Posts Tagged ‘meetings’

Dealing with Economic Fear in Your Conference Calls (part 2)

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

Three Options were provided for dealing with the fear, pain, loss, and confusion present during meetings. The main point for leaders dealing with these issues is to move your team, group, division, clients, etc., forward in the shortest possible timeframe. The strategy for implementing Option Three (Directly confront the issue) was to establish a few rules for conducting the conversation and asking questions. Let’s expand on this strategy.

First, establish a few short rules for conducting the conversation.
For example, one rule could be to limit the discussion of feeling to just work related issues (no discussion of losses in 401k or other personal investments; no discussion of politics, no discussion of rumors). Two SMART rules are 1) have people say their name first so others can clearly identify who is having a similar challenge, and 2) speak only from your own viewpoint. Be sure to set a timeframe for the discussion to take place as well.

If you do not clearly establish the rules for this discussion, your participants will make up their own rules. This is how most direct discussions go afoul – the leader never established ONE set of rules for everyone to follow.

Second, ask what and how questions and avoid why questions.

As Master Certified Coach, questions are my most powerful tool. Period! Advice, wisdom, experience, etc., pale in comparison to the power of asking the right question at the right time in the right way (hey, I didn’t say it was easy to ask great questions!). This is the skill set you want to develop if you desire being respected as a leader.

What and how questions channel people into giving answers based on observable (i.e. something outside of themselves) facts. Why questions require people to go inside and give rationalizations, interpretations, and justifications (all generally defensive in nature). Why questions also surface irrational and intangible fears.  You CAN’T deal with irrational or intangible fears in your business meetings! There is a time and a place for why type questions yet this is not one of them.

Third, fiercely protect the right of each person to speak his or her truth (i.e. as long as it follows your rules and avoids the why question).

This is the concept of safe space. People will not speak honestly about their fear, pain, and loss, if there is any likelihood of being ridiculed. It is perhaps your most important role as the leader to insure the space during your meeting is safe.

Fourth, establish closure and move forward with your projects.

The way to establish closure is to declare the issue complete. Formally do this when you sense it is time to move forward or you are at the end of your allotted timeframe. Simply say, “I declare this issue complete.” If you have time remaining in your call, focus on small steps to get the group moving forward. If someone wants to revisit this discussion on a future call, remind them the issue is complete for the purposes of this meeting and that you’d be happy to talk with them offline about it later. Once you declare it complete, focus fully on the task and projects at hand.

Good luck! Please contact me if you are unsure about how to handle your specific situation.

Posted by Byron Van Arsdale
Twitter: @headset
Author – 16 Secrets to a Great Conference Call
ConferenceCallTraining.com

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The Leader’s Quagmire – Unfinished Projects

Monday, January 12th, 2009

People love the feeling that comes from achieving something. It doesn’t matter whether it is hard or easy to complete the task; it is the act of completing something allows access to this feeling. Unfortunately, in the absence of achievement, we substitute other activities in an attempt to tap into the feeling. This is when leaders will notice a variety of games and counter-productive activities that make achievement even more difficult. The good news is that the solution is both simple and elegant.

What if all the games and counter-productive behaviors in your conference call meetings were viewed simply as an unresolved desire to accomplish something meaningful? Sam Adams, creator of Dilbert, has made us laugh and cry about the antics of the workplace. Yet, what if it is that simple? What if the only thing your team needs is consistent access to the feeling that comes from achievement?

Question:
How many unfinished projects (and tasks) do you currently have on your plate?

Make a list of the ones in your business life first and then your personal life. If you have a high number of items on your list, welcome to the human race! Most people are surprised by how many items are on their list. Now imagine how long the list is for each member of your team. Get the picture here? Welcome to the leader’s quagmire!

Despite what everyone says about starting January 1st with a clean slate, you do not. You and your team have this backlog of things to do and projects that are incomplete. Imagine how much could get done if no backlog of tasks existed!

The solution is to take baby steps to get things done each and every meeting you have. You can’t make your team clean up their list yet you can offer them an oasis in the desert of overwhelm created from too many incomplete projects and tasks. Make part of each meeting you lead dedicated to celebrating completed projects and tasks, as well as setting clear expectations for things to be completed in the future. It is the feeling of achievement you are looking for here – not the size of the accomplishment.

Look back at the meetings you found productive and you’ll find at least one clear feeling present – the feeling of accomplishment and movement toward a specific target or goal. Bring this same feeling into your meetings and people will flock to be a part of what you are doing.

In my previous post, I talked about New Year’s Evolutions rather than setting resolutions. This is one example of an “evolution” that will make your life great!

Posted by Byron Van Arsdale
Twitter: @headset
Author – 19 Best Practices of Teleclass Leadership
ConferenceCallTraining.com

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Leaders or Doers?

Wednesday, November 12th, 2008

Working with Web 2.0 tools like Twitter.com, LinkedIn.com, Facebook.com, Ning.com, and wikis has been both challenging and enlightening. Seth Godin’s new book Tribes proposes that everyone is a leader and that your leadership is needed. (Note: Read Hugh MacLeod’s “tribes” – 10 Questions for Seth Godin interview – it is amazing!) Social Networks live and breathe based upon active interaction of the participants. Phone, face-to-face, and virtual meetings are the same – actively engaged participants make the event come alive. This leads to an interesting question.

In Social Media – you either participate and contribute to the conversations going on around you or you sit back passively reading them. What ever your “intention” is, you either do or do not engage in the process through sharing your comments, ideas, pictures, podcasts, and videos. In other words, you “do” or “do not”. It is quickly obvious in the Social Media world that Leaders are Doers. Literally, “talk” is cheap. You have to record/capture your thoughts AND post them.

On conference calls (and other types of meetings), is the same true? Are leaders also doers? Yes. When a leader imposes control over the participants, it stops the flow of creativity and engagement. Leaders that actively share and encourage others to take active roles in various parts of a project find the group much more active.

Do, or do not. There is no ‘try.’ by Jedi Master Yoda.

Start looking at your meetings as opportunities to encourage participants taking a leadership role through active engagement.

Posted by Byron Van Arsdale
Author – 16 Secrets to a Great Conference Call
ConferenceCallTraining.com

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The Achilles Heel of Leadership

Wednesday, November 5th, 2008

What is the biggest block to your self-development as a leader? It is time or energy? How about motivation or desire? Is it intention or commitment?  Is it the lack of a clear goal or opportunity to practice your leadership? While important, it is doubtful that you chose any of these.

Accurate assessment (by self or others) is one of the biggest challenges a leader faces in the development of skills. Without accurate assessment, we focus our abundant energy and desire on improving the wrong thing(s) and then experience frustration at our lack of progress.

We all suffer from blind spots when self-assessing ourselves. The optimist will always see the best while the pessimist always finds the worst. In truth, we need both. Candid observations (by self or others) about your behavior and specific actions during your phone, face-to-face, or virtual meeting are essential to grow our skills.

A widely used strategy to improve your quality of assessment is to replace “right/wrong” with “works/doesn’t work”. Right/wrong feedback often includes a judgmental component and can feel like a personal attack. Works/doesn’t work feedback is an observation about behavior and specific actions.

After your next opportunity to lead, conduct a quick assessment to find out what you did well (i.e. repeat these things) and what did not work well (i.e. do not repeat these things with out some level of adaptation). If someone offers to give you feedback, request that the person deliver it using the works/doesn’t work strategy and remain focused only on your behavior and specific actions during the meeting.

Now comes the fun part – select one thing to work on during your next meeting to improve while continuing to employ those things you already know work.

See my next post for another self-imposed challenge (the need to win) we employ when developing our leadership skills.

Posted by Byron Van Arsdale
Author – Executive Conference Call Leadership
ConferenceCallTraining.com

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