Making the Case for Results

Making the Case for ResultsAre you really focused on Results?

Most leaders would say “yes” immediately – it sure seems like the correct response. But really focusing on results can be more difficult than it seems. it requires three things:

1. A strong Data Component. Are you running the business on a handful of important numbers that give you an absolute pulse on your business? Or are you making decisions based on feelings, emotions, and vague sensations about how things are going?

2. Accountability top to bottom in the organization. Does everyone – including you – keep the promises they make to the organization (Rocks, To Do’s, Scorecard Measurables)? When promises aren’t kept, do you own it and learn from it? Does you team feel comfortable holding one another accountable?

3. A bias for Results. Many entrepreneurial companies succeed because the owners and early-stage employees work ridiculously hard and make huge sacrifices to get the company going. If that is still a requirement of everyone in your organization, make sure to recognize and reward effort and sacrifice only when it leads to the desired result. Otherwise, you risk sending the message that the regular failure is okay as long as you’re working hard and in some pain. Often, that teaches employees to work harder at demonstrating work-ethic and sacrifice than they do at getting results.

Results are necessary and often, effort and sacrifice lead to better results. But effort and sacrifice alone won’t help your business grow and improve, so if you have to choose one…choose wisely.

Related Posts

Achieving 100% Rock Completion Is Possible

During sessions with my clients, setting Rocks is a pivotal practice for guiding organizations toward completing their quarterly goals/priorities. However, the challenge doesn’t end with setting Rocks; the real test is in completing them. Achieving 100% Rock completion is possible, I promise.

Read on »

Are You Making Decisions Out of Love or Fear?

As leaders, we make substantially more decisions than most, and I’ve come to realize that many of our decisions are made out of fear. The root of that fear is now clear, which I will uncover in a moment. First, I’d like to create a little context.Over the last 30 years, I have created five pieces of content to help driven leaders get everything they want out of their professional and personal lives…

Read on »

Subscribe to the EOS Blog

Subscribe to the EOS Blog:

LOGIN TO

Base Camp

LOGIN TO

Client Portal

LOGIN TO

ORGANIZATIONAL CHECKUP

Search the EOS Worldwide Blog

Skip to content