If you are interested in building a great relationship, whether it's with
your business, your community, your family or even yourself, there have to be
rules and standards for the behavior that will ultimately achieve your goals. A
Code of Honor is the physical manifestation of the team's values, extended into
behavior. It's not enough to have values, because we all do. What's so crucial
is knowing how to put physical behavior into practice to reflect those values.
Let me illustrate what I mean. When I was in high school in Ohio, I was on
the cross-country running team. Typically, any human being of the male sex
living in the state of Ohio was ex-pected to play football, but if you could see
my size you'd realize that I was just not built to go up against a
two-hundred-pound linebacker, even though I love the game. Cross-country was
more my style.
What a lot of people don't know about cross-country is that there are
typically about five to seven runners per team racing at the same time. Usually
there are several other teams running at the same time. The only way your team
can win is if the whole team finishes relatively close together close to the
front of the pack of runners. In other words, having a superstar who runs ahead
of the pack and places first doesn't do the team any good if everyone else is
all spread out across the field. Cross-country is a low-scoring sport, meaning
that first place receives a point, second receives two points, and so on. The
idea is to get the whole team to finish near the front, so that your team gets
the lowest score possible. If we could get fourth-, sixth-, seventh- and
ninth-place finishes, then even if another team got a first, second, twelfth and
eighteenth we would still win the meet.
So for the entire two-and-a-half-mile race each of us would push the others
on, encouraging, threatening, supporting, yelling with each gasping breath for
air. With muscles burning and body strength faltering, it was as much a race of
emotional endurance as it was physical. We pushed each other both on and off the
course. If someone was slacking, you can rest assured the rest of the team would
be on him quickly to pick it up. It took ALL that each of us had for us to win.
Whatever it took for us to cross that finish line close together, that's what we
did. In other words, part of our code was to do whatever it took to support
everyone to win.
We won most of our cross-country meets, or placed very high, even though we
had very few superstar runners. We were a championship team. It was my first
experience with teams, at the most basic, physical, gut-wrenching level, but the
lessons it taught me remain the same today. I have always surrounded myself with
people who would push me that way and who would allow me to push as well. It
serves them and it serves me. As a result I have always been blessed with
incredibly great friendships, success and wealth.
I have also observed that it is in times of pressure, when the stakes are
high, that people are transformed. I've NEVER seen a great team that didn't come
together without some type of pressure. It could be from competition, from
outside influences, or it could be self-induced. We knew in those cross-country
meets that every person, every second, every step counted toward a win for our
team, and it bound us together. We knew that the success of the team took
precedence over our individual goals. No one wanted to let the others down. It
drove you as hard as the desire to win. We had a code that said we stuck
together no matter what. And in those really important moments, we came together
and did what we needed to do to be successful.
Team Tip:
A Code of Honor brings out the best in every person who subscribes to it.
But when pressure increases, sometimes so do emotions. When that happens,
intelligence has a tendency to drop. People revert to their base instincts in
times of stress, and that's when their true colors come out. Sometimes that's
not such a pretty sight. Have you ever said something to someone when you were
upset that you wished you had not said a few minutes later? I thought so. That's
what I mean about high emotion and low intelligence.
I've seen teams that work well together day to day, but when things get
tough, they revert to "every man for himself." A crisis came along and everyone
ran for cover, because there was no set of rules to help them see their way
through it. Judgments based upon heightened emotions became their guide, which
may not turn out to be the best choice for all concerned.
For example, more than half of all marriages end in divorce. In times of
stress, the people involved are unable to negotiate their differences. No common
code of honor or set of rules holds them together. It is the same issue in the
case of a business partnership dispute that has no rules or guidelines. Both
situations can get nasty.
It isn't that people don't want to work out their differences. The problem is
that without rules and expectations mutually agreed upon up front, they act on
instinct, particularly when emotions are running high. Each does what he or she
thinks is best, based upon his or her feelings at the time. Decisions made in
that kind of setting may not be the best ones.
Now I know you've never been under any kind of stress, right? Of course you
have. You know that when you're upset, when you're under a deadline, when you're
angry at a family member or a coworker, it is impossible to try to negotiate
terms. Why? Because you aren't in your right mind! THAT'S why you need a Code of
Honor.
You must create, in a sane moment, a set of rules for your team that tell
everyone how to operate when the heat is really on. That way, in those moments
of high stress, the rules legislate the behavior, rather than the emotions. The
Code is NOT just a set of guidelines to be used only when it's convenient. These
are rules that must be "called" when breached.
The needs, tasks and problems of a team determine how rigid its code is. The
Marine Corps has a code that holds its teams together under fire. When bullets
are flying, life and death may have to take second place to logic and team play.
Repetition of their code and its rules conditions the team to come together as a
cohesive, trusting unit rather than just running for individual survival.
Having a Code of Honor doesn't mean that everyone on the team is happy 100
percent of the time. Sometimes things get messy. A code can cause upset, create
confrontation and even put people on the spot. But ultimately, it protects every
member of the team from abuse, neglect and breaches of ethics. A Code of Honor
brings out the best in every person who subscribes to it.
You can NEVER assume that people know the code on their own. It isn't
something that's necessarily intuitive. You learn it from others-parents,
coaches, leaders or friends. Someone has to "show" it to you. And everyone
involved must agree to it. This is true for any relationship, be it with your
business, your family or yourself-any relationship with an interest in its own
happiness and success.
Currently about 50 percent of the gross domestic product of the United States
comes from small businesses, and of that, about half of those businesses are
sole proprietorships or home-based businesses. I tell you this to emphasize a
point: The average person has much more power than you think. The way you
conduct your business affects the lives of many others.
Team Tip:
Your code is a reflection of you and will attract those who aspire to the
same standards.
Your reputation, your income and your longevity depend upon your consistency
of behavior internally and externally. The future of the country is in the hands
of those who drive the economy, the markets, our businesses and our families.
That's you! Your significance may seem minuscule but never doubt your influence
on others. Your code is a reflection of you and will attract those who aspire to
the same standards. How you conduct your business may have a bigger impact than
the service you provide.
Decide here and now that you will create a Code of Honor for yourself and for
the teams you're a part of. What do you stand for? What code do you publicize to
the world? How tight is your team? How happy do you want to be?
My purpose here is to give you steps, motivation and insights to building a
great team that will give you and those you touch the wealth, satisfaction and
joy that you all deserve. So let's talk about who's on your team.
Team Drill:
1. Discuss great teams that you have been on. What was it like? What were the
rules? How did it feel?
2. What would be the benefits to having a code for your business? Your
finances? Your health? Your family?
Copyright © 2004 by Blair Singer.