Are your goals ever misunderstood by your team?
That can happen when the metric you use decouples from its intention. I remember managing a customer service department and wrestling with the mission of providing world class service and yet counting how many calls each representative answered. They were rewarded for answering many, many calls -- yet anyone who's ever been a customer knows what it feels like to be rushed thru a call. That's not great service.
As a high performance leader, you've got to prioritize. You've got to set unambiguous goals that make it clear what you are measuring AND why. There can be no doubt what matters.
People can game your goals if they aren't clearly aligned with the mission. Don't let that happen.
Set goals so clear that they can't be misunderstood.
It's your best chance at getting the performance you want.
-- Doug Smith
That can happen when the metric you use decouples from its intention. I remember managing a customer service department and wrestling with the mission of providing world class service and yet counting how many calls each representative answered. They were rewarded for answering many, many calls -- yet anyone who's ever been a customer knows what it feels like to be rushed thru a call. That's not great service.
As a high performance leader, you've got to prioritize. You've got to set unambiguous goals that make it clear what you are measuring AND why. There can be no doubt what matters.
People can game your goals if they aren't clearly aligned with the mission. Don't let that happen.
Set goals so clear that they can't be misunderstood.
It's your best chance at getting the performance you want.
-- Doug Smith
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