Saturday 26 January 2019

Aligning company and personal goals


A result-oriented performance management system consists of three primary components:
1.    the daily management system,
2.    process integration,
3.    performance review process.

When synchronized, these three elements communicate, integrate and align multiple roles, departments, and functions towards common organizational objectives. 

So how do we achieve this?

Make sure everyone shares the same definition of success. 
Ask most groups in an organization to tell you what the definition of success is for a project they are working on and you will get wildly different answers. When I do strategic planning with organizations this happens regularly, and the downside is that without a common vision for the outcomes of an initiative there is little chance to succeed. Take the time to ensure that everyone has the same understanding of the problem to be solved, the implications of the problem and the definition of a successful outcome. It sounds simple, but it is not easy and this alone will increase your likelihood of productive results.

Make it simple: Using a white-board or Kanban board where the daily, weekly, monthly definition of success is there every time they look up is a good idea.

Help people see their role in the outcome. 
Once people have a clear and complete picture of a successful outcome, they need to understand their roles in producing that result. Draw a clear line of sight from the responsibilities that each individual plays on your team to the desired outcome. Translate those overall contributions to the tactical and practical day-to-day activities for each person, so they understand the importance of behaving strategically and in alignment with the goals for any given objective.

Make it simple: Show how the model day, model, week, model month of every day routines and behaviours add up to the end result. Rather than manage outputs, manage behaviour and routine. Fix the process, not the people.

Align your performance drivers. 
In every organization there are systems that support the achievement of objectives but those systems, if not aligned, can become barriers to the attainment of your goals. Pay attention to things like infrastructure, compensation, staffing, career development, and even how cross-functional collaboration.

Make it simple: Ensure that key behaviours, projects, outputs and outcomes feature in performance review and appraisal, but also the daily thanks, the weekly congratulations and the end of project celebrations.

Focus on commitment not compliance. 
At the end of the day what you are driving for is a sense of commitment to the organization and its objectives. While motivation for most comes from within, great leaders are able to create an environment that makes people want to go the extra mile. Help people gain a sense of ownership of the organizations direction and goals.
Make it simple: Use rules, guides and check-lists to aid critical thinking rather than ridged compliance. Trust people to try and have a safety net to encourage keep them safe.



More Information




https://blog.jostle.me/blog/team-alignment/





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