Talking about behaviors is one thing. But if that's all you do, what you have done is create a new vocabulary but haven't written a new playbook.
It’s time to push out old behaviors and cultivate new behaviors, and the processes of the past are far too sluggish. They feel comfortable and familiar, but they aren’t working – and they’ll never work again.
Countless articles (including the MIT report) list ‘eroding’ behaviors that need to see their way out, and ’emerging’ behaviors that need to become commonplace – like authenticity, transparency, collaboration, empathy, and inclusion.
Further, more data is becoming available regarding the different leadership behaviors needed for remote leaders vs. office-based leaders, and how leaders can nurture psychological safety regardless of their proximity.
How long are you going to wait for the leaders of your company to step up and exhibit the clearly defined behaviors that will create employee engagement and business impact?
They’ve taken workshops, completed coursework, participate in monthly 1:1s, and (if your company’s still doing them) make it through the annual performance reviews.
But in the months between, they’re wondering “Am I doing this right?”
And you’re wondering if they are, too.
It’s important to both of you – and to the company – for them to get this right, quickly. So why are there weeks between data sets?
It’s the digital age, but their feedback process is locked in the ’80s.
To make it in a digital economy, you and your leaders need more data on how their behaviors are impacting the business, and more frequently. You can only get that with continuous feedback.
Right Now Step 1
Collect frequent feedback on each leader’s alignment to specific behaviors.
Forget the one-off workshops – when done correctly, continuous feedback frequently reminds leaders of the behaviors your company values.
Each week, ask each leader’s peers, managers, and direct reports how frequently that leader reflects each behavior. Make sure that their answers are anonymous – this is one way you can nurture psychological safety with the feedback process itself.
Tip: Avoid requiring written responses. Feedback providers know their writing styles give them away, and often hold back on giving honest answers. Instill psychological safety by using a multiple choice format instead.
See how Rhabit makes continuous feedback fun and easy for feedback providers.
Right Now Step 2
Give each leader access to their feedback data.
To make it in the new economy, data should be flowing throughout your entire company – particularly talent. No more locked up spreadsheets that only one or two people ever see. Pop that hood and share data continuously – in a psychologically safe way, of course.
As feedback data rolls in, each leader gains insight into precisely which behaviors they excel in, and which ones they need to reflect more often in order to achieve the ’emerging behaviors’ required of them in today’s digital age.
Over time, leaders can visualize how their efforts are being perceived by their closest co-workers on a weekly basis. No more guessing, no more crossing fingers, no more kidding themselves – they know exactly how they’re coming across every day, and precisely how to improve.
Step 3
Reward and recognize leaders with high feedback scores.
Ask them how they were successful. How can you replicate their success across other teams? Is there an opportunity to pair one leader with another for mentorship work?
Ideally, you’ll be able to compare performance data for top leaders and bottom performers to understand the impact of leading edge leadership behaviors on employee engagement, team performance, market competitiveness.
Your leaders will develop new habits faster and more effectively when provided with intuitive behavioral blueprints and frequent feedback. Ideally, the feedback process you employ will be easy, frequent, accessible, and psychologically safe. Doing this will help you operationalize faster behavior change – and communicate its impact on the business – for every employee at your organization.
You can read more about pairing behavioral blueprints to frequent feedback here.
See how Rhabit’s innovative approach to behavioral change and frequent feedback transforms leaders with our free 90-day no-risk pilot.
Rhabit unlocks the power of continuous employee feedback to build high-performing work cultures.
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Rhabit unlocks the power of continuous employee feedback to build high-performing work cultures.
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Rhabit unlocks the power of feedback to build high-performing work cultures.
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