Thursday, October 28, 2021

Motivating Your Team with Mission and Values


Motivating Your Team with Mission and Values
Takeaways
“One of the most important things any leader at any level in the organization can do is to be a personal role model. It doesn’t do any good if you have a set of values you want practiced but you, as a leader, are behaving differently. That’s the end of that game.“ Jack Welch
Living and Breathing Your Mission
What it Means
All too often, a mission statement is just a plaque on the wall. Your mission must come to life through your actions every day. Great leaders constantly inspire and guide their team’s behaviors. They understand that the mission defines how they will win in their business and that it is only valuable if it is understood and practiced by everyone.
Why it Matters
·         Your people won’t live and breathe your mission if you don’t.
·         It inspires better performance by rallying the team around a common vision of success.
·         It provides clear targets and vivid direction.
·         It allows a “behavior = reward” evaluation model that removes ambiguity about who is doing a good job and why.
·         It focuses activity and energy to make sure that everyone is working on the tasks that take the company forward.
·         “Busy work” gets quickly identified and removed in companies that align values and actions with the mission every day.
Action Plan
Living and Breathing Your Mission
As a leader, you have to do two things with the mission and values of your organization:
·         Live it yourself and set an example—every day
·         Reward team members who are living the values you set through their behaviors.
Ultimately, when you talk about every behavior you want practiced in your company, you are talking about its values.
Your Starting Point
One of your critical roles as a leader is to create and sustain the passion, energy, and reward structure for achieving the goals that your organization and your team have set. Ask yourself:
1.       How frequently do I communicate the mission to my team?


2.       When I speak about the mission, do I do so in ways that provide clear, vivid examples of how actions can support it and drive the organization forward?


3.       What can I do as a leader to make sure that living and breathing the mission is central to everything my team does every day?


4.       Do our values align with our mission? How do I assess my team’s values (or behaviors) in achieving our mission?


5.       When I see somebody on my team demonstrating the values of the organization, do I praise that person and make specific reference to the values they are demonstrating?


6.       Do the reward systems that I have put in place reinforce the behaviors I am trying to drive?


Quick Wins in Motivating Your Team with Mission and Values
Bringing the mission to life is one of the most challenging, but necessary keys to winning. If your team isn’t living the mission, then it becomes nothing more than nice words on a piece of paper.
If you aren’t leading by example, commit today to identify ways you can immediately demonstrate your organization’s values and make the vision come alive through your daily activities. The steps below cost nothing and require almost no planning, but they will send the message that you lead by example.
·         Make sure the mission provides clear targets and vivid direction
·         Identify examples in your own behavior every day that demonstrate the values you seek.
·         Talk about the mission and values. Yes, that’s right, just open your mouth and start talking about them all the time. Use them as part of your daily conversation. Use them throughout team meetings. Use them when your department is struggling with a decision on a product, process, or whether to go after a new market.
·         Acknowledge when you see others living the mission and demonstrating the values. And do so explicitly. Don’t just say, “Hey, you’re doing a great job.” Say, “I loved the way you reduced delivery time by 20%, because that helps us achieve our mission of . . . and demonstrates our value of finding new efficiencies.”
·         Cut through the jargon. Speak plainly, specifically and focus on behaviors.
Rewarding the Mission and Values
In any organization, as Jack Welch observes: “You get the behaviors you reward.” The main point is to make sure that your team understand that their evaluations will be directly linked to how well their behaviors demonstrate a commitment to the vision and values of the organization. Your team must know what you expect and how their success will be measured. Just like the clarity and specificity required in setting mission and vision, that same clarity must be in place for evaluating the execution of it.
“Show me a company’s various compensation plans, and I’ll show you how its people behave.” Chuck Ames, the former chairman and CEO of Reliance Electric
·         Make sure the vision provides clear targets and vivid direction.
·         Establish an evaluation plan that measures success in terms of achieving the mission and demonstrating the values.
·         Remove ambiguity—everyone must know what choices they need to make and what priorities they should set to advance the mission.
·         Reward those who live the values.
The Generosity Gene
Great leaders delight in rewarding their people and giving praise and credit where it’s due. Leaders who have the generosity gene live nothing more than promoting the top performers on their team sand being able to negotiate raises and bonuses for those who are living the values of the company and performing at the top of their game.
Game Pages
Motivating Your Team with Mission and Values
Bringing your mission to life doesn’t happen overnight. If it’s going to truly be a part of your company’s DNA, it must be:
·         Well defined and actionable
·         Reinforced by the words and actions of the team leader
·         Integrated into the evaluation and compensation systems
When it is, your team will know what choices they should make, what priorities they should set and what behaviors are expected (and rewarded).
Your Starting Point
Mission and Values
By

I helped our company achieve its mission of




When I

I demonstrated the value of


Today I identified _________________________ specific examples of situations where my team members were living the mission and I acknowledged these by





To show my team how serious I am about living the mission, I





When I saw you doing


I was impressed by how that will help us




Reward