How to pronounce "dumbed"
Transcript
Transcriber:
I've spent the last couple of years traveling around the world
giving talks to big corporations and little bitty start-ups
and lots of leadership teams and women's groups,
and what I've been talking to people about,
I've been trying really hard to convince people
that we can change the way we work.
But every time I do a talk,
somebody comes backstage or follows me offstage
and says, "You know, I'm so inspired by what you say.
It's so great, it makes so much sense.
But we can't."
"We can't because we're regulated."
"We can't because our CFO says we can't do it."
"We can't because we're in Europe."
“We can’t because we’re a service industry.”
"We can't because we're a nonprofit."
And then last year came the pandemic.
And the pandemic changed everything all over the world.
Service people started realizing that they had to suit up and wear masks
and take temperatures and wash their hands.
We had to start standing six feet apart in lines.
We started working from home.
We started working virtually.
And we started learning all kinds of things because we had to.
All that muscle around innovation and flexibility and creativity
that we didn't think we had,
we had all along.
And we now have realized that we can.
So what have we learned?
I mean, what did we learn right away?
First of all, we learned we're not family.
The family is the toddler walking around behind you
in the Zoom call with the pet.
The family is somebody needing their diaper changed.
The family is making sure you're taking care of your mom.
That's your family.
This is your team.
And we've also learned
that that separation between family and work
has become this balancing act.
And that when we used to say,
"Well, this is my work home and this is my family home,
and those are two completely different things,"
for many of us, it's exactly the same thing.
You're no longer at home and at work.
For many of us, work is at home and the home is --
and it's confusing,
and it's creating a whole different level of complexity and coordination
so that we understand that it's easier actually to work
when we can separate the work that we do as a team
from the work that we do in our family.
Furthermore, in order to be able to do all that,
we have to recognize that we're all adults.
And here's the deal about adults.
Adults have responsibilities, adults have obligations.
Adults have things that they have to commit to.
And do you know that every single person that works for you,
from the shop floor to the executive suite,
is a grown-up?
But we have been operating as if they aren't.
We operate as if only the smart adults are the people who are at the C Suite.
And as we move through the organization,
everybody sort of gets a little dumbed down
and the rules get a lot stricter
and we have to have more control.
And the truth is, everybody's a grown-up,
we can see it now.
Everybody has all of these things to figure out and coordinate.
And so now we're expecting from people adult behavior.
We're now focusing on the results that matter, not the work.
And the way we track it now
is we don't walk by and see who's working.
We pay attention to what people are doing.
And I think that that's always been the best metric.
And you know what?
For the first time in my life,
the concept of best practices is out the window.
And you know what?
We don't care what Google's doing because we're not Google.
We don't care what some other company is doing.
Nobody's doing it best.
We're all figuring it out as we go along
and we're figuring it out for our organizations
in our teams at this time.
So in order for people to deliver the right results,
in order for people's hard work to matter,
it has to be in the context of what success looks like
for your organization.
So if we start to think about context,
it's really important that we think about how we teach that.
If we can teach everybody in the company
how to read a profit and loss statement,
if we can teach them what the different teams do,
and what they're setting out to accomplish,
then people within their own small teams,
and within themselves,
can figure out what excellence looks like for them.
And so then we can start operating relatively independently
as a whole organization
because we're all moving in the same direction,
trying to do the same thing.
And there's a really critically important part of making that work,
and that's communication.
And everything about communication has changed.
We tend to think
that communication is this waterfall from the top to the bottom.
The executives would tell somebody and the next level would tell somebody
and we'd go all the way down to the shop floor
and everybody would understand what's going on.
Well, it may not have worked that well then,
but it certainly doesn't work that well now.
So now we have to recognize it's a different heartbeat.
What has it been before and what should it be now?
How do we make sure that the messages are clear and consistent?
Because that's how people operate.
That's how those adults who get the freedom
and the responsibility to produce great results operate best
is when they understand
what they need to know in order to make the best decisions.
So that communication,
that skill around being a great communicator
is something that each of us needs to get better at.
One of the things we have to do
is think about what the right discipline is for that.
If you used to communicate to your team by walking by
and asking how they're doing or if they had heard something,
you're going to have to schedule that now,
it's going to have to have discipline.
We've got to check in with the people on the shop floor
to make sure they're hearing what they need to hear
because it's not going to automatically happen.
One of the ideas I have
is just jot down at the end of every day
a sentence of what worked and what didn't work.
And you don't have to look at it for a month.
But when you look back, over a month, you want to look for,
"Wow, that was surprising.
I didn’t really think that would be as effective as it is.”
Or maybe it would be, like, "We keep trying to have
this in-person meeting in Zoom,
and it turns out
that there's 14 people on the call and only two of them are talking.
Maybe it's an email."
So we have to rethink all of the ways, not just the work we're doing,
but the ways we're doing it.
So now I'm starting to hear a lot of nostalgia
around the way it used to be.
There are things we aren't doing now that don't matter.
Maybe we don't need to go back for five levels of approval.
Maybe we don't need to go back and do that annual performance review.
Maybe we don't need to do a whole bunch of things
that were part of the way we do business
that just aren't making a difference.
You know what?
The way we used to do it not only is not the way of the future,
but we're discovering so many wonderful things right now.
Let's not lose it.
We want to create a new organization, new workforce,
that's excited about taking all of the things that we've learned
using that muscle, going forward.
One of the most important things that we can do
is realize the things that we aren't doing now.
The stuff that we've stopped doing and not go back and do it again.
What if we don't go back?
What if we go forward and rethink the way we work?
Thank you.