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
Avishai Ben-Tovim

Avishai Ben-Tovim | CEO of MDI Health

Avishai Ben-Tovim is a sales & business development executive with years of professional experience and a drive to succeed and to innovate. He holds an IT Engineering degree from Ben-Gurion University of the Negev as well as an MBA from Tel Aviv University. Over the course of his career, he has worked extensively within the sales and technology sectors and held a variety of technical and management roles with companies like Kenshoo, eToro, Google and Roundforest, the latter of which he acted as

Ellipsis Health Will Change Behavioral Health, Steven Cupps

How Ellipsis Health Will Change Behavioral Health Diagnosis | Steven Cupps

AlanI’m visiting here today with Steven Cupps, he is the head of Business Development for Ellipsis Health. Welcome to today’s show.Steven Thank you so much for having me.AlanSo Steven, I’d like to hear the background of how you got to the position that you’re in today. What led up to this?StevenBehavioral health has always been a passion of mine. If you think about the entire ecosystem, and in healthcare, it’s really the biggest unmet challenge today. And so what we’re doing at ellipsis is we’re

The Biden Administration Corporate Tax Proposal

California LLC Laws And IRS Identity Theft Reporting

A discussion on the tax history of LLC entities i…

Armin Tahmasbi, Encapsulate

Armin Tahmasbi | Encapsulate

I’m a young entrepreneur and a Ph.D. candidate in Biomedical Engineering program at the University of Connecticut, working on “Drug Delivery Systems, Self-Assembled Nanoparticles & Microfluidic Devices”, in Storrs, CT, US. I’m working in Self-Assembled Functional Nanomaterials Laboratory, under the supervision of Prof. Mu-Ping Nieh on “Drug Delivery Systems for cancer therapy”. We’re developing a universal platform for encapsulating and smart delivery of a wide range of drug molecules and