GearShift: Realigning in the Emerging World of Work— Shift 4

2019 Ferrari, Maranella Italy, October 2019

2019 Ferrari, Maranella Italy, October 2019

Last fall my husband and I took a wonderful trip to central Italy. After a few days in Bologna, we headed to Florence and Tuscany. on our way, we detoured slightly to stop at the Ferrari and Lamborghini factories. These stops included the opportunity for us to drive a Ferrari on the open road for a brief stint. As we got in, I squeezed into what was barely a back seat as Roger took the wheel and our guide jumped into the passenger seat. He turned to me and asked me if I wanted a spin at the wheel before our allotted time period ended. I eagerly said yes, I’ll take the last 5 minutes. We headed out onto the open road and Roger slowed down and then punched the accelerator over and over again to hit mind boggling speeds.

it was thrilling.

As it came closer to my turn, I realized two things. One- how much fun my husband was having behind the wheel of this $300k dream machine, and two- that there was no way I could figure out how to drive this complex car in just a few minutes. In one of my more generous wifely moves over 40 years of marriage, I gave my husband the last few minutes of driving the Ferrari.

This is where we find ourselves on many fronts as leaders right now. Not enough time to make sense of what is in front of us and the recognition that knowing how to drive a 5 speed Toyota Corolla does not provide sufficient experience to just jump behind the wheel of a highly engineered complex machine and put it in gear.

That is why we must make this 4th shift from Problem Solving to Sense-making- we can’t fix this problem.

Most of the skills we have learned up to this point around decision making and problem solving will not support the kinds of environments we are now navigating. The growth edge for leaders right now is to make sense of what we are seeing and learning in complex environments. Welsh social scientist and leadership guru David Snowden captured this way entering into complexity and navigating it quite differently in a framework he calls “Cynefin”, a Welsh word meaning habitat or haunt.. Snowden proposes that we all have connections, often through things we cannot see or grasp, and our work is to truly explore other ‘habitats’ to learn how to make sense of our own.

In the visual below, there are the obvious or clear kinds of problems, and more complicated problems. This is where modern management and leadership science has spent tons of time creating models and tools to equip their people to lead and problem solve. This requires an analytical and engineering mindset and way of approaching challenges. And it is still helpful and useful for many kinds of organizational needs and challenges.

The chaotic, which we have all experienced over these last months, requires quick, decisive action that stabilizes the environment. But it won’t work over time.

Cynefin Framework, copyright David Snowden

Cynefin Framework, copyright David Snowden

Engaging complexity is not a simple thing to pay attention to as it is counter intuitive to traditional decision-making and problem-solving methods. However, the cost of not moving into this way of leading will severely limit you to the opportunities that begin to emerge and cause you to stumble if you are only relying on what you already know.  In order to make sense of what we are seeing and learning in uncharted territory, we must be able identify patterns as they emerge and then build our experiments and prototypes around those patterns. If problem solving requires categorizing and analyzing what we are seeing and experiencing, then a very different framework and road map is needed to “sense-make”:

    • Listening and probing first, not jumping to categorizing and analyzing:

      • In problem solving, our starting point starts from an assumption that we know what the destination is, we just have to ‘engineer’ our way to the solution. The starting point is “we know”. Sense-making starts with curiosity and question asking.
        Assumes that “we don’t know”.

      • Gather qualitative data- ask questions about what people are experiencing around a specific challenge or concern. Capture key words and phrases. Over time you will see some patterns emerge that become actionable.

    • Minimum Viable Decision Making (MVD) is learning to move forward when you can see the bigger picture to some degree but you have insufficient data. Often called   Abductive reasoning, it what is needed when inductive or deductive reasoning are not useful

      • In abductive reasoning, the major premise is evident, but the minor premise and therefore the conclusions we can draw are only probable. We must experiment and be willing to move with insufficient information.

      • Thick Data, not just Big Data, that leads to Rich Data. Thick data is the result of we learned in step one- by seeking patterns and making sense of what people are experiencing and marrying it to Big Data. It provides us with new perspective and insight so that we are not defaulting back to what we know when we begin to examine Big Data.

    • Emergent Practices, not Best Practices:

      • Best Practices only work on familiar, tried and true systems. Things that are known and repeatable. They tend to be rigid and focused on compliance when constraints are fixed.  Over time, without review and improvement, they will produce mediocrity.

      • Good Practices allow for some flexibility, and offer governing constraint while allowing people to move with some creativity. They function best when the problem is known, and the solution can be identified, but the path to get there is complicated. They are very helpful in engineering environments.

      • Novel Practices occur when the environment is chaotic and there are no effective constraints. People must act and respond with little or no complete information and stress is often high.

      • Emergent Practices offer enabling constraints, but allow for a high degree of flexibility and agility. They can also emerge when we see that something that already exists- either tangible or intangible- can acquire functions for which they were not originally adapted or selected.

To make these shifts will require interventions in all of your existing systems. It may even require you to abandon some of your systems and build new ones. The danger of simply rubber-banding back to pre-pandemic norms is that you will extend the trauma and pain your people are already experiencing, rather than giving them new conditions to realign around that create safety, resilience, possibility and hope. If you are actually relying primarily on what you know and what has worked in the past, you may find yourself and your organization in dangerous territory. 

 

This work as a leader is not easy or simple. It will require a significant commitment of your time, energy and focus. It might seem like this can wait until things calm down, or you have more certainty about the future. But when things settle down, and you have a better line of site to a new future, you may have lost some of you very best people along the way. Is that a risk you are willing to take?

 Undertaking this work, especially in complex times, seems daunting. But it has never been more important. If we can be helpful as you navigate these shifts, please email here to schedule a 30 minute consultation.  

Next week, I will publish a conclusion to this series that will seek to synthesize and integrate it a bit based on some stories from the field.

GearShift: Realigning in the Emerging World of Work Shift 3

1984 Toyota Corolla

1984 Toyota Corolla

In the fall of 1983 I bought my first new car. It was a red 1984 Toyota Corolla. It was a 5 speed and it was zippy. By now my ability to handle a clutch was pretty good. But this new one still took a bit of time to become accustomed to driving. Much like the next shift, we may assume that what we already have in place and know about the state of our people is sufficient. It is not. And we must prepare to adjust our thinking and practices around how we care for the whole person, not just their productivity and ability to contribute.

Shift 3 is from Employee Engagement to Employee Well-Being.

Engagement is not possible if employees don’t feel safe and there is anxiety in the organization. You may want to start with Engagement, to know where your team stands. Surveys are a powerful way of listening to your people. and knowing what they think and are experiencing right now is vitally important. Mark Murphy, in a recent Forbes article, strongly urges leaders to assess engagement now, while stress is high and the organizational system is anxious. You are much more likely to get better data, and to hear from those people who are even more likely to be silent now, in the disconnected environment many are operating in. To do this kind of deep listening, and then to respond to it in visible and meaningful ways, builds much need trust and resilience into your organization culture.

And building trust just might be the most important thing you focus your attention on in the near term, and here is why.

Over the last 13 years, the internal think tank at the Mars Corp has undertaken research and application for what it calls the Economics of Mutuality. They identified 4 types of capital that must be considered AND measured in order for Capitalism to be healed. The four kinds of capital are:

    • Individual Capital

    • Social Capital

    • Financial Capital

    • Natural Resource Capital 

Bruno Roche and Jay Jakub wrote the primer on their research findings in 2016 called Completing Capitalism: Heal Business to Heal the World

Focusing in on Social Capital, which outlines what must be present for well-being, is described through these 3 essentials.

“Just three simple component variables—trust, social cohesion, capacity for collective action—account for enough of what constitutes social capital that all of the other variables need not be considered by business, unless of course one is undertaking a purely academic exercise.”

It is more important than ever to create conditions for these 3 essentials to be created. These three elements are the hallmarks of organizational health and social well-being. And there are real business implications to be drawn from the EoM research on social capital summarized here: 

“Social capital has an impact on economic development. Social capital drives prosperity and economic performance, although it is often ignored and omitted from consideration… Like any form of capital, however, social capital can be used, created, and wasted. It can also be intentionally grown through business interventions.

It is measurable in a stable, scalable way, making it business relevant. Social capital, moreover, is stable across varied geographies, and data collection is scalable.

It is actionable in business operations. Using social capital, we can assess the fertility of the socioeconomic environment where we and others operate. And we can diagnose and track the impact of targeted actions/interventions by the business.

Ensuring that you are building social capital in your in your team or organization is of primary importance. Questions to consider might be—Are we extending trust to our employees? Are we as leaders demonstrating trust? Here are a few simple ways to build trust:

  • Communicate often and clearly.

  • Communicate good news fast and bad news faster. This is a time for radical transparency.

  • Ensure your leaders are speaking with one voice, and that voice is calm and congruent. This means that your leaders must be connecting and communicating with one another on a daily basis.

  • Assume good intent. Your people are doing their best, given the uncertain environment. A few may take advantage of these circumstances: deal with those people individually. Do NOT reset or make policy based one or two bad actors.

  • Extend grace. As much of possible. Everywhere.

  • Examine your decision making process. Will this decision, strategy or tactic create opportunities for cohesion or tear cohesion apart? Is this decision being made reactively or responsively

It is easy to move with expedience when decisions press in from multiple fronts. And there are decisions that must be made quickly. But most decisions can be paused for at least some period of time to be consider and evaluated. Do this whenever possible. Get input. Listen to those who will be most impacted. I am not suggesting decisions be made by consensus. But the more your people can participate in a decision-making process, the more ownership they will have in the final call.

This is the time for prototyping and experimenting. It is NOT the time for strategic planning. There is too much unknown. Give people permission to try things and learn. Ensure that experiments, especially ones that donet go well, don’t yield punitive action.

Do our teams have the ability to act and make decisions about their work without checking with a member of the leadership team?

Do they have true agency?

Are we removing obstacles that allow them to do so?

If you are truly creating high trust, cohesive environments, then your teams and people will feel empowered to take intelligent risks that will lead to innovation and new pathways forward.

Are we providing ‘psychological safety’ in our work places? Amy Edmondson, in her ground-breaking book The Fearless Organization defines psychological safety as

“the belief that the environment is safe for interpersonal risk taking. People feel able to speak up when needed — with relevant ideas, questions, or concerns — without being shut down in a gratuitous way. Psychological safety is present when colleagues trust and respect each other and feel able, even obligated, to be candid.”

This season of Covid, massive unemployment, deep unrest around race and equity and tremendous uncertainty has produced a kind of Collective Social Trauma that we are all experiencing, regardless of race or gender.

Finally, do you have resources available for your people who may be facing enormous anxiety and uncertainty in areas of their lives outside of work? This is the time to build up those resources, including counselors, chaplaincy programs, and Employee Assistance Programs and make sure your people access to these people without fear of retribution. The emotional well-being of your people may be very fragile right now. Resourcing them and supporting them in ways that make sense for your business are vital. These are not just ancillary offerings for a few people in the margins. This is a necessary resource that every organization must make available.

Undertaking this work, especially in complex times, seems daunting. But it has never been more important. If we can be helpful as you navigate these shifts, please email here to schedule a 30 minute consultation.

Shift 4: From Problem Solving to Sense-making: complexity requires a new kind of thinking and radically new ways of learning.

 

GearShift: Realigning in the Emerging World of Work Shift 1

1969 Volkswagen Beetle

1969 Volkswagen Beetle

I learned to drive a stick shift in 1976 in a light blue 1969 Volkswagen Beetle. For anyone who remembers learning to drive a 4 or 5 speed , you know that sound that occurs when the gears grind. It is a bad sound, kind of sets your teeth on edge. And it happens a lot in those learning curve weeks. This is the place we find ourselves in as workplaces re-open and new, unknown conditions emerge that feel grinding and unfamiliar. that as leaders, we must address with what often feels like insufficient data.

What follows are 4 Shifts I believe we need to consider in the coming months as we seek to lead, manage and catalyze change in our workplaces.

In the last post on May 4th,  I asserted that the ‘’Return to Work’ paradigm was actually a fictional narrative that leaders were creating to help normalize current conditions. Evidence does not suggest that we will be returning to working environments as they were pre-March 15th and that we all must be prepared for significant changes.

 This requires a re-imagining of work life that goes beyond simply tactics and logistics. I suggested 4 significant shifts we must make if we are to address the current environment unfolding before us, which is largely uncharted territory. This week I will publish more detail on what will be necessary to consider in the first of these 4 shifts.

The 4 shifts are:

·      Shift 1: From Return to Work to Realign to Work

·      Shift 2: From Guiding principles to Grounding principles

·      Shift 3: From Employee Engagement to Employee Well-Being

·      Shift 4: From Problem Solving to Sense-making

 

The implications are profound as we (attempt) to make our plans and new information is surfacing almost daily to inform how we think through how this will impact our workplaces and contexts. On June 12th the CDC published new guidelines for interacting in work and social contexts. There is already evidence that cases are spiking up as states re-open businesses and organizations. There is much to consider as we look at the first shift.

Shift 1: From Return to Work to Realign to Work:

Leaders must do some deep empathetic listening to their people to discern where they need to re-imagine work flow, work environment and workplace habits and requirements, while also considering new health and safety guidelines emerging.

  • Physical Work Spaces: Many employers are restructuring work environments to create safety and to meet new health standards around physical distancing and human contact. This is necessary. But if it assumes that all your people will want to return to your physical work space, then check your assumption. We have already seen announcements from tech companies such as Twitter and Google that their employees need never return to a corporate building if they don’t want to.  Many are drafting plans based on the phased re-entry of Red (where we have been) to yellow (where most states are now or are headed) to green (when we will freely be moving about the country). But it is unlikely, even in the green zone, that all your people will be returning to offices full time. And there is much critique surfacing about the open office floor plan that overtook hip working environments in the last 15 years.  Not so hip (or safe) anymore. Of course, this is greatly dependent on your industry and the actual work requirements. Human services, trades, manufacturing, and many other kinds of work require physical presence, but workers are going to need real assurance that their safety and health have been carefully considered and addressed.

  • Work From Home is really Work from Anywhere: In this recent article by Tech Crunch, the author contends that its less about WFH (although Covid-19 has sequestered many of us in our homes for the last 10 weeks). It is really about work from anywhere, including office spaces. Physical workplaces become one of several options workers will have and may utilize based on their specific roles and job requirements. Physical workplaces may become gathering and collaborations places, and for some portion of their workforces, the daily location. But for many, work from any number of places including their homes, is now the standard, not the exception. How does this impact the unique requirements of your particular work and how much flexibility will you offer your people? We also expect that this will become a critical consideration for job seekers of the future.

  • Teams: While some collaboration in physical gatherings will start back up very soon, many teams have learned how to be exceedingly effective and efficient in virtual collaboration. Expect this to continue indefinitely. How do you allow for this freedom and also set reasonable expectations about physically gathering? Every kind of work has different considerations and requirements. This is a major realignment that will occur in many workplaces. And there are some things that simply cannot be re-produced in virtual environments and that requires in person human interaction to accomplish. We are in uncharted territory here, and will learn in the next few months what works, what doesn’t and what needs to be adjusted.

  • Performance Management: Traditional means of performance management, already becoming obsolete in many environments, are difficult to maintain in the current environment. Many HR professionals wisely recommended suspending all ‘performance management’ during the crisis for reasons of psychological safety and the well-being of already stressed workers. In addition, the trend away from the dreaded (and often ineffective) annual performance review process looks to be accelerating. A recent SHRM article offers valuable insight here as does HBR article “How to Do Performance Reviews Remotely”:

    • “For starters, think about why you’re conducting these reviews in the first place — because, as the Covid-19 crisis trudges on, you’re not necessarily looking to weed out poor performers or decide who gets a raise. Rather, it’s to strengthen your organization’s culture and reinforce its values. “How the company treats its employees in this situation will make or break the culture,” says Tavis. So, think hard about what you aim to achieve with these evaluations. “Performance evaluations are one of the strongest anchors and artifacts of your corporate culture,” and you should use them wisely, says Mortensen. Talk to your boss and colleagues about the company’s near-term and long-term goals. Work together to figure out how to communicate those to your workforce as part of the evaluations. “What leaders do and say now in these times is going to be remembered,” he says. Show your managerial mettle. “Tend to your flock.” And remember, your primary objective hasn’t changed: “You’re still trying to help your employees become as strong as possible.”

Finally, make your plans. And be ready to ditch them or revise them dramatically in real time. What is not predictable here is human behavior and how your people are already re-aligning to the fast-changing work environment in ways no one could predict. If we can be helpful as you navigate these shifts, please email here to schedule a 30 minute consultation.

Shift 2: From Guiding Principles to Grounding Principles coming next week.