Recession Repellant For Your Company

It’s bad out there. People are spending less. Debt is up and confidence in the market is down. It’s time to tighten the belt and be extra careful. It’s time to commit ourselves to poor results, right?

What? That’s crazy! Who would do such a thing? Yet, that’s what most of your competitors will be doing through the recession. They’ll make three fundamental leadership errors, and as a result sabotage their own best efforts to deliver a profit. Here’s what you can do to help your company apply some recession repellent.

Leadership Error #1: They Stall Their Own Momentum

Imagine you’ve entered a contest: The first team to push a car to the end of the parking lot wins. There are three cars in a parking lot. One car is rolling backwards; one car is sitting still; and one car is rolling forward. Which car do you want your team to get behind?

Obviously, your team wants to be behind the car rolling forward; your team craves momentum. Yet, leaders inadvertently sabotage momentum by their actions and words:

• “Times are tough,” they tell their team. And guess what? The team follows the command and acts like times are tough. Fear becomes the norm: Will we survive? Is my job secure? These leaders have just manifested their own tough times.

• Managers announce, “We’re entering a downward business cycle.” They rub their forehead and grit their teeth. So “DISASTER!” is what people hear and read in the body language. Thus, confidence seeps away like heat through a screen door. Questions are asked that leadership never hears. The team becomes nervous.

• Conversely, some managers hide or ignore the bad news. But people read newspapers, so rumors spread. What people feel is always more powerful than what we tell them; rah-rah speeches prove to be a waste of money.

Recession repellent can be applied by taking these actions:

1) At the start of the day ask yourself, “Why am I capable of leading in times like this?” and “What is the image I want to project right now?” and “What can I do so my team can be at their best?”

2) Share the truth so that it reveals the strengths and momentum the organization possesses.

3) Rather than talk about what you don’t want to have happen, talk about what you do want to see.

Leadership Error #2: Managers Adopt a “Bunker Mentality”

Because they’ve committed error #1 above, troubles compound:

• More than ever, perfection is needed. But due to pervasive fear, mistakes increase. And like a magnet, management focuses on those failures – thus communicating to people that “you better lay low. Don’t risk standing out during times like this!”

• Management begins analyzing where things are going wrong. And due to their focus, those they lead can’t focus on solutions. Idea generation – the action that will save the company – becomes stagnant because everyone is trying to outsmart the problem rather than create solutions.

• Firefighting becomes a survival mechanism. This shortsightedness eliminates any vision for the road forward. Resum

Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google
  • Blue Dot
  • De.lirio.us
  • IndiaGram
  • IndianPad
  • MyShare
  • Technorati
  • YahooMyWeb

You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Leave a Reply