New leaders have to tune their antenna to the covert signals and the invisible knowledge networks that are the nervous system of an organization. These unwritten protocols - as well as the people who maintain them - and the unspoken taboos and conventions are wrapped up in the question everyone asks: âHow do things really work around here?
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As a leader, you are trying to unlock the judgment, the choices, the insight, and the creativity of your people. But, as weâve seen in the last two chapters, the way we go about this doesnât make much sense. We cloister information in our planning systems, and we cascade directives in our goal-setting systems. Instead, we should unlock information through intelligence systems, and cascade meaning through our expressed values, rituals, and stories. We should let our people know whatâs going on in the world, and which hill weâre trying to take, and then we should trust them to figure out how to make a contribution. They will invariably make better and more authentic decisions than those derived from any planning system that cascades goals from on high.
Pressler felt many pressures, both from within the company and externally, to make changes fast, to be decisive, and to set bold visions. But he recognized that these were seductive traps. He did not allow himself to be portrayed as a savior, he most certainly did not attempt to be a know-it-all, and he made sure to keep open to the torrent of data and information that flows into any leader when they start a new role. He remains steadfast to his agenda of listening and learning, working with his management team, spending time on the sales floor and in the stockrooms at various company stores, and describing the discoveries, thoughts, and ideas to the management team and the companyâs employees at large.
How people actually go about their works, how decisions are made, who gets promoted, how employees interact with one another, what motivates them - these are the things that really count. What makes things especially tricky, especially for an outsider, is that as with real cultures of any type - from corporations to schools, towns, and even nations - most of the really important rules are not written down.
The place to start assessing a culture is to listen, really listen, to how employees describe a place. We believe that within most generalizations there lies an inner core of truth.
Even though itâs crucial for a new leader to show that he or she fits into the culture and âgetsâ it, the paradox is that you donât want to settle in too comfortably if the culture needs modification. But of course, changing a culture is never as simple as ordering it to be so, especially if the organization is very proud of its traditions. And what organization isnât?
If your people donât know what the direction is, they wonât know where to go. The result: Energy dissipates, momentum slows, morale plummets, and the company drifts. Itâs not a pretty picture. Making sure everyone sees the same picture and then understands what that picture means, Parson says, requires âmore contact with people, more opportunities to meet them, and more communication.