
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Sometimes leaders call me saying they want help to fix their team. That’s always a red flag for me.
A CEO of a west coast food company called me a while back. He said his team lacked accountability and he wanted me to “fix them”. As I asked him questions a disturbing trend appeared: his retention was some of the lowest I’d seen in my 30+ year career.
Even his executive team didn’t stick around—the longest tenure there was under 2 years, and the CEO had been around for over 15 years! What was happening here?
How’s the accountability in your organization? Would you like it to be stronger? If so, then please do this first:
I’ve Seen The Enemy—And It’s Us
It’s because a human isn’t a simple being. We all have parts of ourselves, and some are in conflict with one another. A part of you wants to hold others accountable, yet part of you doesn’t want to be the “the bad guy/gal”.
Here are the top 7 factors that I find prevent, or at best reduce, accountability:
What Actually Increases Accountability
The great news is you can turn around your accountability challenges quickly, due to your own new behaviors:
The Accountability Equation may come in handy too:
Assigner’s (Leader’s) Clear Expectations + Owner’s (Team member’s) Agreement + Personal Celebrations/Conversations (for Team Member) = High Accountability and Ownership
The Net-Net
How will you create the conditions for greater accountability?
Resources Mentioned:
You’re busy growing. Let’s have a strategy session when it makes sense, which means you are…
· Committed to getting better results and finding out how awesome your performance can truly be
· Ready to make this a priority and get started in the next few months
· Allocating budget to improving the leadership, culture and results of you and your company
· Able to make the decision to move forward (or can convince the person who can)
Ready? Great! Please fill out the form here. If not, check out our resources and subscribe to receive news and more tools as they become available, and we’ll work together when the time is right.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By Christine Comaford5
88 ratings
Sometimes leaders call me saying they want help to fix their team. That’s always a red flag for me.
A CEO of a west coast food company called me a while back. He said his team lacked accountability and he wanted me to “fix them”. As I asked him questions a disturbing trend appeared: his retention was some of the lowest I’d seen in my 30+ year career.
Even his executive team didn’t stick around—the longest tenure there was under 2 years, and the CEO had been around for over 15 years! What was happening here?
How’s the accountability in your organization? Would you like it to be stronger? If so, then please do this first:
I’ve Seen The Enemy—And It’s Us
It’s because a human isn’t a simple being. We all have parts of ourselves, and some are in conflict with one another. A part of you wants to hold others accountable, yet part of you doesn’t want to be the “the bad guy/gal”.
Here are the top 7 factors that I find prevent, or at best reduce, accountability:
What Actually Increases Accountability
The great news is you can turn around your accountability challenges quickly, due to your own new behaviors:
The Accountability Equation may come in handy too:
Assigner’s (Leader’s) Clear Expectations + Owner’s (Team member’s) Agreement + Personal Celebrations/Conversations (for Team Member) = High Accountability and Ownership
The Net-Net
How will you create the conditions for greater accountability?
Resources Mentioned:
You’re busy growing. Let’s have a strategy session when it makes sense, which means you are…
· Committed to getting better results and finding out how awesome your performance can truly be
· Ready to make this a priority and get started in the next few months
· Allocating budget to improving the leadership, culture and results of you and your company
· Able to make the decision to move forward (or can convince the person who can)
Ready? Great! Please fill out the form here. If not, check out our resources and subscribe to receive news and more tools as they become available, and we’ll work together when the time is right.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.