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CEOs and senior executives can employ proven techniques to create top-team performance.

The value of a high-performing team has long been recognized. It’s why savvy investors in start-ups often value the quality of the team and the interaction of the founding members more than the idea itself. It’s why 90 percent of investors think the quality of the management team is the single most important nonfinancial factor when evaluating an IPO. And it’s why there is a 1.9 times increased likelihood of having above-median financial performance when the top team is working together toward a common vision.1“No matter how brilliant your mind or strategy, if you’re playing a solo game, you’ll always lose out to a team,” is the way Reid Hoffman, LinkedIn cofounder, sums it up. Basketball legend Michael Jordan slam dunks the same point: “Talent wins games, but teamwork and intelligence win championships.”

The topic’s importance is not about to diminish as digital technology reshapes the notion of the workplace and how work gets done. On the contrary, the leadership role becomes increasingly demanding as more work is conducted remotely, traditional company boundaries become more porous, freelancers more commonplace, and partnerships more necessary. And while technology will solve a number of the resulting operational issues, technological capabilities soon become commoditized.

Building a team remains as tough as ever. Energetic, ambitious, and capable people are always a plus, but they often represent different functions, products, lines of business, or geographies and can vie for influence, resources, and promotion. Not surprisingly then, top-team performance is a timeless business preoccupation. (See sidebar “Cutting through the clutter of management advice,” which lists top-team performance as one of the top ten business topics of the past 40 years, as discussed in our book, Leading Organizations: Ten Timeless Truths.)

Amid the myriad sources of advice on how to build a top team, here are some ideas around team composition and team dynamics that, in our experience, have long proved their worth.

Team composition

Team composition is the starting point. The team needs to be kept small—but not too small—and it’s important that the structure of the organization doesn’t dictate the team’s membership. A small top team—fewer than six, say—is likely to result in poorer decisions because of a lack of diversity, and slower decision making because of a lack of bandwidth. A small team also hampers succession planning, as there are fewer people to choose from and arguably more internal competition. Research also suggests that the team’s effectiveness starts to diminish if there are more than ten people on it. Sub-teams start to form, encouraging divisive behavior. Although a congenial, “here for the team” face is presented in team meetings, outside of them there will likely be much maneuvering. Bigger teams also undermine ownership of group decisions, as there isn’t time for everyone to be heard.

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Beyond team size, CEOs should consider what complementary skills and attitudes each team member brings to the table. Do they recognize the improvement opportunities? Do they feel accountable for the entire company’s success, not just their own business area? Do they have the energy to persevere if the going gets tough? Are they good role models? When CEOs ask these questions, they often realize how they’ve allowed themselves to be held hostage by individual stars who aren’t team players, how they’ve become overly inclusive to avoid conflict, or how they’ve been saddled with team members who once were good enough but now don’t make the grade. Slighting some senior executives who aren’t selected may be unavoidable if the goal is better, faster decisions, executed with commitment.

Of course, large organizations often can’t limit the top team to just ten or fewer members. There is too much complexity to manage and too much work to be done. The CEO of a global insurance company found himself with 18 direct reports spread around the globe who, on their videoconference meetings, could rarely discuss any single subject for more than 30 minutes because of the size of the agenda. He therefore formed three top teams, one that focused on strategy and the long-term health of the company, another that handled shorter-term performance and operational issues, and a third that tended to a number of governance, policy, and people-related issues. Some executives, including the CEO, sat on each. Others were only on one. And some team members chosen weren’t even direct reports but from the next level of management down, as the CEO recognized the importance of having the right expertise in the room, introducing new people with new ideas, and coaching the next generation of leaders.

Team dynamics

It’s one thing to get the right team composition. But only when people start working together does the character of the team itself begin to be revealed, shaped by team dynamics that enable it to achieve either great things or, more commonly, mediocrity.

Consider the 1992 roster of the US men’s Olympic basketball team, which had some of the greatest players in the history of the sport, among them Charles Barkley, Larry Bird, Patrick Ewing, Magic Johnson, Michael Jordan, Karl Malone, and Scottie Pippen. Merely bringing together these players didn’t guarantee success. During their first month of practice, indeed, the “Dream Team” lost to a group of college players by eight points in a scrimmage. “We didn’t know how to play with each other,” Scottie Pippen said after the defeat. They adjusted, and the rest is history. The team not only won the 1992 Olympic gold but also dominated the competition, scoring over 100 points in every game.

What is it that makes the difference between a team of all stars and an all-star team? Over the past decade, we’ve asked more than 5,000 executives to think about their “peak experience” as a team member and to write down the word or words that describe that environment. The results are remarkably consistent and reveal three key dimensions of great teamwork. The first is alignment on direction, where there is a shared belief about what the company is striving toward and the role of the team in getting there. The second is high-quality interaction, characterized by trust, open communication, and a willingness to embrace conflict. The third is a strong sense of renewal, meaning an environment in which team members are energized because they feel they can take risks, innovate, learn from outside ideas, and achieve something that matters—often against the odds.

So the next question is, how can you re-create these same conditions in every top team?

Getting started

The starting point is to gauge where the team stands on these three dimensions, typically through a combination of surveys and interviews with the team, those who report to it, and other relevant stakeholders. Such objectivity is critical because team members often fail to recognize the role they themselves might be playing in a dysfunctional team.

While some teams have more work to do than others, most will benefit from a program that purposefully mixes offsite workshops with on-the-job practice. Offsite workshops typically take place over two or more days. They build the team first by doing real work together and making important business decisions, then taking the time to reflect on team dynamics.

The choice of which problems to tackle is important. One of the most common complaints voiced by members of low-performing teams is that too much time is spent in meetings. In our experience, however, the real issue is not the time but the content of meetings. Top-team meetings should address only those topics that need the team’s collective, cross-boundary expertise, such as corporate strategy, enterprise-resource allocation, or how to capture synergies across business units. They need to steer clear of anything that can be handled by individual businesses or functions, not only to use the top team’s time well but to foster a sense of purpose too.

The reflective sessions concentrate not on the business problem per se, but on how the team worked together to address it. For example, did team members feel aligned on what they were trying to achieve? Did they feel excited about the conclusions reached? If not, why? Did they feel as if they brought out the best in one another? Trust deepens regardless of the answers. It is the openness that matters. Team members often become aware of the unintended consequences of their behavior. And appreciation builds of each team member’s value to the team, and of how diversity of opinion need not end in conflict. Rather, it can lead to better decisions.

Many teams benefit from having an impartial observer in their initial sessions to help identify and improve team dynamics. An observer can, for example, point out when discussion in the working session strays into low-value territory. We’ve seen top teams spend more time deciding what should be served for breakfast at an upcoming conference than the real substance of the agenda (see sidebar “The ‘bike-shed effect,’ a common pitfall for team effectiveness”). One CEO, speaking for five times longer than other team members, was shocked to be told he was blocking discussion. And one team of nine that professed to being aligned with the company’s top 3 priorities listed no fewer than 15 between them when challenged to write them down.

Back in the office

Periodic offsite sessions will not permanently reset a team’s dynamics. Rather, they help build the mind-sets and habits that team members need to first observe then to regulate their behavior when back in the office. Committing to a handful of practices can help. For example, one Latin American mining company we know agreed to the following:

  • A “yellow card,” which everyone carried and which could be produced to safely call out one another on unproductive behavior and provide constructive feedback, for example, if someone was putting the needs of his or her business unit over those of the company, or if dialogue was being shut down. Some team members feared the system would become annoying, but soon recognized its power to check unhelpful behavior.
  • An electronic polling system during discussions to gauge the pulse of the room efficiently (or, as one team member put it, “to let us all speak at once”), and to avoid group thinking. It also proved useful in halting overly detailed conversations and refocusing the group on the decision at hand.
  • A rule that no more than three PowerPoint slides could be shared in the room so as to maximize discussion time. (Brief pre-reads were permitted.)

After a few months of consciously practicing the new behavior in the workplace, a team typically reconvenes offsite to hold another round of work and reflection sessions. The format and content will differ depending on progress made. For example, one North American industrial company that felt it was lacking a sense of renewal convened its second offsite in Silicon Valley, where the team immersed itself in learning about innovation from start-ups and other cutting-edge companies. How frequently these offsites are needed will differ from team to team. But over time, the new behavior will take root, and team members will become aware of team dynamics in their everyday work and address them as required.

In our experience, those who make a concerted effort to build a high-performing team can do so well within a year, even when starting from a low base. The initial assessment of team dynamics at an Australian bank revealed that team members had resorted to avoiding one another as much as possible to avoid confrontation, though unsurprisingly the consequences of the unspoken friction were highly visible. Other employees perceived team members as insecure, sometimes even encouraging a view that their division was under siege. Nine months later, team dynamics were unrecognizable. “We’ve come light years in a matter of months. I can’t imaging going back to the way things were,” was the CEO’s verdict. The biggest difference? “We now speak with one voice.”

Hard as you might try at the outset to compose the best team with the right mix of skills and attitudes, creating an environment in which the team can excel will likely mean changes in composition as the dynamics of the team develop. CEOs and other senior executives may find that some of those they felt were sure bets at the beginning are those who have to go. Other less certain candidates might blossom during the journey.

There is no avoiding the time and energy required to build a high-performing team. Yet our research suggests that executives are five times more productive when working in one than they are in an average one. CEOs and other senior executives should feel reassured, therefore, that the investment will be worth the effort. The business case for building a dream team is strong, and the techniques for building one proven.

Cualquier persona que ha trabajado dentro de una gran empresa puede nombrar algunas razones por las que las buenas ideas mueren, tales el caso de conflicto con las empresas existentes, opositores, recursos insuficientes, y así sucesivamente.

Sin embargo, cuando las empresas se deciden a ponerse más innovadoras, normalmente se olvidan de abordar aquellos comportamientos que matan a las ideas prometedoras.

Cómo eliminar los obstáculos a las buenas ideas

  • Pregunta

Pregunta a los miembros más destacas de la organización en innovación sobre la dinámica de la compañía que estrangular nuevas ideas y luego toma medidas conforme a sus respuestas.

  • Validación externa

La venta de una idea es más fácil cuando los clientes saben sobre ella y pueden expresar su deseo por ella.

  • Invierte

Las ideas no pueden tener éxito a menos que las empresas asignen recursos suficientes para que lo hagan.

  • Recompensa

A quienes toman decisiones para apoyar a las ideas ganadoras. Pero asegúrate de que el respaldo de quienes no han triunfado con sus idease termine la carrera de la innovación dentro de la empresa.

Piensa semanalmente, no trimestralmente. Moverse despacio mata ideas y desmoraliza al equipo. Busca formas de acelerar el proceso de construcción de la innovación.

Nunca será lo mismo asistir a un evento de Conferencias sobre un tema, que experimentar un proceso de desarrollo personal de 3 días de inmersión total, vivencial, práctico, científico y con resultados medibles, pero sobre todo que te proporcione herramientas para aplicar de inmediato al regresar a tu trabajo ”

El Líder es el responsable de la transformación de una empresa para ser más competitivos ante los cambios disruptivos
Liderazgo que transforma mediante principios y valores
Establece Nuevos paradigmas / Retorno a Cero
Rompe el Status Quo, el paternalismo y el oportunismo
Crea Propósito y Visión
Establece nuevos estándares de desempeño Individual y en equipo
Promueve y administra el Cambio

El Líder debe ser capaz de manejar profesionalmente las 3 R´s del Liderazgo
Recursos R1 Relaciones R2 Resultados R3
La única forma de lograr mejores resultados con los recursos asignados es capitalizando y exponenciando R2, las relaciones, esto es lograr los resultados a través de la gente y no a pesar de ella

Para Información y Registro llamar al (01800) 838-1363
(81) 8378 4710 Celular : 811 277 0969 con Lic Rosalía Escandón
rosalia@miguelpla.com
www.miguelpla.com

A los seres humanos siempre les han resultado difíciles los cambios; pero, nos gusten o no, si queremos crecer hemos de cambiar.

El principal problema que hoy afecta a las pequeñas y medianas empresas españolas es la adaptación a los cambios que están modificando las formas de negocio del planeta.

La grave situación económica y política nadie las puede negar; pero nosotros, pequeños y medianos empresarios o simples “ciudadanos”, debemos preocuparnos menos de cosas que están fuera de nuestro círculo de influencia, y ocuparnos más en vencer la apatía y nuestra resistencia a cambiar.

En los Centros Elefante Azul de Avilés estamos convencidos que en una sociedad global las empresas deben ser también globales; entendiendo por “Empresa Global” aquella en la cual participan todos los actores que influyen en su labor diaria; por eso invitamos a clientes y proveedores a involucrarse con nosotros en el objetivo común.

Con este fin hemos creado un Sitio Web (www.elefanteazulaviles.com), en el que todos puedan interactuar en nuestra actividad, y esto ha significado un avance extraordinario en el concepto de negocio.

Estamos desarrollando una encuesta con todos los clientes para conocer su grado de satisfacción y en que debemos mejorar, y los primeros resultados indican que el Cliente de los Centros de lavado de coches Elefante Azul de Avilés es un cliente exigente pero satisfecho; que además de la calidad del lavado y el precio del mismo, valora principalmente la atención y el trato que recibe, y la facilidad que tiene para comunicarse con nosotros de forma personal, y/o a través de nuestro sitio Web.

Según Albert Einstein, toda crisis significa una nueva oportunidad, y hoy los ciudadanos de este país tenemos una excelente oportunidad de cambiar y convertirnos en lo que aprendimos del ejemplo de nuestros padres, a ser hombres y mujeres, creativos, trabajadores y solidarios.

Compartimos nuestra experiencia porque puede ser útil para muchos pequeños y medianos empresarios desorientados por no saber como afrontar los cambios necesarios; y nos ofrecemos desinteresadamente a apoyar, puesto que estamos convencidos que el éxito de los demás aumenta nuestro propio éxito.

Los Centros Elefante Azul hemos sido pioneros en el lavado responsable con una apuesta firme por el cuidado del medio ambiente; y ahora entendemos que, con la misma firmeza, debemos apostar por el cambio social necesario para convertir las empresas en “Empresas Globales”.

Failure is never a positive feeling. Nevertheless, constantly trying to avoid failure is just as bad because it means you are unlikely to take the risks necessary to achieve success.
Failure is never a positive feeling. Nevertheless, constantly trying to avoid failure is just as bad because it means you are unlikely to take the risks necessary to achieve success. Failure is not something to purposely seek out, but it’s certainly not something to fear if and when it does happen.
The statistics say that 90% of new businesses fail in the first five years. However, the studies say that focusing on statistics like this only makes it more likely you will become a failure. Fail in the right areas and don’t obsess over setbacks.
The reality is failure does make better leaders, and here’s why.
Failure Shapes Leaders
Someone who never fails either never takes risks or constantly finds a way to weasel out of responsibility. The greatest leaders in the world are shaped by failure. Take a look at tech executives, such as the co-founders of Google. They dropped out of college. Most would see that as a failure, and yet they created one of the historic companies.
The most rewarding decisions of your life will be shaped by how you react to failure.
Resilience to Run a Business
Resilience is how people react under pressure and how they bounce back from disappointment. The only way to gain this resilience is to dare to fail. There are no leaders who are born to be leaders. This is a disservice to the men and women who are good leaders as it simply dismisses their achievements as genetics, God, or some other force out of our control.
Failure will teach you resilience and how not to buckle when you experience difficult times.
Learn What Works
The only way to achieve the success you crave is to think outside the box. Copying what someone else has done will not make your business into the organization you want. It will only take you part of the way, as all innovators have realized.
To learn what works and what doesn’t you have to test. This is the number one rule of marketing, and it’s what crucial A/B testing is based around.
If you are unwilling to fail, you will never go through this process and you will never achieve the things you want to achieve, as a result. Accepting failure will push you to try things you have never tried before and potentially win big.
Better Employee Morale
There’s nothing worse than working for someone who believes they can do no wrong. Executives like these tend to always shift the blame to a lower manager, or to simply pretend a setback never happened. It’s not a good trait to have.
Employees who see that you as a leader can fail won’t look down upon you because of it. They will see it as a positive trait. It will encourage them to try new things because they know that if it goes wrong they aren’t going to lose their jobs over it.
Some of the best corporate ideas around have come not from leaders but from the people working under them.
Of course, this is no reason to actively seek out failure. Someone who fails repeatedly without success is simply a bad leader.
Who has Your Back?
Take a startup company as an example for this section. Everyone starts working in good faith. They all love the product and they all believe they can succeed. Then a major setback happens, such as having a poor first release.
There are two sets of people at this point. One set will continue to work with the company and figure out where they went wrong. The other set will either walk out of the company or become snarky and unmotivated.
Failure has taught you who REALLY believes in what you are doing and who is going to bail when the going gets tough. You wouldn’t have known that unless something had gone wrong.
Conclusion
To become a great leader in 2016 you have to be comfortable with things going wrong. Great leaders see them as learning opportunities, rather than setbacks. As long as you learn from the mistakes you make, failure is a worthwhile endeavor.
It will help you make the tough decisions and better appreciate your responsibilities as a leader. Countless organizations have turned themselves around simply because a big failure made them change their way of thinking.
In 2016, embrace failure. It could be the point where your company makes a change for the better.
How will you learn from your failures during this coming year?

Diverse business group meetingMiguel Angel Pla  Presidente y Director General   MPC  ww.miguelpla.com  direccion@miguelpla.com Teléfono: (01800) 8381363 y (81) 83784710

Cuando absolutamente toda la gente de la organización se involucra en el aprendizaje y a su misma vez la práctica de valores y nuevas estrategias a niveles propios que les son relevantes, puede producirse un desarrollo significativo de liderazgo, el crecimiento de la organización y por supuesto el cambio.

La estrategia perfecta debe abarcar las tres dinámicas esenciales de la vida organizacional :

  1. Comprenderse a uno mismo y a los demás
  2. Comprender cómo entablar y promover relaciones sólidas
  3. Comprender como usar el poder con eficacia.

Una vez que todo el equipo comprenda la dinámica se empieza a desarrollar el liderazgo en todos los niveles de la organización, no sólo en la cúpula. El compromiso, la iniciativa, la creatividad y la innovación se pueden desarrollar de muchas maneras distintas en forma de trabajo en equipo.

Todos tenemos una opinión sobre el liderazgo de otras personas y según nuestras circunstancias defendemos con mucha pasión lo que pensamos o sentimos.

Aunque hayan pasado siglos de indagar sobre el tema todavía no hay un consenso universal sobre que es lo que sí funciona y lo que no. Dado que, lo que funciona para una persona en un conjunto de circunstancias no funciona para la otra ya que se encuentran en contextos y circunstancias totalmente distintas.

El liderazgo radica en cada individuo, en algún momento de nuestra vida todos hemos sido líderes, esto radica en el núcleo de la inteligencia emocional que tiene cada ser humano.

Los líderes tienen poder personal real es decir, son aquéllos con quienes otros cuentan diariamente porque se puede confiar en el logro de sus resultados, son aquellos que los demás recurren cuando surgen problemas, confusiones o simplemente cuando necesitan compartir una idea creativa.

¡El verdadero trabajo en equipo SÍ funciona! Solo si la visión más nueva del liderazgo y el poder es que ambos existen en virtualmente todos los niveles de la organización y que las personas son capaces de expresarse con rapidez cuando la necesidad se presenta. El cambio fundamental que se requiere es desde el control hacia la libertad con responsabilidad.

Cuando se trata de persuadir, el nivel más básico es… el del puñetazo en la mesa, si bien hoy es una forma mal vista… al menos teóricamente. Todos nos podríamos apuntar a que “Los altavoces refuerzan la voz, pero no los argumentos” (Kaspar) pero también es cierto que muchas veces se tiene más en cuenta el nivel de ruido o la jerarquía para tomar decisiones. Y así nos va…

Un nivel algo más sutil que el anterior es el de persuadir desde nuestra visión personal de las cosas, tendiendo así a argumentar y defender con pasión aquellos puntos de vista que están de acuerdo con nuestras creencias, pensamientos, sentimientos, valores y experiencias.

No ver el mundo con los ojos sino con nuestro cerebro, nos suele llevar con frecuencia a  descuidar datos y comprobaciones y a pretender infantilmente que aún así los demás nos sigan y se entusiasmen con lo que proponemos.

Lo que vence pero no convence

Muchos de los planteamientos habituales -especialmente vinculados a formas pobres de ejercer el liderazgo- son poco eficaces porque ni son objetivos ni son formalmente correctos. A saber:

  1. Plantear las cosas en términos absolutos y competitivos (para ganar), sin un análisis objetivo de datos. Algo que se hace desde estilos “autoritarios” y que también se ve mucho en las tertulias de televisión. Como consecuencia, los demás se cansan y se limitan a ceder… sin sentirse convencidos.
  1. Defender los puntos de vista personales con arrogancia y/o “aires de superioridad” y sin dar apenas espacio a lo que otros puedan decir. Un ejemplo típico  de este estilo “paternalista” suele ser el “te lo digo por experiencia”.
  1. Solo argumentar de un modo “oportunista”, es decir, en función del beneficio personal y no del colectivo,  bien sea imponiendo u ocultando el propio criterio en función de que las circunstancias lo permitan.
  1. Actuar con un estilo “conservador” y así defender una posición o la otra según vayan las cosas y de qué personas se trate. Un caso típico es cuando esto se hace en función de la jerarquía o antigüedad.
  1. Dejar pasar las cosas, esperar que se resuelvan solas y defenderse con el típico “A mi no me informaron de eso…”
  1. Argumentar desde un estilo “amistoso”, es decir, con muchas precauciones o de una forma indirecta para evitar un posible rechazo de los demás: “A lo mejor me equivoco, pero creo que…”

Cultiva tu liderazgo argumentando mejor

Es fácil ver los estilos que “vencen pero no convencen” en los demás. Es algo más difícil verlos en uno mismo. Sin embargo, “haberlos hailos” y cada cual tiene su tendencia.

A partir de ella estaría bien reconocer que lo más eficaz suele ser tomar decisiones en función de las circunstancias y basándolas en la información disponible. Y lo contrario no solo lleva a malas decisiones sino a generar una progresiva desmotivación y desconfianza.

Con todo esto, si quieres comunicarte de un modo más eficaz y así trabajar tu liderazgo desde la argumentación quizás podrías considerar lo siguiente:

  1. Practicar la “escucha activa” como fuente objetiva de información y también como ejercicio de inteligencia emocional. ya que no solo se convence con el “qué” sino también con el “cómo”. Fondo y forma son inseparables.
  1. Trabajar siempre que se pueda con datos y hechos objetivos y, consecuentemente, con flexibilidad y apertura para atender y ceder la razón a ideas contrapuestas si alguien demuestra con datos sus planteamientos.
  1. Utilizar con rigor los datos a la hora de presentarlos
  1. La defensa de las propias ideas no debería caer en el absolutismo. Incluso aunque los datos las apoyen rotundamente. Un argumento lleno de datos pero falto de empatía puede ser rechazado por crear la sensación de que hay ganadores y perdedores. Por eso nunca estará de más utilizar el lenguaje con habilidad y adaptando nuestro estilo a cada persona.
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