Carolyn Stevens offers the following royalty-free article for you to publish 
online or in print.
Feel free to use this article in your newsletter, website, ezine, blog, or 
forum.
-----------
PUBLICATION GUIDELINES
- You have permission to publish this article for free providing the "About the 
Author" box is included in its entirety.
- Do not post/reprint this article in any site or publication that contains 
hate, violence, porn, warez, or supports illegal activity.
- Do not use this article in violation of the US CAN-SPAM Act. If sent by 
email, this article must be delivered to opt-in subscribers only.
- If you publish this article in a format that supports linking, please ensure 
that all URLs and email addresses are active links.
- Please send a copy of the publication, or an email indicating the URL to 
[email protected]
- Content Crooner (www.ContentCrooner.com) has distributed this article on 
behalf of the author. Content Crooner does not own this article, please respect 
the author's copyright and publication guidelines. If you do not agree to these 
terms, please do not use this article.
-----------
Article Title: Do You Want Your Team Members To "Just Get The Job Done"?
Author: Carolyn Stevens
Category: Leadership, Team Building, Corporate
Word Count: 618
Keywords: leadership, communication, relationships, teamwork, influence, 
corporate communication, task focused
Author's Email Address: [email protected]
Article Source: http://www.contentcrooner.com
------------------ ARTICLE START ------------------

Some of the leaders I coach are simply too task-focused!

Well, being "too task-focused" is not exactly the real issue. It's that these 
leaders are insufficiently "people-focused". In their effort to get the job 
done they burn people up and consequently the job doesn't get done!

One leader I met a couple of years ago had a horrible nickname-"The Fireball". 
Yikes! That said something about the way he burned people up. As a consequence 
of his fiery behaviors, he was way "behind the eight ball" whenever he wanted 
to influence his team members or peers.

Highly task-focused leaders too frequently lose team members, and they find it 
enormously difficult to generate discretionary effort from their team members. 

Both of these issues are huge costs to an organization. For example, I recently 
spoke to a Human Resource Manager who was dealing with an industrial issue that 
had "suddenly" flared up. I bet that a leader who was too task-focused was a 
part of that situation somewhere or other. 

It's Not An Either-Or Situation.

It really, really bothers me when I see behavioral models that put task and 
people focus on one continuum. 

That doesn't make sense from where I sit. People orientation and task 
orientation aren't mutually exclusive opposites. You know people who have a 
good dose of both, don't you?

In fact, if you're an exemplary leader you'll have a nice blend of task and 
people orientation. Rather than always opting for either a wired-in task or 
people preference, you behave in a contextually appropriate way, astutely 
attending to both matters.

How Do These "Balanced" Leaders Do It?

As I've inferred, some leaders are born with a natural inclination to attend 
equally to the person and the task-and most aren't born that way.

If you're highly task-focused, rather than being naturally task/people 
balanced, I suspect you can do with some steps to support you in behaving as an 
exemplary leader behaves.

Let's see how these two steps sit with you...

Step 1: Up your awareness.
Like most issues, being aware of what's actually going on is half the battle 
won. 

I know you know that your team members aren't just robots without their own 
thoughts, feelings, desires, aspirations and goals. They are...people. People 
who are after engagement. People who don't appreciate it when they're brusquely 
given an order. 

Just because you want something to be done pronto, doesn't mean they'll easily 
forgive your "command and control" manner.

Step 2:  Hum a particular tune :-).
Remember that people's buy-in is almost always required to complete the task. 

So your second step is to sing to the tune of...  

"Money makes the world go round", "People get the task complete". 

(I suggest you don't sing too loudly if there are people around :-).)

Keep on remembering that involving the other person, and building rapport, wins 
over "telling" any day. 

The job's much more likely to get done effectively, with your team members 
using discretionary effort, when you take care of the people part of the 
equation.

Your Leadership Call To Action

If, and only if, you notice that you have a bit of a tendency to be somewhat 
task-focused, and if, and only if, you want to have...

-More impact and better results from your interactions with others
-More influence with your team members and peers
-More buy-in and discretionary effort from your team members...

...all in the interests of better productivity and enhanced business results, I 
recommend that you consciously apply the above steps consistently, every hour 
of every day, certainly every single time you embark on a new task. 

Then once you've habituated the behavior, you can relax and let your 
unconsciousness support you in taking this big step towards exemplary 
leadership :-).

It really can be as easy as it sounds... provided you're highly, highly focused.

Carolyn Stevens, Managing Director of Leading Performance Pty Ltd, works with 
executives, leaders and teams who want to do a remarkably good job. 

Go to http://www.leadingperformance.com.au to request her useful, bite-sized, 
twice-monthly leadership solutions.
------------------ ARTICLE END ------------------



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Reply via email to