How Do You Know If You Have a Great Team?
Most business leaders think they have pretty good teams, but how can they KNOW objectively? What are the telltales?
Tune in this week as Wayne gives you seven indicators that can help you objectively assess whether you have the right people – and five tips for upgrading your talent if you are missing the right pieces.
Please give us the benefit of your thinking in the comments section below.
And, don’t forget about our next Contractor Business Boot Camp class scheduled for Oct 15-16 in Raleigh, NC. Please contact Charlotte at ckopp@familybusinessinstitute.com to learn more about the program.
Hello. This is Wayne Rivers at The Family Business Institute. Thanks for tuning in, as always. Don't forget about bootcamp
coming up this fall. And as always, we like to have your comments in the comment section below.
This week, I want to talk about how do you know, not how do you feel, but how do you know if you have a great team?
Well, why is this important to you? I would say that the majority of problems that our clients and our members have tend
to be people problems. So, let's talk about those and let's talk about seven ways that you can know, not feel, not think,
not infer, but know that you have a great team. And five tips for upgrading your team if you think it is a need of upgrading.
And we're always in need of upgrading our talent.
Okay. You know you have a great team when, first thing is, senior leaders make people the priority. If you remember,
we've talked about McDevitt and Street, the magnificent construction company that's no longer around, but Bob Street
required his leadership team to invest 20% of their time in people. And they had to demonstrate that they were investing
20% of it, one day per work week if you think about it, in people. That sends a loud and clear signal that people are the
priority here.
The second thing is your company's financial performance is good because good people, great people, great team
members drive financial performance. They're not just there to improve morale, and to make sure that the trains run on
time. They know that they're there for a number of reasons, one of which is driving profits to the bottom line.
The third thing is, if you have a great team, they are making decisions. They're not driving decisions up the chain. They're
not requiring the senior leader to make every single decision. They're making decisions at the lowest possible level in the
organization so that the people closest to problems are tackling the problems and dealing with them themselves. Rather
than waiting a week or a month or worse sometimes, to bring those problems to senior leadership.
The fourth thing, all the bases are covered. If you've got great estimators, great project managers, great superintendents,
but a poor controller who's always late with financials, or a subpar business development function, you don't have all your
bases covered. So, you can have some great employees, but the goal is to have great employees throughout the
organization, covering all of your key functions. And if you've got weak players in any of those top key functions, it's going
to hurt the overall performance of the team. So, you want to upgrade there for sure.
The fifth thing, great employees solve problems on their own. They dig in, they gather resources. They talk to other people
in the organization and people outside the organization. Architects, engineers, customers themselves, or whatever, and
they solve problems quickly and decisively. So again, problems solved quickly are problem solved cheaply. And waiting to
solve problems or avoiding difficult decisions and things like that, they just hamstring an organization.
The sixth thing is the people are low maintenance. That's one of my favorite ones. They are self-reliant. They are selfmotivated. They are self-driven, so that you don't have to become a rah-rah cheerleader, motivator type. I actually don't
think you can motivate people. I think people who are unmotivated are going to stay unmotivated. You might get 10%
more performance out of them on some days, but if you hire and train great people who are self-motivated, then you
won't have to do that. And it's not natural for some of us, frankly, to be the cheerleader rah-rah types. So that solves that
problem by getting people who are low maintenance and motivated on their own.
And the seventh and final thing is great people are aligned with your mission, vision, and values in your organization.
Maybe this is the key one. Everybody has a personal mission. It may not be written down, but it's in their hearts. It's in
their minds. They see themselves doing things and going places in life. And if they can see that they have alignment with
your organization, that your organization is going to foster, they're doing things and going places in life. That's perfect. If
on the other hand, they're interested in anything but work and they live to be off at five o'clock on Friday and live for the
weekends, maybe that's not in alignment.
Okay. So, what are the five tips then for upgrading if you think that you need to upgrade? The first thing is, look in the
mirror. We have to be self-aware. We have to know that sometimes we're not getting it done. We're on cruise control.
We're not undergoing self-improvement, or taking classes, or learning new things, or demonstrating new skills. So, look in
the mirror first, if you're not taking your own medicine, and you're not trying to get better as a leader, as an executive, as
a businessperson, then chances are good that people in your organization are going to see your actions. They hear what
you say, but they believe in what you do. And they'll see what you're doing and copy that. And you know what rolls
downhill in organizations.
The second thing, take the McDevitt and Street tip. Make people your priority. Make developing your team your highest
priority. The third thing, I've said this in so many blogs. Go out and get the book Who. W-H-O, Who by Geoff Smart, and
follow that book. Let that be your guide for how you hire and onboard people in your organization. Best book ever written
about getting people. Recruiting, hiring, and onboarding people. And I wish we'd written it ourselves.
The fourth thing, get help. Maybe one of your weak functions is HR. If you need to go out and get an HR consultant, or a
hiring consultant, or a talent consultant, or you need someone to talk about how McDevitt and Street did all the things
they did, get help. Find somebody that knows these things and get help so that you can get training, and you can upgrade
your own skills. Because you can't get great talent without a great talent acquisition process. Makes sense, right?
And the final thing, be willing to pay great people. We're all thrifty. Contractors are notoriously thrifty. And, it just makes
sense that if you want the top talent, you're going to have to pay them, especially in a talent marketplace as competitive
as today.
So, I'd love to have your thoughts, comments below about the seven ways to know if you have a great team and the five
tips for upgrading your team, if it's necessary. This is Wayne Rivers at The Family Business Institute. Thank you.