Is
the performance of your team slipping? What if there was a way to stay ahead of
performance dips? There is. And, fortunately, you don’t have to wait until
things aren’t working well to get this approach working for you and your team.
Proactively have one-on-one conversations with each person you work with about
their relationship between your roles. Consider this. It is your respective roles
in the organization that place you in work relationships with each other. Each
role has its own “lane” or area of responsibility. Now is the time to design
each relationship so that, in the places where your lanes overlap, you can
create a clear context for all your interactions. You can shape your dialogue
about the relationship between your roles along the lines of the following
three ideas.
Responsibilities -
We
each have specific and unique responsibilities which are posited by our roles.
Predictably, there is inherent tension between our role responsibilities. These
responsibilities have us interpret our work in a particular way. Invariably,
that means what is of significant importance to you at a tactical or
transactional level may or may not be important to me, and vice versa. This is
a reality between the roles that we inherit.
Start
your role relationship conversation by sharing what each person sees as their
responsibilities in the work you are doing together, what you each think your
responsibilities are, and how they are aligned or misaligned. Consider where
you may be competing for each other’s time and attention. Have the discussion
to achieve alignment. Identify exactly what you will be counting on each other
for. This is also known as “count-on-ability” (a.k.a. “mutual accountability”).
Priorities -
Each
of our responsibilities comes with its own set of specific priorities. We are
operating in dynamic circumstances, so priorities will shift and change over
time and even masquerade as hidden agendas. What is in-the-moment urgent for me
may become a backburner item in a month. What was a burning issue for you
yesterday has disappeared off your radar today. This plays havoc with effective
teamwork. Which makes it all the more important that we inform each other when
a priority that impacts our work together shifts.
Take
the first step and identify where your current priorities compete. Identify
these competing priorities as areas for potential conflict moving forward—and
have the conversation as to how you will resolve the competing priorities now.
These may be challenging conversations to have, but they pale in comparison to
the challenge presented by not having them.
For
example, a division President responsible for doubling the division’s capacity
may want to secure working capital for growth. His primary concern is on making
sure his division has the capabilities in place to deliver value in the given
timeframe. The CFO, whose most important concern is to reduce costs for the
whole enterprise, may want to limit all capital expenditures to manage ROI. It
isn’t lost on either of them that their priorities are competing. Both leaders
can, if they proactively discuss their competing priorities (which are
legitimate) ahead of time, have candid discussions to resolve the conflict
between making the capital investment and balancing ROI.
We
need to design a good working relationship first—before we can resolve the
inevitable disagreements and conflicts we will have within it.
Expectations -
We
sometimes come into a conversation about our responsibilities and priorities
with preconceived expectations of the role, based on our prior experience. The
role you currently play in the organization may have been played by other
people. I may unconsciously expect that you will repeat what they did and how
they did it. Or we may have hidden expectations of each other simply because of
what we associate with our titles.
Commit
to take nothing for granted in the realm of expectations. Rather in a new role
relationship, a new project or an emerging situation, articulate any
expectations you have of the other person—and invite them to do the same with
you. Remember that what was urgent and important in the past may have no
bearing on our current role responsibilities and priorities. Discuss whether
some, all or none of these expectations of each other are still valid.
Effectively
getting work done together can happen when we are clear about the
responsibilities, priorities and expectations underlying our “arranged” work
relationship. I strongly recommend to my clients that they not wait for a
conflict or crisis to initiate a conversation about role relationships. In
fact, I recommend they have these conversations early and often.
We can give each other our best when we design
our relationships proactively. Better to prepare ourselves with some competence
for those inevitably painful moments in which we will need some equanimity and
presence of mind to see our way through—together. When everything else has been
taken into consideration, it will be our ability to reconcile our conflicts
together that maintains the high performance of our team and our organization.
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