Clarity, alignment, & accountability are the foundational pillars of a great culture and therefore a great business.
But before a company is ready to implement any of those things into their organization, there are two other crucial factors that determine the effectiveness and lasting impact of implementing those pillars.
Ownership is the leader's willingness to admit that they failed. Ownership is admitting that the reason their company doesn’t have a strong culture and is struggling with issues like retention, engagement, lost productivity, toxicity, mediocre performance, is entirely their own doing. That’s a hard and very uncomfortable pill to swallow.
But culture is simply the sum of behaviors you allow. It’s what you tolerate, avoid, or ignore. If you don’t lead with intention, then dysfunction will lead for you. “All that’s needed for evil to rise is for good people to do nothing.”
Being a leader is a hard and lonely road. Leadership is a heavy burden to carry. So this isn’t a passing of judgement, it’s the brutal acknowledgement of what must happen in yourself in order to do any of the things required to create real and lasting change.
You have to take ownership for not clarifying the standards and behaviors of the people who work for you.
You have to take ownership for not ensuring alignment in skills and character in the people you allowed into your organization.
You have to take ownership for allowing people to lead who lacked the character and integrity to do so.
You have to take ownership for turning a blind eye to the frustration, chaos, confusion, and toxicity you allowed to breed within your organization.
You have to take ownership for failing to do anything about it.
Until now.
Because if you’re willing to swallow this brutal red pill that acknowledges the truth instead of the sugar coated blue pill that continues your ignorance and denial, then that’s the very first step towards creating real and lasting change in your organization.
But ownership isn’t a one time thing. It’s not a decision you make once. Ownership is a new way of life. It’s constant self-reflection, conviction, and discipline to do the hard things. Ownership is the thought that leads to new behaviors and actions. Ownership is the driving force behind commitment.
Commitment is the willingness to do what it takes for the greater good of your people and your company. Commitment is the follow through, it’s the actions that bring validation to your words.
You cannot and will not change your company or culture without following through. Commitment is holding yourself accountable against all excuses to see the transformation you really want in your company.
Commitment is investing your time- To make the time, take the time, and give the time necessary to see real change.
Commitment is investing your energy- To do the deep work in yourself to become a better person and leader.
Commitment is investing your money- to put your resources towards what it takes to see this through
Commitment is investing your effort- having hard conversations, making hard decisions, and doing hard things.
I’ve seen plenty of leaders who are willing to take ownership of the past but aren’t able to commit to the discipline and tough work required to enforce real change going forward. Leaders with good intentions unwilling to embrace the discomfort of what’s required. It’s unfortunate and all too common.
But for those leaders willing to take ownership and commit to doing the hard work and following through, their reward is ten-fold. It’s a fail-proof path.
They grow as an individual and as a leader.
They positively impact the lives of the people they lead.
They create environments that breed trust, creativity, innovation, and passion.
They bring purpose and meaning to work in a whole new way.
They foster genuine connections, appreciation, and value.
They build a culture people want to be a part of.
They build a business that succeeds in every way.
This is what greatness is made of. These are the leaders books are written about. These are the stories that shaped irrefutable business principles.
Your responsibility as a leader is significant. Your path is not an easy one.
Your number one obligation, to the best of your ability, is to lead well those who have been entrusted to your care while you walk this earth. And your best requires ownership of your past, present, and future, and the commitment to address every obstacle you face in pursuit of creating real and lasting change.
But I promise you this- The best things in life are worth the mountains we climb and the valleys we walk through to get them.
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