Doing this requires one simple routine: a well-structured, one-day monthly management meeting that includes everyone who supervises or manages anyone in the business. It should be a day focused on learning, sharing, and problem-solving vs. a day of mind-numbing reports.
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I use a handful of methods for setting context across the company, but my primary platforms are our E-staff (Executive Staff) and our Quarterly Business Review (QBR) meetings. A few times a year we bring together all the leaders (top 10 to 15 percent of people) of the company from around the world. It starts with a long meeting or dinner with my half dozen direct reportsâpeople like Ted and Greg Peters and our head of HR Jessica Neal. Then I spend a day with E-Staff (all VPs and above) and then we have two days of presentations, sharing, and debates at QBR (all directors and aboveâabout 10 percent of the entire workforce).
The number one goal for these meetings is to make sure that all leaders across the company are highly aligned on what I call our North Star: the general direction we are running in. We donât need to be aligned on how each department is going to get where they are goingâthat we leave to the individual areasâbut we do need to make sure we are all moving in the same direction.
Before and after QBR, we make available many dozens of pages of Google Docs memos to every employee, explaining all the context and content we shared at QBR. This information is read not just by QBR participants but also by people at all levels of the company, including administrative assistants, marketing coordinators, you name it.
Between QBRs, I hold ongoing one-on-one meetings to get a feel for how aligned we actually are and where context is lacking. I have one thirty-minute meeting with each director once a year. That makes about 250 hours of meetings with people who are three to five levels below me in the org chart. In addition, I meet with each vice president (two to three levels below me) for one hour every quarter. This results in another 500 hours of meetings annually. When Netflix was smaller, I met with each person more frequently, but I still spend about 25 percent of my annual time on all these meetings.
Youâll drive everyone in the organization crazy if you implement all of these habits at one time. The key is focusing on one or two each quarter, giving everyone roughly 24 to 36 months to install these simple, yet powerful, routines. Then itâs a process of continually refreshing them as the company scales up.
What the data showed is that periodic one-on-one coaching (rather than superior technical knowledge) ranked as the #1 key to being a successful leader.
From our experience, great managers must focus those coaching sessions with their âdirect supportsâ (a better term than âdirect reportsâ) on five topics representing the five main activities of successful managers/coaches.
In reverse order of importance:
- Hire fewer people, but pay them more.
- Give recognition, and show appreciation.
- Set clear expectations, and give employees a clear line of sight.
- Donât demotivate; âdehassle.â
- Help people play to their strengths.
Communication rhythm is established and information moves through organization accurately and quickly.
⢠All employees are in a daily huddle that lasts less than 15 minutes.
⢠All teams have a weekly meeting.
⢠The executive and middle managers meet for a day of learning, resolving big issues, and DNA transfer each month.
⢠Quarterly and annually, the executive and middle managers meet offsite to work on the 4 Decisions.
We encourage management teams to set aside an hour or more each month to brainstorm ways to improve each of these cash cycle components. This is a powerful exercise to do with the broader middle-management team at a half- to full-day monthly management meeting. It will give everyone a better understanding of how cash flows through the business and how each function can contribute positively.