Chose The Right People for Goal Setting Success |
Goal Setting Ideas to help you move your business to new levels of success.
Written by Robyn T. Braley
Part 1; Why Goal Setting; Part 2; Leaders Role Part 3; Drafting The Winning Team Part 4;
A Location Where Anything Can Happen Part 5; Formula for Success Team Part 6;
Implementing the Plan
Goal setting directly
impacts branding, brand building and brand loyalty. A strong team will bring
focus and creative synergy to the process.
It’s All About Team
When
I organize goal setting sessions, I try to bring together a cross section of ages,
genders, opinions and experiences. Ideally people who have good ideas, can
communicate them well, and are comfortable participating in positive free flow discussions
will be in the majority.
While
you don’t want to include all “yes” people, you also want to create group
synergy and a collegial working atmosphere.
Look
for participants who are creative and fun to have in the room. The makeup of
the team will have a direct impact on the goal setting outcomes. Let me review what
you will accomplish;
·
Bring
your team together
·
Strengthen
team relationships
·
Visualize
stretch goals by asking, “What if…
·
Prioritize
according to need and practicality
·
Focus
on the highest priority goals
·
Edit,
refine, and clarify goals
Draft Day
Use
a formula to draft your team to ensure all areast of your operation are
represented. While it is a no-brainer that managers should be there, adding a
lead employee from each section will inject slightly different views than the
team leader.
·
Marketing
·
Sales
·
Operations
·
Manufacturing
·
Customer
service
However,
final selections will be dictated by the leadership pool within your company. If
the talent pool is deep, the decisions will be difficult. If it is shallow,
well…
On
another level, if you are the president and sole employee the decision about
who participates will be obvious. However, if the talent pool in this scenario is
shallow, maybe not.
Dealing With Debbie
Downer
Every
company has one. A Debbie Downer, a Bobby But.., a Nancy Negative or a Billy
Buzz Kill. Not everyone is a Suzi Sunshine, Charlie Cheerful or a Freddy
Feelgood.
Debbie,
Bobby, Nancy and Billy probably have valuable ideas to contribute and should be
included. In the lead up to the session, find opportunities to challenge your
Debbie to bring ideas for solving problems you know she is most passionate about.
Create
an alliance with Debbie – or Bobby - that can be leveraged during the session. I
will provide tips for managing difficult or strong willed people in the the
fifth article in this series.
Those Close To the
Action
It
only makes sense to include key frontline workers for part if not all of the
session. Providing an opportunity to contribute will encourage buy-in,
empowerment and team-building.
Frontliners
see things differently and offer solutions often overlooked by those further
from the action. If the goal discussions include business sensitive or other
high trust topics that should only be discussed only by the ESuite, organize
the agenda so that frontliners can be included in other segments.
Expanding the
Resource Pool
Entrepreneurs
are often shy about asking for help. Consider including people you respect including
mentors, marketers, management consultants, bookkeepers, suppliers or anyone
else who might provide valuable input into identifying key goals.
While
inviting outsiders requires high trust relationships, they will bring valuable
ideas, experience and business or industry knowledge to the table. This is
particularly helpful for Bootstrappers.
Invite
them for only a portion of the day. They may become evangelists for your brand
due to learning more about you and your intention to make your business better.
Sourcing Fundamental Information
My
company, Unimark Creative, has conducted many market research projects and
facilitated focus groups seeking input from our client’s customers.
I
am always amazed by the quality and often blunt feedback we receive in a 20
minute interview. If you are experiencing a pivotal moment in the history of
your company, polling your customers may be the best way to identify which
goals you need to focus on. I would do that 1-2 months before the goal setting
session.
Tips
·
Task
a trusted employee with recording and transcribing the key sessions. I’m always
amazed by the nuggets of information passed over in the animated discussion.
·
All
mobile devices should be left in a safe out-of-reach place for the entire day.
How many times have planning groups achieved great synergy only to have it
destroyed when someone receives an urgent email or text.
In
my next post, part 4 of 5, I will provide tips for selecting an ideal location.
Robyn T. Braley is a writer, speaker and songwriter. He is the President
of UniMark Creative which focuses on website design, video production, media
services (editorial and advertising), and graphic design.
No comments:
Post a Comment