You should talk to people and make connections because youâre naturally curious. You want to know how other teams at your company work and what people do. You want to talk to your competitors because youâre all working to solve the same problems and theyâre taking a different approach. You want your projects to be successful, so you donât just talk to your immediate teammates at lunchâyou grab lunch with your partners, your customers, their
customers, their partners. You talk to everyone: get their ideas and their perspectives. In doing so you may be able to help someone or make a friend or strike up an interesting conversation.
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Youâre somebodyâs customer, tooâso talk to whoever is doing work for you. Show up with something of value or a pertinent question. Try to understand what their roadblocks are and what theyâre excited about.
And talk to the people who are closest to the customer, like marketing and supportâfind teams who communicate with customers day in and day out and hear their feedback directly.
Come curious. And come genuinely interested. When youâre looking up and around, youâre not on a self-serving mission to understand if your company will fail and how quickly you should cut and run. Youâre trying to understand how to do your job better. Youâre getting ideas of how to help your project and your companyâs mission succeed. Youâre starting to think like your manager or leader, which is the first step to becoming a manager or leader.
So as a manager, you have to find what connects with your team. How can you share your passion with them, motivate them?
The answer, as usual, comes down to communication. You have to tell the team why. Why am I this passionate? Why is this mission meaningful? Why is this small detail so important that Iâm flipping out right now when nobody else seems to think it matters? Nobody wants to follow someone who throws themselves at windmills for no reason. To get people to join you, to truly become a team, to fill them with the same energy and drive thatâs bubbling within you, you need to tell them the why.
Because in the beginning youâre not going to have HR to help you find and hire a world-class team. You wonât even have a recruiter. For the first twenty-five or so employees itâll all come down to you and your cofounderâyour vision, your network, your ability to convince people that you know what youâre doing. You can lean on your mentors and board (and hopefully early investors), you can put them to work to prop up your reputation, but ultimately youâre selling yourself and your vision for success.
You need a story people can get behind. [See also: Chapter 3.2: Why Storytelling.] People you respect. People who will help you create something great. Your team is your company. And your first hires are crucialâtheyâll help you architect what your business and culture will become.
Under normal circumstances nobody should ever be shocked that theyâre getting fired or have to ask why itâs happening. They may not agree, of course. But anyone whoâs struggling should be having weekly or twice-monthly 1:1 meetings about that struggle. Thatâs where issues are honestly discussed, solutions are attempted, and thereâs a follow-up about what
worked and what didnât and whatâs going to happen next.
Just as people make a commitment to your company when they join it, you make a commitment to them. If youâre leading a company or a large org, it is your responsibility to help people identify their challenge areas and give them space and coaching to get better or help them to find a spot at the company where they can be successful.
But even with all the goodwill and good intentions in the world, sometimes itâll become obvious to you and to the person on their way out that their issues are unsolvable, the team has lost confidence in them, and the world is full of other wonderful opportunities, with other, much less miserable jobs that you will happily help them find. And thatâs when theyâll leave, usually of their own accord.
The takeaway here is worth repeating: Getting the team right is the necessary precursor to getting the ideas right. It is easy to say you want talented people, and you do, but the way those people interact with one another is the real key. Even the smartest people can form an ineffective team if they are mismatched. That means it is better to focus on how a team is performing, not on the talents of the individuals within it. A good team is made up of people who complement each other. There is an important principle here that may seem obvious, yet - in my experience - is not obvious at all. Getting the right people and the right chemistry is more important than getting the right idea.