Thursday 17 November 2022

Being Focused

 Being Focused 

(Execution Excellence -"Ability to get things done" Series)

 
As we discuss the art of getting things done in the workplace, managers/ leaders must organize themselves effectively. In line with this, we have discussed the importance of managing time and expectations. The next aspect of managing self is FOCUS.

What is meant by FOCUS?

Focus means directing our thoughts, energy, and time into something. It is beyond the ordinary meaning of concentration in a single activity.

From an execution capability development of point of view, focus means knowing the priority and pursuing it till the end without distraction.

The priority can be achieving the task or business goal, strengthening relationships with stakeholders, building a foundation or stability, etc.

Most of us need clarity on WHAT to focus on and HOW to remain focused in any endeavor.

Focus is one of the leadership skills which can be acquired through awareness and practice.

Why is FOCUS required for anyone?
  • When we don't focus on the result, we quickly get distracted with activities and end up managing activities or being busy rather than getting things done.
  • When we do not intend to complete the task or achieve some goal, how can we expect our colleagues, peers, and junior colleagues to stick to our plan? People follow a leader who is focused on the end objective.
A few years ago, Warren Buffet and Bill Gates were asked, "what is the single factor that contributes to your success?" Both immediately responded with one word: FOCUS

FOCUS differentiates between dreamers and achievers in any profession.

Staying focused is essential, but it is not easy for everyone to remain focused as numerous distractions and opportunities will derail.Effective executives always begin with the end in mind and remain focused till they reach the end.Hence they are quite effective in getting things done.

Let us discuss how effective people trained themselves to remain focused and the behaviors they display to others to stay focused next week.

Have a great week ahead.

Expectation Management- Accountability Vs.Responsibility

 Expectation Management-

Accountability Vs.Responsibility
(Execution Excellence -"Ability to get things done" Series)

 
We have discussed the importance of being aware of key stakeholders' expectations related to expectation management. One way of being aware of the role expectation is getting clarity between accountability vs. responsibility.

In practice, we interchangeably use the term accountability and responsibility. There is a difference in the terminology, and how we use them to understand the expectation of our role in a professional setup will help us to deliver effectively.

Accountability refers to RESULT or end expectation, and responsibility refers to ACTIVITIES. In any professional dealing, others expect us to be accountable rather than responsible, even though it is not explicitly expressed.

How will this understanding help us?

When you relate your job with reference to more accountability than responsibility, it will enhance your understanding of expectations. You tend to improve your execution capabilities when you are clearer on expectations.

For example, assume you are the finance head of the organization. The key accountability expected from the position is to ensure positive cash flow, and all the activities are subsets of this accountability. When you know your ultimate accountability or result expectation, you will tend to do an effective job rather than when you relate your role only to activities like account keeping, generating statements, analysis etc. When you relate more to activities, likely suboptimal performance only will happen.

Similarly, if you are the procurement head, the key expectation is to ensure undisturbed material supply and cost optimization in material procurement. The other activities or responsibilities are a subset of accountability.

You may relate to your current role and articulate the highest expectation of the role.

When we are not aligned in expectations between key stakeholders and us, say, our boss or customer, disappointment occurs.

Some effective leaders, as i observed, will always relate their work and their team's work with an accountability perspective. When they have clarity, they will always communicate or connect with the team from a result delivery point of view and minimize the micromanagement on the activities level.

The clarity on accountability vs. responsibility is vague in many organizations, and it is the prime job of the managers/leaders to make clarity and practice when dealing with others.

This clarity on expectation setting helps to execute things well.

Have a great week ahead!

Expectation Management

  Expectation Management 

(Execution Excellence -"Ability to get things done" Series)
As we are discussing the relevance of self-management for enhancing execution capabilities, one aspect we discussed was time management for ourselves and others.

The next aspect is "Managing the Expectation."
 
Managing expectation is about being aware of what is expected from us in professional dealings and how we set expectations for others.

First, we need to be aware of what is expected to deliver for the role we assume
Second, we must be clear about the priorities sequence we need to follow.

Why is this CLARITY important?
 
When we do not have clarity on the expectation, it affects our execution capabilities and growth opportunities.
Most of the firefighting and chaos in the organization is due to a lack of clarity on the expectation between people or stakeholders.
 
It is not what you can do or deliver, but knowing and delivering the same as expected from you completes the execution cycle successfully. Otherwise, the efforts will be wasted only.

One incident happened to me with my client where i realized the importance of expectation management. At the beginning of my consulting career, a human resource head from a company called me and briefed the requirement for productivity improvements, as he understood from his business head.

Since this company is abroad, they organized flight travel and accommodation. I went, met a few people and spent a couple of days, and identified the opportunity areas for improvement. At the end of the day, i met the business head and was about to make a presentation and hurry to catch the flight. When i started presenting the potential areas where we could work on improvements, the business head began showing signs of confusion and irritation. He turned to the human resource head and started firing him up. He asked me to stop the presentation and explained he wanted to know the methodology of manpower assessment, not improvements at that point: completely different expectations and realities. The entire effort became a waste.

The business head, however, asked me to stay back, and i refused as i had some other work lined up. Then i  returned and sent a proposal as per his expectation, but it did not work out as the first impression was not appealing to both of us.

I realized in this incident that i must be clear enough about the expectation from key stakeholders as communication distorts from person to person. It is not how good you are or how you deliver; whether you deliver as expected or not matters in professional dealings.

Knowing the expectation is a must for delivering effectively, and our effort in getting the expectation right is essential.

However, regarding expectation management,  executives need clarity on accountability vs. responsibility which affects the execution capability. Let us discuss that next week.

Have a great week ahead.