Leadership through Eyes of a Coach...Alan Booth

Friday, December 11, 2015

WHY YOUR BOSS DOES NOT HEAR YOU


Getting your ideas across to your boss is no different than how to influence a business owner who is on the fence to sell her business.

You talk, they hear you...and nothing moves forward.  Frustration

The problem is most likely when you keep the conversation going; and, you miss the cues from the other person.

So you may not know your boss or business owner well enough to influence them; and you conclude they don't understand you.

Example: I engaged a client by first hearing from his spouse.  We arranged lunch to determine a good fit with her husband.  It was 2 months before I found out that she hired me to help her husband.

Complex triangulation!

This reminded me of not only to stop talking but to use the powerful tool of silence, sitting back to be open to the other person to tell me more.

Of course this probably does not work well with your spouse!

Friday, October 16, 2015

BE AWARE: JULIA IS HAVING CONFLICT



Conflict I have observed within my client's organizations always involves different communication styles. Usually one person is outspoken and monopolizes conversations which impacts those more reserved.

And the outspoken person needs to be a better listener!

I am currently working with Bob [CEO], who has a "need to be right" when speaking with Julia. He is more experienced and proud of it [to the annoyance of his team]

Julia, as a result, feels unappreciated, misunderstood and isolated because of a lack of dialogue with Busy Bob.

When one person feels the other does not take the time to understand him/her, trust is weakened, conflict rises.

"Conflict management" is rarely the issue; more it is what people need to openly talk about that prevents conflict.

In Bob's case, his staff would work harder for him if he took the time to LISTEN!

Friday, September 18, 2015

WATCH OUT FOR THE FILTERS


Filters, a communication typically based on opinion, not fact.  I see these in [1] vertical hierarchy...how many layers from top to bottom, [2] personal opinions not based on fact, [3] parent/child relations.

Take the case of my client Xenox Enterprises.  The CEO [68] has hired mostly relatives for managerial roles because, she says, in the beginning [40 years ago], it was believed that relatives are more trusted.  Ha!

Today the CEO is totally stuck with less than competent relatives in management positions.  He will not terminate them [of course not family] nor coach them to reach expectations [does not know how].

The CEO has stated that one alternative is to sell the business; however he has never sought people who could at least determine Fair Market Value and has discounted the fact that no one would want to inherit a dysfunctional management team.

Solution?

We are making headway by getting agreement from the CEO to form a management team where he will not have any direct influence, but will be kept him informed. This eliminates the clash with the next generation in the business as well as the aunts, cousins and "close relatives", incent them to reach specific company goals and be more strategic to grow from a successful regional producer to at least develop customers east of the Mississippi.

You might consider this a "work around" but the CEO is finally hearing the news that without him in the business, it will fail.  It will succeed by empowering his younger team.

"The buck does not stop at the top!"

Friday, August 21, 2015

ARE YOU IMPORTANT?


I find most of the management I consult , including business owners, do not know how to influence people successfully.

This can lead to managing more by "authority" which makes people defensive...and the management frustrated.

If you want to influence others, you need to make them feel important.

That's it.

How?

Current clients are being taught about the 80/20 rule of conversations which turns the highly stressed [passionate?] to only occupy 20% or less of any conversation.

Monitor yourself to see where you are with this rule.

Need help on the "how"?  Give me a call. 203.454.3502
 
 
 

Monday, July 20, 2015

I AM TOO BUSY


All too often with my clients I observe how people react and feel when others say, "I am busy" or when they simply do not take the time to engage people.

And...this is what others hear when this happens:

ü  She sees me as less or unimportant

ü  It is always about him

ü  I feel marginalized

In family businesses this phenomena is exacerbated because of parent-child relations that overlays the business culture.

In professional firms I observe competitive cultures where people are not working on a level playing field because of a lack of being genuinely engaged. Genuine and trusting engagement starts first by talking!

TAKE THE TIME TO BE INCLUSIVE...and recognize when you are not!

Wednesday, June 10, 2015

MAURICE RESISTS REQUESTS


Totally stuck.

Potential to inherit Dad's company

Has talent but stuck in status quo

 
Approach

Patient listening to find out what is causing the stuckness,  that which has yet to be revealed

 
Who do you talk to when you feel stuck?  203.216.6232

Wednesday, May 20, 2015

THE CEO WHO SPEAKS LOUDLY


EXTREME ENGAGEMENT!
 
Client

2nd generation business owner

Actions

He goes directly to individuals to point out "what is wrong" with what they are doing

Message sent to staff

They feel he does not trust their abilities

Opening comment when first engaged:

"I don't think any of my managers add value"

No surprise!
 

Two weeks later:

"I have never had anyone teach me how to manage!"

Process

Transition to holding managers accountable and stepping away to make that happen.  His managers need to build greater trust with the boss that they are competent leaders.
 
 
 
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