Accountability in Four Easy Steps

shutterstock_648760555

Source: Partner Insights

The following includes excerpts, reproduced with permission, from an article by Marty Stanley, president of Dynamic Dialog, Inc.

Accountability hasn’t been considered the “next big idea” because it’s not “flashy.” There are no “bragging rights” about implementing an accountability process. After all, accountability means people would need to change, rather than a system or process that needs to change. And who wants to be accountable if it means having to personally change?

On the other hand we’ve seen what happens when there’s no accountability for leading people or processes: The dot-com bust, Enron, Katrina, FEMA…Scandals everywhere: Politics, religion, sports…Bernie Madoff, bailouts and industries collapsing…Product recalls, contaminated foods, greed, waste and excess.

Here are four easy steps to holding people accountable:

  1. Use job descriptions as the basis for hiring or promoting people into a position.
  2. Share the job description with incumbents so they know their accountabilities and let them know this will be used for training, coaching, and performance feedback.
  3. Have objective ways to measure and monitor performance and communicate those methods to the people performing the jobs. Follow through by providing feedback about performance.
  4. Provide training and coaching opportunities to enhance performance.
Posted in

The Value of Investing | Elaina Serotte

  About Elaina Serotte Elaina began her career in 1999 at Morgan Stanley as a sales assistant in the Global High Yield Bond department in New York. In 2002, Elaina moved to MassMutual Financial Group in San Francisco as a Senior Financial Planner. She built her private client group from the ground up, serving over…

Greg Pickett; Real Estate for Startups

Real Estate for Startups | Greg Pickett

  About Greg Pickett Utilizing his background in real estate finance and his skills in the areas of communications and analysis, Greg Pickett represents the interests of corporate clients and their real estate needs. Greg specializes in representing tenants in the leasing and disposition of property on the Peninsula and Silicon Valley. Greg has represented…

Jukko – Meaningful Engagement on Mobile | Elizabeth Sarquis

  About Elizabeth Sarquis Elizabeth Sarquis is the founder and CEO of Jukko, the first ever mobile discovery platform designed to foster positive social impact. She is also the CEO and founder of Global Gaming Initiative. Elizabeth has worked extensively with United Way, the National Eating Disorders Association, Park Nicollet Health Services, and others to…

Daniel Lewis; Ravel Law

Ravel Law | Daniel Lewis

About Daniel Lewis Co-founder and CEO Daniel Lewis has a JD from Stanford Law (’12) and a BA from Johns Hopkins. Prior to law school, he worked as a national energy and transportation policy analyst at the Bipartisan Policy Center in Washington, DC. Daniel also worked for Senator Barbara Boxer and was a leader of…