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Great businesses are built on teams that take full ownership of individual responsibilities. Too many businesses let people slide by partially doing things, and accepting excuses for delays and mistakes that could have been avoided.
A culture of accountability is one of the most valuable institutional habits that your business can form, and for better or worse, it starts with you.
If you don’t move heaven and earth to honor your word and meet all your commitments, your team will learn that they don’t have to either.
Here are seven time-tested tips on your role in creating accountability in your company:
For example this might look like, “So summing up, I’ve got three action items here. Item one… item two… and item three…” [Visibly writing each of them down in your notes.]
When your team sees you consistently sum up and write down action steps and who owns them (and by when) after every meeting you’ll be amazed at how quickly they will raise their game and start to follow the same behavior. Plus, this will make it worlds easier for you to remember to circle back and check with your team that they have met their commitments and to close the loop by telling them of how you met the commitments you made yourself to them at the meeting. Which brings me to my next tip…
Even when the task isn’t complete, don’t leave people guessing.
Circle back and say, “I haven’t solved the problem yet, but I haven’t forgotten you and I’m actively working on a solution.” Again, you are modeling the behavior of taking full responsibility to your team.
It is one behavior with a huge return on investment in terms of modeling accountability inside your company.
Too many companies implement respect in a hierarchical manner. Your time is not more important than an employee’s time or a customer’s time in their eyes.
Being on time shows respect, and it makes a big difference to the receiver.
A corollary of this is to start your meetings on time, versus waiting for the late arrivals to saunter in. You’d better believe they’ll get the message that integrity matters when they come in to the meeting 6 minutes late and you take them aside afterwards to ask them why they were late.
Instead I encourage you to show your team how mistakes are a part of being in business, and often can lead to profitable insights.
When you make a mistake, publically take responsibility, share what you learned and how you’ll apply it, and implement a better solution going forward.
“Sarah, you own this deliverable and it includes doing x and y by Friday close of business. Can you also please make sure to send a quick recap to Tom and me on Monday that shares how Client Z responded?”
The combination of these 7 time-tested tips, applied with gentle pressure – relentlessly – will have a big impact inside your company in shaping your team to help you get and sustain growth.
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