Get
It Done: Ten Ways to Ensure Effective Results
David Peck, President, Leadership
Unleashed
There
has never been a higher premium on getting effective
results. And yet, while technology continues
to improve, organizations consistently over-promise
and under-deliver. What levers do leaders need
to pull to ensure greater success?
We’ve
developed ten factors to enhance the effectiveness
of any project, goal, or business objective.
The more these “Key Effectiveness Factors”
that are present, the higher the likelihood
for the success of your project.
Factor
One: Engage highly self-motivated and capable
people to do the job.
Getting
the right people on board can be a challenge.
A common error is to choose people based on
factors other than capability and self-motivation.
As Jim Collins found in his study of companies
that sustained great performance over long periods
of time, “The right people don’t
need to be tightly managed or fired up; they
will be self-motivated by the inner drive to
produce the best results and to be part of creating
something great.” Setting high standards
for the people you choose is critical to any
objective.
Factor
Two: Give your people the freedom to do it their
own way, while also functioning within clear
guidelines.
To
get the most out of your people, show them the
game, playing field, and the values, guidelines,
and milestones required to win. Then, let them
play in their own way. This requires trust on
your part, but it is more effective than riding
herd over them. Your team needs clarity from
you about values, deadlines, revenue, cost,
and how you define success. By combining clear
guidelines and delegation, you increase the
likelihood of success.
Factor
Three: Give your people a sharp picture of the
desired outcome from the start.
Take
the necessary time to define up front what measurable
outcomes will delight you. Studies show vagueness
about key outcomes often leads to failure. Go
over it repeatedly with your team until any
assumptions are replaced with actual information.
Leaders who have the courage to pause and clarify
outcomes significantly increase the likelihood
of success.
Factor
Four: Create a culture where people are rewarded
for being brutally honest.
Extraordinary
results require a culture in which those you
lead are rewarded for telling the truth. Take
inventory the culture you are creating, and
be on the lookout for hesitation when it comes
to full disclosure. By modeling and inviting
brutal honesty, you enable your team to detect
its own errors, and correct them, while providing
you the “real story,” on which you
can base smart leadership decisions.
Factor
Five: Supply adequate resources to the task
at hand.
Problems
are often caused by either a shortage or a glut
of resources. The fast-paced culture in the
workplace tempts us to jump in now and be more
precise about resource needs later. It takes
leadership to carve out the time to calculate
resource needs from the very beginning. By doing
a great job of allocating resources from the
start, you stand a better chance of success.
Factor
Six: Challenge your people by setting a high
bar.
Capable,
self-motivated people tend to work best when
they are truly challenged. It is important to
understand what motivates each key person, and
set expectations within their grasp and beyond
their immediate reach. This keeps it interesting
enough for them, producing a positive creative
tension. Your best people are then more likely
to run at full speed, even as you improve the
chances for success.
Factor
Seven: Implement a simple yet profound success
measurement.
How
do you measure success? If it’s not crystal
clear, perhaps it’s time to look more
closely at your definition of success. A great
measure for success is a compass for everyone
involved that answers the question: are we moving
toward, or away from success? Such a compass
sets the stage for your team to act independently
and effectively toward a common goal.
Factor
Eight: Set up reliable, honest, and concise
reporting on progress, and watch it carefully.
A
clear progress report requires three elements:
reliability, honesty, and brevity. Low reliability
of information causes issues. Incomplete or
anecdotal information leads to bad decisions.
Too much information creates an inability to
focus on what’s important. Careful and
ongoing attention to each of these elements
greatly increases the likelihood of success.
Factor
Nine: Establish clear consequences linked to
the success or failure of milestones and outcomes.
The
consequences related to interim milestones and
final outcomes are often glossed over or ill-defined.
Set milestones that - if missed - could threaten
the overall effort, and link them to consequences.
In this way, success and failure will be clear
to everyone, and no one can be surprised when
consequences - either positive or negative -
follow.
Factor
Ten: Structure a continuous feedback approach
that detects and corrects errors.
Outcome
is a result of people, resources, and process.
Great processes are designed to identify and
correct errors throughout. Building in real
time error-detection and correction feedback
mechanisms will improve the quality of intended
outcomes. The process should make itself more
effective over time, making “ah hah!”
moments an ongoing thing, rather than at the
end, when it’s too late.
Using
the Key Effectiveness Factors.
How
can you apply these Key Effectiveness Factors
to your project? One way is to make each factor
worth ten points. By scoring your project, you
will have an overall picture, and you will know
where barriers exist and where additional focus
is needed. Armed with that information, you
can then apply solutions appropriately, ensuring
effective results.
About
the Author
David Peck is the president
of Leadership Unleashed (www.leadershipunleashed.com),
a San Francisco-based leadership coaching and
management consulting firm that helps individuals,
teams, and corporations achieve specific, meaningful,
and sustainable results.