In the previous two blogs, we introduced you to Compassionate Accountability: How Leaders Build Connection and Get Results by Nate Regier PhD and Marshall Goldsmith.
Doug Conant, founder, and CEO of Conant Leadership, is an internationally renowned Fortune 500 business leader, and bestselling author, who turned around a struggling Campbell Soup Company during his tenure as CEO (2001–2011). His philosophy was to be tough-minded on standards and tenderhearted with people. He recognized that life is too fragmented and dynamic to rely on traditional approaches to communication. Leaders need behavioral skills to make a difference in the smallest moments in the flow of work.
His philosophy is summed up in this image: Interactions lead to Culture lead to your Brand!
Interactions, Culture, Brands
This definition explains the most frequent failure in most organizations. Behavior Never Lies. A behavior (culture) of a can-do spirit, gets Key Results done.
Compassionate Accountability further acknowledges, “Your brand is a lagging indicator of the quality of your culture. Culture is the sum of all the interactions between your people. The action is in the interaction. Embedding Compassionate Accountability within every interaction will create a thriving culture and lead to a strong brand.”
At its core, culture is the sum of every interaction between the people.
Leaders must be fluid in the small moments and offer an opportunity to practice compassion.
WHAT IS COMPASSION?
Compassion is the practice of demonstrating that people are valuable, capable, and responsible in every interaction.
This definition has four parts:
WHAT IS THE COMPASSION MINDSET?
With the help of one of his colleagues, Compassionate Accountability author Nate Reiger created this switch model to help audiences understand the critical importance of being compassionate. Each switch represents one of the three components of compassion: value, capability, and responsibility.
When our switches are off, energy is blocked and wasted. This causes division, disengagement, drama, and cultures that don’t work.
The book provides a Compassion Mindset Survey. I used to love surveys like this until I realized how easy it is to game them. We all tend to believe we’re smarter or better than we are on surveys. I’ve learned to recognize I might not be as brilliant as I suspect. Often, I ignore or downplay how my mind plays tricks on my abilities when I do an exercise like this. The survey is shared below. It might be more helpful to recognize the value of the questions than to assess your score as a truthful representation of how you are presently doing. You might ask someone else how they’d score you, which may prove more valuable than scoring yourself.
The compassion mindset is a decision. It’s an attitude to view yourself and others as valuable, capable, and responsible.
The three switches of the compassion mindset are value, capability, and responsibility. Each one can be assessed through observable behaviors. When they are turned on, people can experience more connection, engagement, innovation, ownership, loyalty, and a thriving culture.
WORK RELATIONSHIPS should energize us, not drain us.
Drama steals too much precious time and energy away from what’s most important.
Compassion makes us human, brings us together, and gets us back on track when we lose our way. Compassion is the antidote to drama.
Compassion must not come at the expense of accountability, though, because our missions and goals are too important to compromise.
Our people are our greatest asset, so we must prioritize the human being at the center of it all.
Compassionate Accountability allows leaders to reimagine their understanding and practice compassion to include accountability without giving up either one. No drama, no compromises.
To create an environment where everyone is inspired to give their best, contact Positioning Systems to schedule a free exploratory meeting.
Turn your team into a growth organization.
Growth demands Strategic Discipline.
Next blog, we continue to explore developing Compassionate Accountability. We’ll explore The Value Switch. Turning on the value switch involves the fundamental belief: people are unconditionally valuable! Perhaps you’re like me. I find this easy to do with others but often struggle to see it in myself.
A winning habit starts with 3 Strategic Disciplines: Priority, Metrics, and Meeting Rhythms. Forecasting, accountability, individual, and team performance improve dramatically.
Meeting Rhythms achieve a disciplined focus on performance metrics to drive growth.
Let Positioning Systems help your business achieve these outcomes on the Four most Important Decisions your business faces:
DECISION |
RESULT/OUTCOME |
PEOPLE |
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STRATEGY |
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EXECUTION |
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CASH |
Positioning Systems helps mid-sized ($5M - $500M+) businesses Scale-UP. We align your business to focus on Your One Thing! Contact dwick@positioningsystems.com to Scale Up your business! Take our Four Decisions Needs Assessment to discover how your business measures against other Scaled Up companies. We’ll contact you.
NEXT BLOG – The Value Switch