LEADERSHIP COURSE
Leadership Program
Powered by Nova
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Introduction
If you have recently moved into a leadership role or have been a manager for a while and want to improve your skills, this leadership program is a practical resource that will guide you through the most useful tips and activities for effectively managing your team. Our leadership program not only shares knowledge from our experts but also shows you how to use templates and provides you with resources that you can revisit whenever you need. We don’t expect you to memorize everything; instead, we want you to draw inspiration and learn industry-leading tips with us, especially those that can save you hundreds of hours.
The video you see here highlights the challenges faced by managers overseeing teams, including scattered decisions, team accountability and their ability to track progress.
We’ll discuss some of the main challenges managers have and discuss Nova as one potential solution. If you are not using Nova, you can skip this video.
CHAPTER 01
Leadership Styles
Writer: Ro Fernandez
Being familiar with your leadership style is crucial because it helps you connect and communicate better with your team. It also allows you to adapt your approach to meet the needs of each individual employee.
Are you curious about which leadership style you most resemble?
I’ll explain the most common leadership styles below so you can identify which one matches your personality. Understanding your style can help you lead more effectively, adapt to your team’s needs, align with your organizational culture, and collaborate with managers who have different styles.
What are the 10 leadership styles in business?
The 10 leadership styles in business are:
- Coaching
- Visionary
- Servant
- Autocratic
- Laissez-faire
- Democratic
- Pacesetter
- Transformational
- Transactional
- Bureaucratic
Effective leadership requires understanding and adapting to the needs of your team.
Here, we explore various leadership styles, each with its unique strengths and ideal scenarios, not as “styles” that define you as a manager — more like hats that you can wear.
Research has shown that there is one leadership style is not better than another one.
In a way, there are different hats you have to wear in different situations and based on the people you manage to effectively enable and empower the team, keep velocity and productivity constant, and design a successful future for the business.
I think in a week, I have to wear multiple hats. It doesn’t matter which leadership style I am more inclined or natural at; I need all of them. In some cases, I even create habits or reminders for myself to ensure I am not missing anything.
In a few companies, I had to use the Bureaucratic Leadership hat more often than I preferred because of the chaos in the leadership team to document decisions and avoid conflicts.
When I look at where I feel most comfortable, I know my leadership style well. However, if you have worked with me, you know that I have had to wear the Autocratic Leadership hat before because quick decisions had to be made, so I just made them and defined responsibilities. I also try to balance this with my most natural leadership styles and have certain activities scheduled to communicate and create a vision while driving organizational change, for which I often wear the Strategic Leadership hat.
What does the coaching leadership style look like?
Coaching leaders focus on recognizing and nurturing the strengths of each team member to improve collective outcomes. They cultivate deep connections with team members to understand their hopes, beliefs, and values. This style emphasizes individual growth and success.
- When is the coaching leadership style effective? Coaching leadership is effective in building relationships and enhancing self-efficacy. It is ideal for direct management roles where team members need skill development or when integrating new graduates into the workplace.
- When is the coaching leadership style not effective? This style is time-intensive and focuses on daily tasks, making it less suitable for high-pressure situations requiring quick decisions or senior leadership roles in cost-cutting scenarios.
What does the visionary leadership style look like?
Visionary leaders are big-picture thinkers focused on the company’s mission. They set ambitious goals and inspire teams to think creatively about achieving them.
- When is the visionary leadership style effective? Visionary leadership is most effective during times of significant change or when a clear vision is needed. It fosters a culture of innovation and forward momentum.
- When is the visionary leadership style not effective? This style is less effective for roles requiring detailed attention to daily operations. It may also falter without a solid succession plan to manage the departure of a charismatic leader.
What does the servant leadership style look like?
Servant leaders prioritize empowering their teams. They focus on the well-being of employees and the communities they belong to, placing others’ needs above their own.
- When is the servant leadership style effective? Servant leadership is ideal for managing diverse teams that need to work independently. It creates a positive culture focused on employee well-being and community impact.
- When is the servant leadership style not effective? This style is time-intensive and relies heavily on listening, making it less suited for time-pressured decision-making roles. It may lack authority in high-growth or startup environments.
What does the autocratic leadership style look like?
Autocratic leaders make decisions without consulting their team, expecting full compliance. This style is directive and centralized.
- When is the autocratic leadership style effective? Autocratic leadership is effective in crisis situations where quick, decisive action is required. It ensures clear direction and rapid execution.
- When is the autocratic leadership style not effective? This style can lead to low job satisfaction and morale due to its lack of team input. It is less suitable for collaborative environments and long-term engagement.
What does the affiliative leadership style look like?
Affiliative leaders focus on creating emotional bonds and trust within the team. They prioritize people over profit and foster a sense of belonging.
- When is the affiliative leadership style effective? This style is effective during times of stress, boosting morale, improving communication, and creating a harmonious work environment.
- When is the affiliative leadership style not effective? Constant praise and nurturing can lead to overlooked performance issues. It may be less effective in high-performance or results-driven environments.
What does the bureaucratic leadership style look like?
Bureaucratic leaders adhere to strict rules and company policies. They focus on maintaining established procedures and minimizing risks.
- When is the bureaucratic leadership style effective? This style is effective in highly regulated environments and large organizations where adherence to rules is crucial.
- When is the bureaucratic leadership style not effective? Bureaucratic leadership can stifle innovation and adaptability, making it less suitable for dynamic and fast-changing environments.
What does the democratic leadership style look like?
Democratic leaders value team input and build consensus. They empower team members by seeking their opinions and fostering collaboration.
- When is the democratic leadership style effective? This style is effective in building confidence and preparing employees for senior positions. It works well in environments where team input is valuable.
- When is the democratic leadership style not effective? Democratic leadership can be too time-consuming in emergencies, where quick decisions are needed. It may also struggle in high-pressure situations requiring rapid action.
What does the laissez-faire leadership style look like?
Laissez-faire leaders trust employees to work independently with minimal interference. They offer support only when necessary.
- When is the laissez-faire leadership style effective? This style is common in entrepreneurial startups, fostering creativity and innovation. It works well with self-motivated teams.
- When is the laissez-faire leadership style not effective? It can lead to missed growth opportunities and inefficiencies if employees need more guidance. It may also result in absentee leadership, where leaders are disconnected from their teams.
What does the emergent leadership style look like?
Emergent leaders develop their leadership role over time through team interactions. They influence their team by building relationships and reciprocity.
- When is the emergent leadership style effective? This style is effective in fostering team collaboration and leveraging informal leadership. It works well in dynamic environments where leadership naturally evolves.
- When is the emergent leadership style not effective? Emergent leadership may struggle with formal authority and decision-making in structured or hierarchical organizations.
What does the pacesetting leadership style look like?
Pacesetting leaders set high standards for themselves and their teams. They lead by example, expecting others to follow suit.
- When is the pacesetting leadership style effective? This style works well with self-motivated, high-performing teams that value continuous improvement. It is effective in results-driven environments.
- When is the pacesetting leadership style not effective? Pacesetting leadership can push individuals too hard, leading to burnout. It may not provide enough guidance for those needing detailed direction.
What does the strategic leadership style look like?
Strategic leaders balance managing day-to-day operations and pursuing growth opportunities. They create and communicate a vision while driving organizational change.
- When is the strategic leadership style effective? This style is effective in volatile, uncertain, complex, and ambiguous environments. It fosters productivity and long-term planning.
- When is the strategic leadership style not effective? Strategic leadership may struggle with immediate, short-term tasks requiring quick decision-making. It requires a balance of vision and execution.
What does the transactional leadership style look like?
Transactional leaders focus on work outcomes and reward employees based on performance. They set clear targets and reward achievement. Transactional leadership focuses on the role of supervision, organization, and performance. Leaders using this style promote compliance through both rewards and punishments.
Key Characteristics:
- Clear Structure: Transactional leaders establish clear goals and expectations, with defined roles and tasks for their team members.
- Rewards and Punishments: They motivate employees by using rewards for good performance and punishments for poor performance.
- Task-Oriented: This style is focused on completing tasks and achieving short-term goals efficiently.
- Managerial: Transactional leaders are often more concerned with maintaining the normal flow of operations rather than innovation or change.
- Directive: They provide direct instructions and expect compliance from their team members.
When is the transactional leadership style effective? This style is effective in sales teams and environments where clear performance metrics are crucial. It provides clear roles and expectations.
When It’s Effective:
- In highly structured environments where routine and procedures are crucial.
- In situations where specific tasks need to be completed efficiently and on time.
- When managing employees who are motivated by rewards and need clear, short-term goals.
When is the transactional leadership style not effective? Transactional leadership can be demotivating if overused. Employees may do the bare minimum if they know the exact value of their effort.
Potential Drawbacks:
- Can stifle creativity and innovation as it focuses more on maintaining the status quo.
- May lead to lower job satisfaction if employees feel they are being micromanaged.
- Less effective in dynamic environments that require flexibility and adaptability.
What does the transformational leadership style look like?
Transformational leaders inspire continuous improvement and push teams beyond their comfort zones. They are often charismatic and skilled communicators.
Key Characteristics:
- Inspiration: Transformational leaders inspire and motivate their team with a compelling vision and enthusiasm.
- Innovation: They encourage creativity and new ways of thinking, promoting an environment where team members feel free to innovate.
- Personal Development: These leaders are invested in the personal and professional growth of their employees, often acting as mentors.
- Charisma: Transformational leaders often possess strong communication skills and charisma, which they use to inspire and influence their team.
- Change-Oriented: They focus on transforming the organization and its culture, pushing for significant changes and improvements.
When is the transformational leadership style effective? This style is effective in high-growth organizations, motivating employees to achieve beyond their capabilities. It fosters a culture of innovation.
When It’s Effective:
- During times of change or when a new direction is needed.
- In high-growth organizations that require a culture of continuous improvement.
- When motivating a team to achieve beyond their current capabilities.
When is the transformational leadership style not effective Transformational leadership can risk burning out team members if they lack the right support and direction. It can also slow things down and affect the organization negatively. It requires careful balance and coaching.
Potential Drawbacks:
- Risk of burnout among employees due to high expectations and constant push for improvement.
- Can be less effective in stable environments where significant change is not necessary.
- Requires a lot of emotional intelligence and personal energy from the leader.
Transformational leadership focuses on inspiring and motivating employees to achieve their highest potential and exceed their own expectations. Leaders who use this style emphasize vision, change, and the collective good.
What does the situational leadership style look like?
Situational leaders adapt their style based on the specific challenges they face. They are flexible and change their approach as needed.
- When is the situational leadership style effective? This style is effective in dynamic environments where different challenges require different leadership approaches. It ensures responsiveness and adaptability.
- When is the situational leadership style not effective? Situational leadership can be challenging if the leader struggles to identify the appropriate style for each situation. It requires keen awareness and adaptability.
Understanding the various leadership styles and their appropriate contexts can help you become a more effective leader. By adapting your approach based on your team’s needs and the challenges you face, you can foster a positive and productive work environment while achieving your organizational goals.
CHAPTER 02
Managing your time
Effective time management is the cornerstone of successful managerial roles for a myriad of reasons. It empowers managers to optimize their productivity by focusing on tasks that truly matter, enhancing overall efficiency and resource utilization. Lastly, mastering time management contributes to achieving a sustainable work-life balance, ensuring managers can maintain their performance levels over the long haul. In essence, adept time management is not just a managerial skill; it’s a fundamental driver of success for both individuals and the organizations they lead.
The emphasis is not just on managing time but also giving you the resources to help team members in handling stress and expectations, ensuring a fair process and workload distribution.
Here are a few of the things we will discuss:
- Organizing Work with Kanban Boards: One common approach showcased by Sarah, during the video, involves using Kanban boards to organize tasks and priorities on a monthly basis.
- Team Priorities Meeting: To help teams define their priorities, Sarah recommends conducting a monthly meeting. This tool facilitates open discussions about key deliverables, allowing the team to define priorities collaboratively.
Watch this video to learn more.
Teams can easily get distracted by other tasks and continuous requests from other teams. If you do something like this on a recurring basis, you may want to schedule it and have it prepared for you. Automating this will save you time and keep everything in one place so everyone knows where to find it, as the link will remain the same over time.
CHAPTER 03
Define your Objectives (OKRs)
As a leader, you often need to participate in discussions about the company’s objectives or set objectives for your own department. Regardless of the situation, objectives are essential because they help the team understand why certain activities and results are important and how they positively affect the overall company. A popular way to define objectives is by using the OKRs framework. Let’s explore how you can use it and the key considerations to keep in mind.
You can watch the video to see how it works, but right here you can find a few steps to brainstorm objectives.
Let’s go over the steps:
- Engage the Team: Ask your team to share what they are currently working on and why they believe these tasks are important. You may discover fundamental tasks that need attention, such as upgrading the product to a new technology or updating the website to improve SEO. Understanding these basics from the team’s perspective will help you recognize what is already in progress and what is essential for success.
- Define Long-Term Goals: Evaluate your long-term goals. Avoid vague statements like “increasing revenue by 15% in the next 5 years.” Instead, focus on how you plan to achieve this. Will it be through reducing costs and increasing margins, or by targeting new markets or segments? Be specific. While all companies aim to increase revenue, specifics will clarify the vision and approach.
- Visualize the Path: From these specifics, imagine a mountain or a castle with multiple steps leading to the top. The top represents your long-term vision or goal. Now, focus on identifying the top 3 to 5 steps in front of you that will help you move forward. If completed, these steps should indicate that you’re heading in the right direction. Take your time with this. Reflect on it. If needed, ask the team for their input, and request a one-page memo with their proposed 3 to 5 objectives (or steps) to move forward. Look for ways to group and classify these objectives effectively.
- Set Objectives and Key Results: Think about the next year and how to best represent these goals, turning them into clear objectives and key results. Watch the video to learn the details and visualize the process.
Leverage technology to track your objectives. Sometimes key results are quantitative and can be easily tracked, such as revenue, web traffic, etc. If so, your IT or data analyst team may be able to create a report or dashboard that automatically updates. However, in many cases, some key results are not so easy to track and require discussion.
Moreover, you may find that when a report is shared, most team members will only focus on the 2 or 3 things that seem to be stagnant and discuss solutions, while ignoring everything else. If you are aiming for a more holistic approach, consider holding a meeting or asking team members to provide their input by discussing each key result.
Ask questions like: “What’s working well?” “Where do you need help?” “What’s a blocker or what’s slowing things down?” “What should we stop doing?” “Who else can help?” “What have we learned about A and B that are progressing well, and how close are we to achieving this objective?”
This meeting should only happen two or three times a year, so having a 60-90 minute conversation to discuss better approaches and learn from the results should be a priority.
When considering OKRs, certain tendencies often emerge in the leadership team. For example, revenue and cash tend to be major focuses. However, in some organizations, revenue has remained stagnant for years because they’ve focused so much on revenue that they’ve neglected the fundamentals. For a business to be healthy and increase revenue, other areas must be explored, improved, and grown.
A good way to think about OKRs is to ask yourself:
- “How might we better prepare our team to stay passionate about what they do, take responsibility and ownership, and bring more value to our company?”
Consider these questions:
- What skills need improvement or are missing?
- Who is overworked, and how can we help them? Who could help grow our company — any external partnerships or perspectives?
- How can we leverage our talent and support their growth?
- What roles may be needed to achieve our objectives? Who needs to take on new responsibilities or adapt to a new role?
This focus on people is essential, as they are core to the business. When setting goals, explore how people and skills need to be updated, added, or changed.
The next fundamental is processes, rituals, and technology.
We all know that processes are fundamental to growth and clarity. Without them, companies often slow down as they grow, due to a lack of clarity and confusion among team members, which can lead to redoing work. Additionally, technology is constantly evolving, and sticking with the same tools, while comfortable, may give an advantage to competitors who are leveraging new technology to get things done faster. One example we often discuss is meetings. Companies that still rely heavily on meetings for collaboration and keep their employees in meetings for half the day are moving 30 to 40% slower than those that have moved half of their meetings to asynchronous formats using technology like Nova.
In this area, you want to ask questions like:
- What processes and rituals do we need to improve or add to guide the team and provide clarity on collaboration?
- What rituals will help create better bonds between team members, making creative collaboration feel like music?
- What processes can we automate to reduce workload and minimize the number of administrative tasks the team needs to complete?
- What processes can be put in place to preserve knowledge and avoid mistakes?
- How can we implement processes that give our team more autonomy and confidence in what they need to do next, reducing dependencies between managers and employees?
Finally, another fundamental is strategy. Here, you should consider the strategic activities needed to achieve your objectives. Think as if you were planning where to place pieces on a board game at the start, to increase your chances of winning. What pieces do you need to place and where? Do you need to open a new location? Should you change your branding or packaging to be more easily recognized? Should you launch a new promotion? When thinking about OKRs, consider at least the following:
- People & Skills (including partners, mentors, influencers),
- Rituals, Processes, and Technology,
- Strategy,
- Cash and Revenue.
While defining the overall goals for the department or organization is key, there is a missing piece that leaders often forget when finalizing their OKRs: the ability to translate those objectives into smaller, actionable objectives that can be assigned to specific team members. These smaller objectives are crucial for achieving the company’s broader goals.
Defining employee objectives and obligations is essential for several reasons, but I’ll highlight two:
- Strategic Alignment: Breaking down larger objectives into smaller, actionable ones allows leaders to clarify how their team can contribute to achieving these goals. This provides employees with a clear understanding of how their work impacts the company’s success and helps in building an action plan with key people accountable for each part.
- Performance Evaluation: Clear objectives and obligations help employees understand how success is measured within the company. This ensures that there are specific criteria by which they will be evaluated during performance reviews. Without defined objectives and obligations, employees may struggle to understand what is important and how they will be assessed.
The Objectives and Obligations framework was created by our CEO, Ro Fernandez, to help leaders identify the three to five key things an employee should focus on achieving within a year. While there will be other priorities, these objectives directly impact the team, the organization, and the employee’s success within the company. The framework also clarifies the obligations necessary to achieve these objectives.
Watch the video to learn more.
CHAPTER 04
Team Roles & Responsibilities (RACI)
When starting a new project, building a new team, or even when a new person joins the team, some team members may feel more or less comfortable with certain responsibilities. They may tend to rely more on their strengths or may not even realize certain responsibilities are theirs because they were not part of their previous role. For various reasons, teams are often shuffled between tasks without clear understanding of what they own and what’s next. This lack of clarity on where they should take full responsibility and where they need to take action can create conflicts and slow down progress.
A great way to address this is by defining roles and responsibilities for the team. Identify all the main phases and key tasks needed to get from point A to point B, the people who need to be involved in that process, and the role they play in each part of it, if any.
In addition to the traditional RACI chart, our CEO, Ro Fernandez, has added a few other options, given that we found the traditional chart to be limited. Feel free to explore these options.
CHAPTER 05
Team Retros & Check-ins
Progress is only possible if questions are asked and you are not afraid to hear criticism. Leadership roles require constant iteration, continuous learning, and what worked for one team may not be ideal for this new team. Adapting and considering what the team needs to thrive can be challenging, as your perception is often limited by the few interactions you have with the team. That being said, to support your observations, try to find evidence and understand where improvements can be made and what is working well for the team.
There are multiple ways to check in with the team, from 1-on-1s to check-in meetings and team retrospectives. We will share more tips about 1-on-1s later. For now, let’s focus on check-ins and team retrospectives, which have a more collaborative approach. Both team check-ins and team retrospectives are sessions aimed at discussing how things are going with multiple team members, evaluating what is working and should be maintained, what needs improvement or should be stopped, and identifying any current blockers or obstacles.
The goal is to see if anything can be done to remove these blockers and give the team the speed they need.
A popular tool for this is team retrospectives.
There are multiple templates well-known in the industry that can be used to lead a meeting or even run them asynchronously. In this video, I will walk you through it.
You have multiple templates and tools at Nova.
Key Discussion Points During a Retrospective:
- Celebrate Successes: Identify what went well during the review period. Highlight achievements, smooth processes, and any positive outcomes.
- Acknowledge Challenges: Recognize the difficulties the team faced. Discuss obstacles, roadblocks, and areas that didn’t go as planned.
- Reflect on Lessons Learned: Extract insights from both successes and failures. Consider how these lessons can be applied to future work.
- Set Action Items: Decide on specific steps to improve team performance, productivity, communication, or any other relevant aspect moving forward.
Conducting Structured Retrospectives:
Retrospectives are most effective when structured and facilitated to ensure all voices are heard. There are several formats and tools available to guide these discussions, whether in meetings or asynchronously.
Example 1: The Sailboat Retrospective
- Start with the Goal: Discuss whether the goal was clear and well-defined. Did the team achieve it? Review the results and indicators of success.
- Celebrate Wins: Identify what propelled the team forward. This could be well-organized processes, useful templates, or helpful collaboration. These are practices to continue or enhance.
- Identify Risks (The Rocks): Discuss potential risks and what held the team back. Consider what slowed you down or caused confusion. This often involves clarifying expectations.
- Capture Positives: End by asking team members to share what made them feel good and excited. Add these to a shared board.
Example 2: The Simple Retro (Great for Beginners)
- Start-Stop Retrospective: Talk about what should be added, kept, or done more or less frequently. This straightforward approach is perfect for those new to retrospectives.
Wrap Up with Action Items: In both examples, conclude by agreeing on actions for future improvements. Ensure these decisions are documented and shared with the team as reminders.
Running Retrospectives Asynchronously
If you’re running retrospectives frequently, consider doing them asynchronously using various tools and learn more about Nova.
- Start-Stop Retrospective: This tool allows you to invite team members as collaborators, set start and due dates, and facilitate the session automatically. It mirrors the in-meeting experience but on a flexible timeline.
- Quick Team Retro & Astronaut Meeting: These are other asynchronous tools that provide structured questions to guide your retrospective.
No matter the format, the key is to facilitate these sessions effectively and ensure collective decision-making on changes to test in the future.
Turn any of your team retros into recurring sessions with Nova.
An alternative to team retrospectives and check-in meetings is using team surveys. To start, we always recommend considering the team pulse survey. This quick survey, as the name suggests, helps you keep a pulse on your team and identify if any fundamental aspects need improvement.
Essentially, you’re trying to understand if the team needs your help or if something urgently needs to change.
What’s unique about this type of survey is its brevity—it should take under 60 seconds, much like taking someone’s pulse. It usually includes 2 or 3 questions that help you measure key areas of team health. This survey tends to be recurring, but many managers skip it because they have to set it up and remember to send it out. However, if you use a tool like Nova, you can easily schedule these team pulse surveys to ensure everything is going well with the team.
These surveys can be sent out four times a year or even more frequently, depending on your company’s structure, how work is organized, and the other points of contact you have with your team. What’s important here is to acknowledge that not everyone is honest during meetings, and not all managers have the ability to read and uncover conflicts or how people are feeling. Therefore, surveys provide a good way for people to feel safe by offering them anonymity.
As a recommendation, encourage your team to use an incognito tab when participating so they feel secure that their input is anonymous.
You have a template available at Nova for free. Also watch this video to understand how to turn any survey into a recurring survey.
While team pulse surveys are great because they allow teams to provide their input within a few seconds and help you check the pulse of the team over time, longer and more traditional team surveys are often needed for a deeper evaluation. These surveys happen less frequently—some companies wait two years or more to send one. But why are they important?
As mentioned earlier, not all managers have the same skills, and leadership approaches can vary, so it’s normal for some managers to be more or less aware of how their teams are feeling and how healthy their teams are. As a company, you want to give employees the opportunity to provide feedback and highlight areas that are important but may not be working well. These surveys should be used by leaders to discuss ways to improve, build action plans, and continuously improve the culture to better support and enable the team.
You have a template available at Nova for free. But you can use tools like Typeform to create your traditional surveys and make them more fun and interactive.
CHAPTER 06
One-on-One Meetings
1-on-1 meetings are a crucial component of effective team management. These meetings provide an opportunity to get to know and empower team members, helping to build trust and strengthen the relationship between the manager and their team members—an essential aspect of a healthy team dynamic.
These meetings should cover a variety of topics, which is why each 1-on-1 can be different. Sometimes, they might be more free-flowing, allowing for personal topics to be discussed, helping to connect with the employee. Other times, they might focus on career development, providing feedback on work, or discussing strengths and goals. 1-on-1s can also be used to address issues, allow team members to escalate concerns, or offer coaching when motivation is low or obstacles need to be overcome.
It’s common for these meetings to drift into project status updates, but that shouldn’t be their main objective. Project tracking can be handled through task management tools or shared via a Slack message.
1-on-1s are a priority for leaders who put people first, but they can be time-consuming, especially for managers overseeing more than 3 or 4 people. You might find yourself dedicating eight hours a week just to 1-on-1s.
Unfortunately, many managers take poor notes or fail to prepare adequately for these meetings, making it important to leverage technology to maintain and improve the quality of these sessions. Automating some aspects of the meetings and getting inspiration for conversation topics can help.
Here are a few tips:
- Make These Meetings Recurring: Add them to your calendar, and include a link to the session or document where you’ll take notes.
- Leverage Technology: If using sessions to keep all your notes and access prompts during the meeting, explore tools like Nova to turn these sessions into recurring ones.
- Keep Notes Private and Collaborative: If using a tool like Nova, keep one section private for your notes and another collaborative section where both you and the employee can share notes. This helps avoid multiple documents and keeps everything organized.
Additionally, avoid having too many 1-on-1s or scheduling them for the wrong reasons. If you’re scheduling 1-on-1s every week and manage 15 people, but are primarily using them to check in on progress, consider reducing the frequency and meeting once a month if you think tracking progress in person is necessary. Alternatively, ask them to send you a message every Friday on Slack or by email to share progress updates.
Then, use 1-on-1 meetings to connect, enable, empower, and grow your team. To do this, try turning your templates into recurring ones, so you’re not just blocking time in people’s calendars, but also providing a space where notes can be taken and previous notes can be reviewed. If you’re using Nova, you can use its tools for that.
There are several tools that we recommend for 1-on-1s that serve as inspiration for leaders, offering prompts and questions to kickstart the conversation. It’s not about asking the exact same questions every time, but using them as a resource for inspiration.
At the end of the meeting, take five minutes to write down your notes, including any points you’d like to revisit in the next session. This may seem obvious, and you might think you’ll remember, but it’s common for leaders to forget specific details that are important to employees, especially when managing many people. For example, if a team member mentions that their child is starting daycare next week and they’re excited about it, take a note and remember to follow up on how things are going.
Showing that you care is important, even if you don’t have the best memory. If you’re using Nova, it’s especially useful as it sends the conclusions from your previous 1-on-1 to your next one, ensuring you always see those notes first.
Now, let’s go over the tools that are highly recommended.
TFN 1-on-1 Meeting
It stands for Topic, Feeling, and Notes. It’s a very simple framework that helps leaders organize and customize their 1-on-1 meetings.
- Topic Space: The tool includes a space where the team member can add topics they want to discuss. Ideally, open the session one or two days before the meeting so they can add their topics.
- Emotional Check-In: The tool asks the employee how they feel, giving you visibility and the opportunity to ask questions and evaluate if there’s anything you can help with.
NOTES
- Notes and Next Steps: There is a space for both you and the employee to write notes or outline next steps.
- Private Notes: As a leader, you have a private section for notes that the team member can’t see, allowing you to keep your private notes in the same space. You can also use the conclusion section and choose to show those notes only to leaders.
Basic Check-In
The Basic Check-In is a tool that provides a framework to help you assess key areas of a team member’s well-being. It’s a very simple and holistic way to approach your 1-on-1s. Watch this video to learn about each area.
1-on-1 board
Finally, this whiteboard for 1-on-1 notes has been curated specifically for that purpose. It can hold up to four 1-on-1s and guides you through the process of highlighting areas of improvement and observations after your first four 1-on-1s. The space is flexible, allowing you to even add tasks for yourself.
All these tools are available for Free at Nova
CHAPTER 07
Managing Low Performers
As a manager, one of the most challenging tasks is helping low-performing team members improve their motivation and skill levels. It’s essential to understand that these team members are still valuable and can significantly contribute to the team’s success with the right guidance. To assist managers in this endeavor, I introduce the CARES framework—a five-step process designed to transform low performers into key contributors.
When this process doesn’t work, it’s important for a manager to keep a log of issues and a record of the challenges they’ve encountered with the employee. This is helpful for providing specific feedback in the future, as details can often be forgotten, and it also allows you to share accurate information with the HR team if needed.
WRITER: Ro Fernandez
As a manager, one of the most challenging tasks is to help low-performing team members improve their motivation and skill levels.
It’s also important to be aware of what their goals are and their motivations, as certain employees may be just not right for the role or the company and aren’t simply a good fit. I have personally tried to coach a few employees and spent months supporting them, taking away a lot of time from other team members, and it didn’t work out. So I don’t want to say that every time it is possible to improve things with coaching. If someone doesn’t want to improve and is not motivated by the role and the company, they may simply not be the right person for your team.
I am personally someone who will try everything and invest a lot of time and resources on my team but I have learned to also identify when I am just “forcing things” to work.
What is C.A.R.E.S?
CARES stands for Communicate, Accountability, Roadmap, Execution, and Support.
This framework is not another HR-initiated performance improvement program but a managerial tool to help team members enhance their performance without the fear of job loss.
Let’s dive into each step of the CARES framework:
Step 1: Communicate
Effective communication is the foundation of improving performance.
As a manager, you must address performance issues early and clearly, rather than waiting for year-end reviews. Here’s how to communicate effectively:
- Document Performance Issues: Before discussing performance, gather evidence of multiple instances over at least six months. Document the expected results, actual results, and how they relate to performance issues.
- Engage in Dialogue: In the meeting, listen to the team member’s perspective. It’s crucial to have a two-way conversation.
- Summarize and Share: After the discussion, send a summary email or document outlining the issues, agreements, and next steps. This sets a clear tone for the process.
What to Say: “Hi [Team Member], I wanted to discuss your recent performance. Over the past few months, there have been several instances where your work hasn’t met expectations, such as [specific examples]. I’d like to understand your perspective on these issues and work together on a plan to improve.”
Step 2: Accountability
Once performance issues are acknowledged, establish clear accountabilities. Define the specific responsibilities the team member must fulfill to meet their goals.
- Define Responsibilities: Outline clear and specific tasks, such as requirement clarification, timely task completion, and regular updates.
- Agree on Accountability: Ensure the team member understands and agrees to these responsibilities. Adjust if there is any disagreement.
- Document Accountability: Share a written record of the agreed-upon responsibilities.
What to Say: “Let’s clarify your responsibilities. For example, you’ll need to provide requirement clarifications before starting any coding, ensure timely completion of tasks, and regularly update me on any dependencies or issues. Do you agree with these expectations?”
Step 3: Roadmap
Create a detailed roadmap to guide the team member’s improvement journey. The roadmap should include granular tasks and milestones.
- Detail Tasks and Milestones: Break down tasks into manageable steps with clear milestones.
- Set a Timeline: The roadmap should span at least three months to allow for meaningful progress.
- Consider Role Adjustments: If needed, discuss potential role changes within the organization for a better fit.
What to Say: “To help you improve, we’ll create a roadmap with specific tasks and milestones. For the next three months, your milestones will include completing project documentation and attending relevant training sessions. We’ll review your progress regularly to ensure you’re on track.”
Step 4: Execution
With the roadmap in place, the next step is execution. The team member begins working on the agreed tasks while the manager monitors progress.
- Track Progress: Monitor the completion of tasks and milestones.
- Evaluate Regularly: Conduct evaluations at each milestone based on predefined criteria.
- Adjust as Needed: Make necessary adjustments based on progress and feedback.
What to Say: “Now that we have our roadmap, let’s start working on these tasks. We’ll review each milestone together to ensure you’re progressing as expected. If you encounter any issues, let me know immediately so we can address them.”
Step 5: Support
Provide ongoing support throughout the execution phase. Your involvement and encouragement are crucial for the team member’s success.
- Offer Regular Feedback: Give constructive feedback and course-correct as necessary.
- Provide Training: Arrange small training sessions if needed.
- Maintain Open Communication: Conduct regular one-on-ones to discuss progress and challenges.
What to Say: “I’ll be here to support you every step of the way. We’ll have regular check-ins to discuss your progress and any challenges you might face. Remember, this is a collaborative effort, and your improvement is my priority.”
As a new manager, it’s crucial to realize that each team member has different skill levels and varying degrees of motivation.
The situational leadership framework allows managers to view their team from multiple dimensions and adapt their approach accordingly.
Typically, the framework uses skill and motivation as key dimensions. For instance, you’ll need a different strategy for managing a highly skilled and highly motivated individual compared to someone who is highly skilled but lacks motivation. Without adapting your approach, a team member with low motivation, despite their skills, won’t deliver the desired results.
Understanding where you have control or influence and where you don’t is essential for managing stress as a manager. Not all managers approach the same situation in the same way, especially when dealing with a low-performing employee or when team members find it challenging to work with certain employees.
As a new manager, you may feel a strong desire to support the employee, which can lead to stress, particularly in areas outside your control. There is an exercise, or mental model, that helps managers gain perspective on where they can exert influence and make changes, and where they cannot. This approach helps managers focus on what they can control instead of becoming frustrated by the things they can’t change.
It’s a valuable resource for managers facing these situations.
The Circle of Influence
The concept of the “Circle of Influence” is a powerful tool in personal and professional development, offering a framework to help individuals focus their energy on the things they can control rather than getting bogged down by concerns that are beyond their influence.
Ro Fernandez uses a vivid metaphor to illustrate this idea: imagine the area of concern — the things that are out of your control — as a cliff. When you focus too much on these concerns, it’s like standing dangerously close to the edge. The risk is that you might fall off the cliff, losing sight of what truly matters.
When you “fall off the cliff,” you become overwhelmed by things you can’t change. This not only drains your energy but also blinds you to the opportunities and actions that are within your control — the very things that can drive progress in your life. The “wheel of progress” represents the momentum and forward movement in your personal or professional journey.
But if you’re too focused on the area of concern, you lose the ability to see or influence this wheel.
You’re stuck, paralyzed by worry and fear, unable to make the necessary steps to move forward.
Staying at the top of the cliff, on the other hand, gives you a clear view of your Circle of Influence. From this vantage point, you can focus on the actions, decisions, and behaviors that are within your control. This perspective empowers you to steer the wheel of progress, guiding your life or career in the direction you want it to go.
While this concept isn’t new, it’s a timeless reminder of how easily we can slip into the habit of worrying about things we can’t change. The key is to recognize when you’re nearing that cliff’s edge and to consciously pull yourself back. By staying within your Circle of Influence, you maintain the power to make meaningful changes and progress in your life.
This framework helps leaders manage difficult situations by focusing on what they can control. It encourages them to step back, self-reflect, and acknowledge where and what they can influence, rather than losing track of their capabilities and becoming frustrated with things beyond their control. The framework serves as a visual tool to practice this mindset, but with repeated use, individuals often find they can go through the thought process without needing to open a notebook or use a whiteboard.
This framework is available at Nova for Free.
The issue log is an effective tool for managers to keep track of issues they or other team members have with an employee. It allows for detailed notes and explanations, enabling the manager or HR to reach out to the employee and provide specific feedback.
This is crucial because feedback needs to be precise. Keeping records of what happened, and whether the issue or feedback was addressed by the manager in a timely manner, helps the HR team take action or provide additional support to the manager.
The issue log is a simple page where these issues are logged, and the manager can indicate if the issue has been discussed with the employee while keeping HR informed. This tool is available for free at Nova.
CHAPTER 08
Performance Reviews & Career Growth Plans
Growth is often dependent on feedback and personal self-reflection. Managers play an important role in the career and growth of an employee, as they influence how employees perceive themselves and manage their development. While managers are not directly responsible for the effort an employee puts into growing, learning, and improving, the feedback they provide is crucial for employees to recognize areas of improvement. Feedback can take many forms, such as a message on Slack, an email, during a 1-on-1 meeting, or in a performance review.
In this chapter, we will explore performance reviews and career growth plans.
Start the process by sharing how success will be evaluated with the employee months before the performance review. Ideally, the employee should be aware of the key objectives they need to achieve during the year and where they should focus on growing and improving. For reference, review the Objectives and Obligations (OO) section in the previous chapter.
Growth Recommendations (Initial Evaluation)
Before providing feedback, carefully consider personalized growth recommendations for each employee. Assess their strengths and identify areas that need improvement. For areas where performance is lacking, provide a few actionable suggestions for improvement.
To help you think about what to recommend to each employee and how to provide tips that foster their growth, our CEO has created a fantastic framework that covers key concepts.
EGR Performance Review Feedback
Key Concepts to Consider:
- Team Environment: Identify areas within the team environment that could be enhanced to better support the employee. Consider feedback from other team members.
- Leadership: Evaluate how leadership can better support the employee’s growth.
- Individual Changes: Determine specific adjustments the employee needs to make.
- Processes: Review processes that could be improved to empower the team, increase autonomy, ensure fairness and transparency, and build trust.
A brief video is included to outline this exercise, offering additional insights for developing growth recommendations.
Performance reviews are not just about evaluating past performance; they are a strategic tool for fostering growth, encouraging self-reflection, and aligning individual objectives with organizational goals. Here are some final tips to ensure your performance reviews are effective, fair, and constructive:
1. Prepare Thoroughly
- Gather Data: Collect performance data from various sources, including self-assessments, peer reviews, and metrics related to the employee’s objectives.
- Set Clear Criteria: Define the criteria and metrics you will use to evaluate performance to ensure consistency and transparency.
2. Foster a Growth Mindset
- Encourage Self-Reflection: Ask employees to reflect on their own performance and identify their strengths and areas for improvement.
- Promote Continuous Learning: Emphasize the importance of continuous learning and development. Provide resources and opportunities for skill enhancement.
3. Be Specific and Constructive
- Highlight Specific Examples: Use specific examples to illustrate points about performance, both strengths, and areas needing improvement.
- Provide Actionable Feedback: Ensure that feedback is actionable. Suggest specific steps the employee can take to improve in identified areas.
4. Focus on Strengths and Areas for Growth
- Leverage Strengths: Identify and leverage the employee’s strengths. Discuss how they can use these strengths to add more value to their role and the organization.
- Address Areas for Improvement: Be honest and direct about areas needing improvement, but frame them positively as opportunities for growth.
5. Encourage Two-Way Dialogue
- Listen Actively: Ensure the review is a two-way conversation. Listen to the employee’s feedback and perspective.
- Ask Open-Ended Questions: Use open-ended questions to encourage discussion and gain deeper insights into the employee’s experience and expectations.
6. Set Clear Goals and Expectations
- Define Future Objectives: Collaboratively set clear, achievable goals for the next review period. Ensure these align with the employee’s career aspirations and organizational objectives.
- Clarify Expectations: Make sure the employee understands what is expected of them and how their performance will be measured going forward.
7. Follow Up and Support
- Regular Check-Ins: Schedule regular check-ins to discuss progress toward goals and address any challenges the employee may face.
- Provide Ongoing Support: Offer continuous support and resources to help the employee succeed. This could include training programs, mentorship, or additional tools.
Consider providing feedback about the following:
- Employee and Reviewer Information: Start by filling out the name of the employee and your name as the reviewer.
- Overall Performance: Provide feedback on the employee’s overall performance. Evaluate how well they are achieving their objectives, their ability to collaborate and work as a team member, and their attention to personal health. This is crucial as it reflects the company’s culture and its commitment to ensuring employees don’t overwork and stay healthy.
- Key Objectives: Evaluate the performance of the key objectives the employee had for the year. Focus on significant goals rather than small tasks. It’s essential that the employee is informed about these objectives on an annual or quarterly basis. If the objectives were not communicated, omit this section and keep the overall review of objectives general.
- Values and Attitudes: Measure and provide feedback on key values and attitudes at work, which are often as important as objectives. If your company or team has specific values and attitudes you prioritize, include them and rate the employee from 1 to 5 on how well they embody these traits.
Effective performance reviews are vital for employee development and organizational success. By preparing thoroughly, fostering a growth mindset, providing specific and constructive feedback, focusing on strengths, encouraging dialogue, setting clear goals, and offering ongoing support, you can create a performance review process that not only evaluates past performance but also inspires future success. Remember, the goal is to build a collaborative environment where feedback is seen as a tool for growth and improvement, fostering a culture of excellence and continuous development.
By incorporating these tips, you can ensure that your performance reviews are a positive, empowering experience that contributes to the overall success of both the employee and the organization.
When defining a career path for your team members, it’s essential to clearly outline the skills and competencies they must have mastered beforehand, as well as the non-negotiables for progression. For example, in our team, high performers consistently deliver work with excellence, regardless of the complexity of the projects or the circumstances. It’s important to identify and communicate these non-negotiables for growth to ensure everyone understands the expectations.
To present the career path, you can use a simple Excel file or opt for a more visual representation using a specialized tool.
For creating a career plan, we recommend embedding the career path directly into the template you provide to each team member. This allows them to assess any gaps in their current skills or experience. The career plan should include recommendations for potential activities and actions the employee can take to develop and improve specific skills. Remember, the employee is responsible for their growth, so they need to take initiative and turn their plan into reality. As a manager, your role is to support them, provide feedback, and explore additional ways to help them grow and gain experience.
At our organization, we share this growth plan template with each employee, encouraging them to map out their development goals for the next year. This plan might focus on improving 1-2 skills identified during feedback sessions or performance reviews as areas needing attention. Just like Rome wasn’t built in a day, they can work on some skills this year and continue to develop others in the following year.
It’s also crucial to give employees the opportunity to discuss their strengths and overall career goals. This ensures that the career path they pursue aligns with their unique abilities and aspirations, as each employee will thrive in different areas. For instance, while one person may have leadership potential, leadership is not the right path for everyone.
You can find these and other tools at Nova inside the Leadership Hub.
CHAPTER 09
Team Onboarding & Training
Defining a good onboarding process for the team can set an employee up for success within their first few weeks or give them the wrong impression about the company. Overall, how organized the information is, how the employee is received, and how easily information can be found and learned will define their perspective of the company. It’s common for organizations and managers to write long documents with instructions about onboarding and what the employee should know, but these documents are often not trackable or engaging, so new employees may not read them or give them enough importance. We will discuss the minimum topics that need to be included during the onboarding process and how this can be done more effectively with new technology. If you are using Nova, consider using the current template we have.
CHAPTER 10
Finding the right Candidate
(The Hiring Process)
Hiring a new team member, looking at different candidates, and putting these candidates through an interview process can be overwhelming and take much more time than expected. This is unfortunately a constant battle for managers, as hiring and training new employees while keeping up with ongoing responsibilities is never easy. If, as a manager, you are leading or are a key collaborator in hiring a new team member, there are a few tricks and processes that can help you manage the whole process faster and ensure you don’t miss a great candidate amid the chaos.
Additional Youtube Videos
The emphasis is not just on managing time but also giving you the resources to help team members in handling stress and expectations, ensuring a fair process and workload distribution.
Here are a few of the things we will discuss:
- Organizing Work with Kanban Boards: One common approach showcased by Sarah, during the video, involves using Kanban boards to organize tasks and priorities on a monthly basis. Managers like you can outline priorities, key deliverables, and tasks to start at the beginning of each month. It will also help you provide a space for tasks that you are thinking (on the radar), offering visibility into potential priorities that may arise.
- Team Priorities Meeting: To help teams define their priorities, Sarah recommends conducting a monthly meeting. This tool facilitates open discussions about key deliverables, allowing the team to define priorities collaboratively. The session begins with a review of the previous month, marking completed tasks, discussing challenges, and transitioning to the new month’s objectives.
How to manage your time.
Effective time management is the cornerstone of successful managerial roles for a myriad of reasons. It empowers managers to optimize their productivity by focusing on tasks that truly matter, enhancing overall efficiency and resource utilization. By meeting deadlines consistently, managers instill confidence in their team and stakeholders, building a reputation for reliability. Additionally, proper time management reduces stress levels, fostering a healthier work environment and enabling managers to make well-informed decisions.Lastly, mastering time management contributes to achieving a sustainable work-life balance, ensuring managers can maintain their performance levels over the long haul. In essence, adept time management is not just a managerial skill; it’s a fundamental driver of success for both individuals and the organizations they lead.
So, let’s begin with organizing your work.
We recommend using a Kanban board, such as the ones shown here, to arrange your tasks and priorities each month. Add the Kanban board tool to your Leadership Hub as demonstrated in the video, and at the start of each month, outline your priorities, the key deliverables due by the end of the month, and the tasks you need to start.
Additionally, you have a section for items on your radar, a fantastic place for sticky notes that may not be current priorities but could become ones as you make progress.
For your team, on a monthly basis, we recommend conducting a brief meeting to openly discuss the main deliverables they need to complete.
Even though the tools I will be sharing with you are widely used by most managers, I still recommend exploring our tool library to find other options that might be a perfect fit for your needs or can be customized to suit your requirements.
- OKRs: Managers often set Objectives and Key Results on an annual basis, and we have two top choices for this.
- Employee Performance Reviews: Providing clarity on what is expected from each employee is crucial for team empowerment. Employee performance reviews offer an easy way to provide feedback on teamwork, objectives, and more.
- KEAP for Hiring: KEAP is designed to assess candidates fairly based on the skills and capabilities needed for the role. In here you see all the skills and capabilities that are important for the role. All organized based on the importance of those skills.
- One on ones and coaching sessions: There’s a versatile tool for one-on-ones that’s incredibly popular, so let me start with that one and then introduce a few others that can be helpful in specific situations.
- Team Building Workshop.
- Team Culture Discussion.
- Thriving teams survey: (Team Survey) This Survey helps you assess areas requiring improvement for your team to thrive.
- Thriving teams workshop.
- Team onboarding.
- Candidate Interview Questions (Hiring Tools).
Templates and tools empowers managers to work more efficiently, maintain consistency and accuracy, save time, enhance the quality of their work, make informed decisions, foster collaboration, and adapt to changing business needs.
These resources are essential for modern managers striving for effective and successful leadership in their organizations.
Let’s go over the details.
Leading a team is one of the most fulfilling activities, but it also adds a lot of complexity to your day-to-day tasks and a lot more workload. It is very normal to often feel like you don’t have time and that your team is always asking for more feedback and clarity. In many ways, leadership is an exercise in continuous improvement and constant iteration.
To simplify some of the activities you may have to do as a leader, we have created a simple list. We are sharing a template with you, explaining how and when you can implement each activity to make the whole process easier to manage.
#1 — Monthly Priorities
Discussing monthly priorities can help teams gain clarity and focus on the things that matter without getting distracted by all the new tasks added to their plate. The monthly priority meeting should be defined by you as a manager. Based on the company goals, you should start by selecting the 1 or 2 urgent tasks that need immediate attention and the 2 or 3 priorities for the month, along with their deliverables. This meeting is not for discussing tasks or details but for identifying key deliverables that must be completed by the end of the month.
During the meeting, as the manager, you open the discussion on these priorities and deliverables. The team can mention additional tasks they have and potential priorities that may create conflicts or dependencies. The core objective is to discuss these priorities as a team and create a list of deliverables everyone feels comfortable with.
Templates and tools empowers managers to work more efficiently, maintain consistency and accuracy, save time, enhance the quality of their work, make informed decisions, foster collaboration, and adapt to changing business needs.
These resources are essential for modern managers striving for effective and successful leadership in their organizations.
Let’s go over the details.
Leading a team is one of the most fulfilling activities, but it also adds a lot of complexity to your day-to-day tasks and a lot more workload. It is very normal to often feel like you don’t have time and that your team is always asking for more feedback and clarity. In many ways, leadership is an exercise in continuous improvement and constant iteration.
To simplify some of the activities you may have to do as a leader, we have created a simple list. We are sharing a template with you, explaining how and when you can implement each activity to make the whole process easier to manage.
#1 — Monthly Priorities
- What to expect: As the month progresses, priorities may change. If that happens, the team can come to you to discuss and clarify priorities.
- What not to do: Do not write tasks or to-dos during this meeting. The team should manage those outside the meeting. Focus on deliverables or results. For example, if you need to conduct research to deliver a report next month, note the research as a priority but do not list individual tasks like finding competitors or scheduling interview calls. These are steps that lead to the deliverable but are not deliverables themselves.
What else?
Who owns it: Each team member should own their deliverables for the month. They are responsible for reaching out when they are blocked, finding information, creating task lists, managing their tasks, contacting stakeholders, and asking for help when needed without remaining blocked.
#2 — Roles and Responsibilities
This is not always necessary, but in some cases, especially when the company goes through many changes or involves many people in the process, some responsibilities may become confusing. This can lead to team members feeling unsure and thinking they are doing tasks that should be someone else’s responsibility. This confusion can create conflicts and leave a bad impression among team members.
To address this, write down all the deliverables and activities needed for the team to achieve results. These can be simple tasks like reporting on results, adding meeting notes and decisions to a document, or creating presentations.
Roles and responsibilities can be defined in various formats and places. In our team, we use the RACI chart, but we have expanded it because we found it was limited for our needs.
We explain this in our video. Our CEO has done a fantastic job of sharing the tool and template on our platform, Nova, to make it available.
The acronym RACI stands for the four roles that stakeholders might play at any point in a project.
- Responsible: The person(s) who do the work to achieve the task.
- Accountable: The person who is ultimately answerable for the correct completion of the task.
- Consulted: Those whose opinions are sought (typically subject matter experts).
- Informed: Those who are kept up-to-date on progress and outcomes.
To these 4 roles I am adding 3 more. You can use them if you think those are helpful. Watch the video for more information. (RACIPAL)
#3 — Individual Goals or OKRs
Often, you want to define clear goals for each of your employees. Defining those goals or objectives with the team can take different shapes and be done in various ways. For example, you can use our OKRs template. We often prefer to keep it simpler by defining all the key objectives and giving our team the opportunity to measure their own success while we do the same. This allows us to use the goals for feedback and to discuss ways to nurture their growth and potential learning opportunities.
Goals should not only help employees understand their main priorities for the year but also provide an easy way to measure their success. If their goals change over the year, remember to update them, ensuring they remain aligned with the company’s goals.
— Tool: Employee OO. (Objectives & Obligations)
This tool was created so that you can also use it to provide feedback and as a performance review tool at the end of the year. The tool is great because it is easy to use, lets you add notes on the status of things, and allows the employee to evaluate their own performance before you provide feedback.
— Tool: RPO Employees
Similar to the previous one, but it includes a section where company objectives and overall company values are mentioned. It provides more opportunities to discuss with the employee how they positively affect those company goals.
— Tool: Goals & Milestones
The tool shown below is probably the easiest to use. It simplifies the process by describing the overall goal and the main four goals for the employee. At the bottom, after having a meeting to discuss progress, you can add your notes and define the status and overall performance.
Learn more watching this video
#4 — 1 on 1s
One-on-ones are a wonderful way to spend time with your team, get to know them, learn what excites them, understand what blocks them, how they like to work, what keeps them up at night, what makes their work more difficult, and how you can help them. Most importantly, these meetings allow you to “get to know them” so you can better enable and support them.
Our leaders have a few favorite tools to manage one-on-ones and to prepare for them easily. These tools provide sample questions and frameworks to start the conversation and keep all your notes in one place.
Here are a few tools that we recommend.
— Tool: 1-on-1 Basic Check-in
One-on-ones are excellent opportunities to connect with your team, assess progress, understand their feelings, and foster growth. Here are the basic questions you should ask at least every three to six months:
The first question should help you gauge their emotional state. Do they feel overwhelmed? Are they happy and excited about their role and the company? Explore these questions to understand their mindset. Next, ask about who they have helped and how proactive they have been. This ensures employees recognize the importance of assisting other departments and being proactive beyond their ongoing priorities.
This tool provides the framework to ask all these questions.
There are other ways to approach one-on-ones. For example, you may want to encourage your team to bring their own topics to the table. You can ask, “What would you like to bring to this meeting today?” and let them own their growth. If that is the case, this tool may give you the flexibility you are looking for while allowing you to keep your notes private.
— Tool: 1-on-1 TFN
One-on-ones can take a lot of time to set up and organize, especially when managing a large team. If that is true, make sure you use the functionality of recurring sessions. Set up a session for each employee and choose how many times and how often it repeats. This will automatically set up the template, organize your notes by dates, and schedule it for your team.
If you are not using Nova, find a tool that can do something similar.
#5 — Team retrospectives
Team retrospectives are popular among product teams and are becoming increasingly common across various industries and departments. They are a great way to have quick conversations about improvements, blockers, and successes.
Team retrospectives usually happen on a recurring basis. As a manager, you might run them just twice a year, depending on the time available and the other activities led by different leaders and team members. For example, our product team holds retrospectives after delivering a feature, and we have high-level retrospectives twice a year.
Typical Questions During a Team Retrospective:
- What went well? Identify the practices and processes that are working well and should be continued.
- What should be improved or changed? Determine what is not working well, identify blockers or slow-downs, and decide what needs to change or stop.
- What else should we do? Consider new actions or experiments that could be beneficial or fill a missing need.
Additional Questions:
– What are you most proud of?
– What have you learned, and what are the main results?
– Who helped you during the process?
– What can we automate or simplify?
There are hundreds of tools and well-known templates for running team retrospectives. You can conduct them using whiteboards or traditional sessions, all of which can be collaborative and even done asynchronously.
Here is a quick video for more information.
If you are not using Nova, find a tool that can do something similar.
Watch the video here.
#6 — Team surveys
Understanding how a group of people feel and their key concerns can often remain invisible to you as a manager. People may not always feel comfortable talking about challenges with coworkers or other issues, and they may not be able to identify exactly what isn’t working. Team surveys help you get a general overview of how teams feel, what is working, and what isn’t. This is important because what people say and how they feel can be very different. While surveys are anonymous, the goal is not to identify individuals but to understand the challenges the team is facing and the areas that are working well.
Team surveys are often used to discuss improvement plans and explore better ways to do things. There are multiple ways to conduct team surveys. You might do this once a year, have a quick survey with just 3–4 questions that you send monthly, or send one after a specific project.
At Nova, we send one longer survey per year and another shorter mid-year survey with just four questions. The long survey evaluates the 12 dimensions of a healthy team and includes multiple questions. It is more in-depth and is used to discuss overall improvement company-wide. The smaller survey is sent to different departments or groups to evaluate how things are going on a smaller scale and to check in case we are missing any issues. This approach helps us spot challenges that team members are facing and solve them.
— Tool: Team pulse survey
A team pulse survey is a quick survey used to measure two or three areas within a small group to identify potential gaps and track overall team health over time. Because it is so short, companies use it on a recurring basis to monitor their team’s health and see if any new implementations are affecting the team negatively.
These are often scheduled and ongoing, sometimes even include a point system.
— Tool: Team survey (Thriving teams survey)
A team survey is often used once or twice a year to monitor multiple areas that are important for company and team success. These surveys typically include between 10 to 20 questions and are usually shared with large groups or company-wide, such as by department.
These surveys inform the management team about how things are going and must be evaluated to identify potential issues that need urgent support.
They should also be used to discuss and continuously improve the company’s overall approach to work, culture, and team activities to promote health.
For example, after conducting a survey, our team always discusses the 12 dimensions of happy teams. We identify the two areas that need the most attention and decide on activities to improve them. This discussion happens annually and helps us continuously improve.
Here is a quick video with more information:
#7 — Feedback
When providing feedback to the team, whether they do a good job or need improvement, it is essential for their growth and capacity to understand what is expected of them. Feedback is so crucial that it has become one of the most requested things by new generations in the workplace. They want to get feedback and be recognized for their work.
There are multiple ways to provide feedback:
- Personal Feedback: This can be done by contacting them via Slack or during a meeting and providing feedback.
- Public Recognition: Positive feedback can be made public. For example, at our company, we have a Kudos channel in Slack where we share gratitude with team members and mention achievements.
From there you have different ones:
- Work-Based Feedback: When an employee shares some of the work they have done, you can provide feedback on things that can be done better and things that are done well.
- Feedback Walls: These are spaces created for each team member where leaders or all team members can leave feedback. It’s a wall that captures all the feedback received during a specific period. It can be initiated by the employee or the manager. In our team, we like to ask employees to own their growth and encourage them to be curious. They are the ones who need to ask for feedback with intention, such as “What is the one thing I could do better that will help you?” or “What is the mistake that I keep making?”
- Project-Level Feedback: We have a tool called “Do I have spinach in my teeth?” where team members ask for feedback in a healthy way, understanding that if things are not improved, it’s like letting someone go to a party with spinach on their teeth.
#8 — Issues/Wins Tracking
When there are certain incidents, issues, or even great performances by employees, as a manager or HR person, you want to keep track of those and make sure they are accessible if something else happens. Keeping a track record of incidents is especially important, but we should not forget the good results either.
To do that, we have a few tools that are accessible at Nova.
— Tools: Performance or Incident Note or Feedback Notes for Employees
#9 — Performance Reviews
A performance review, or performance evaluation, sometimes shortened to “PA”, is a periodic and systematic process whereby the job performance of an employee is documented and evaluated. The performance review is a crucial part of the ongoing dialogue between managers and employees that usually happens once a year. It summarizes ongoing performance and development conversations and provides a record of past performance and expectations for work moving forward. Many employees think that performance reviews are directly associated with salary reviews, but that is an assumption made in the past few years. The performance review is really a tool for the employee to continuously learn and improve and have a way to self-reflect. It’s also an opportunity for the employee to understand where they thrive and which areas they seem to be naturally good at, what we will call their strengths or superpowers, and which areas are needed for the role but need attention or improvement. In some cases, it helps spotlight potential new career paths or areas in which the employee needs to grow to move forward in the next step of their career.
On top of that, it is an opportunity for the manager to evaluate how they can leverage those superpowers and give the employee more opportunities to shine and grow. It also opens a line of communication to discuss career growth expectations.
But what is a good way to provide feedback, and how should you manage this process as a manager?
We will be sharing some tips based on our processes internally and what works for us. Where should you start? In our team, we approach performance reviews in two different ways depending on the role. In some cases, we share key objectives with the employee at the beginning of the year, and of course, those can change as we can’t predict all the challenges along the way. In some cases, because the role is more focused on hitting certain responsibilities, we share a clear sheet with responsibilities and expected deliverables. The team knows how they are going to be evaluated. For example, we mention that all team members get feedback at the end of the year not only based on their performance and how they have achieved their yearly objectives but also we measure things like accountability, teamwork, collaboration and cooperation, problem-solving, and autonomy, etc. This is key because our employees should be able to know how we measure success as a company and as a team.
Next, they need a 360 performance review. That means that the way we approach feedback is by diversifying performance improvements based on the different areas that affect the performance of an employee. In our case, we evaluate the following:
- Team environment: What can we change or improve in the team environment that will enable this employee? What type of feedback can other team members provide that will help this team member?
- Leadership: What can we do better as leaders to help them improve?
- Individual: What do they have to change?
- Processes: What processes can be improved to better enable the team, provide more autonomy, create a fair and transparent workspace, and build trust?
To mention just a few, but you can view and learn about some of the other options if you watch our video.
The next step is self-assessment.
What we like to call “finding blind spots.” All our managers have to ask employees the following questions: “What do you think you are doing exceptionally well? Where do you think you can improve? Where do you think you should put more effort?” or sometimes ask directly about what they think about their performance on specific objectives. Understanding the employee’s perception of how they are performing will give you a general idea of how they feel, what areas they seem motivated to improve, and which areas seem to be their blind spots. Those are areas that have to be discussed during the improvement performance meeting, as this usually means that employees are not prioritizing those areas, may need training, or may need support.
Next, or while the previous step is happening, we ask peers to provide feedback about each team member, also known as peer reviews.
Peer Reviews.
Managers can’t be everywhere all the time (and shouldn’t be). Successful organizations have managers that act as facilitators, coaches, process and knowledge enablers, but not day-to-day peers. In fact, peers often have a unique vantage point to share insights and ideas about what that employee can improve. Often recognition can mean a lot more when it comes from peers because they are the people they work with on a daily basis, and peers are often the ones that identify and suffer from gaps and underperforming team members.
Now, the next step is extremely encouraged. For example, we often ask our team to provide feedback to their leaders. This is a process that can help not only give visibility to the manager on what the team needs from them and a way to learn but also encourage fair feedback. In this case, where the employee gets a chance to provide feedback in return and is not only getting feedback from the manager, it creates an opportunity for healthy dialogue where both the leader and the employee approach feedback with curiosity, growth mindset, and without ego.
Now let’s discuss the details of providing feedback during the performance review meeting.
During this meeting, the manager should ideally have all the objectives and responsibilities measured and have written all the details or areas that have to be measured. On top of that, they can even include some notes about behavior, attitude, and other related things, and can even add feedback from other team members. This is a document that can be shared with the employee but also with the HR team. It’s there to guide the conversation. In our case, our team shares this after the meeting, as often notes are taken and added right after. That conversation can start by mentioning all the achievements, then going over key objectives for the year and discussing those. For example, asking “How would you say your performance was during that project?” “What do you think you could have done better?” “What were you proud of or what was an exciting challenge?”
Then you can go over the areas that need improvement based on your observations or the team’s observations. Try as much as possible to be specific on the matter.
Discuss other areas like attitude and behavior, and think about what should be changed, what should continue, and what they should focus on next. By the end, provide clarity on areas of improvement and recommend potential activities and actions that can be taken to improve, from recommending books and training to weekly discussions.
#10 — Career Growth Plans
The career growth plan can start and be done in multiple ways, but it usually includes the career path plan. This is a document or something similar that illustrates the potential growth of a role inside and outside the organization. It includes details about what is needed to be able to move into a new position.
Often, this is also given to the employee with a career development plan, which is a space for the employee to conduct their own self-assessment and includes your recommendations.
Let us walk you through some tips.
#11 — Meeting notes
When discussing multiple things across team members and projects, it is normal to lose track of where things were left and what decisions were made. Having a good method to keep all decisions in one place is key. In our team, we like to have a Decision Log session per project or deliverable. The session is open to capture decisions over time.
We use it so that if any decisions are made during a meeting or even during a Slack conversation that leads to changes or improvements, they need to be saved there, including how this new decision affects everything and what the potential next steps are.
— Tool: Decision Log.
Decisions can make or break a project. Stakeholders have a vested interest in the decisions that have been made. Just as they are updated regularly with stakeholder presentations and status reports, a decision log explains why decisions were made and who authorized them. Use a log whenever there’s a key decision made in the project, whether those are mentioned during a meeting or through a Slack message or email. Chances are, stakeholders will get upset at some point and demand to know why certain actions were taken. The decision log is a way to communicate and monitor those decisions and also support the rationale behind them.
Meetings are a bit like a thermometer. They help you evaluate how healthy your organization is, how well your organization is adopting new technology, and how easily you can scale.
Here are a few questions that can help you evaluate what meetings are revealing about your productivity and organizational health.
- How many meetings do you have per week to check in on progress?
- Do you use your 1-on-1s to discuss the progress of things?
- Do you have a way to check progress without adding a meeting to the calendar?
- How often do you have meetings to explain the process and what is expected from people?
- How easy is it for you (if you are a manager) to delegate work?
- How often do people need to redo work because it wasn’t what you needed or expected?
- How often do you have or join meetings where you don’t say a word? Are we talking about one a month or four a week?
- How often do you go to meetings where you are sharing or someone else is sharing just information, and your participation is not required? Are we talking about one a month or two a week?
- How often do you come across a challenge and need to discuss it with a few people, and you can’t chat about it within the next two hours or the same day because their calendars are fully booked, so you put things on hold?
Let’s discuss a few of those questions.
For instance, having too many check-in meetings can be a symptom of a few things, such as a lack of trust between the manager and the team, a lack of processes in place to guide the team and ensure they know what the expectations are, or even a lack of digitalization.
Companies may not be using technology to track progress and have to depend on meetings, but this is key.
Another example is the use of meetings to share information or updates where there is no collaboration between team members or stakeholders, but the only objective is to inform. Often, this is a symptom of bad habits and a lack of digitalization.
Sometimes, this implies that there are no processes in place to track “who has read it or watched it,” and meetings end up being the only way to do that. Even if that means that people are just “present” while doing other things during the meeting. This is so common that it has become normal.
In how many of your meetings today did you not say more than 2 words?
Another example is the constant use of meetings to share proposals, ideas, new designs, or new strategies, whether the goal is to get them approved, get feedback, or gather information from stakeholders. These meetings tend to be ineffective in a live format, as people usually need time to digest the information. Many negative things can happen as a result, but this is a symptom of a lack of trust, lack of digitalization, and lack of processes — to mention just a few.
Additionally, we see that very few organizations have quick calls to troubleshoot a problem or have changed some of their meetings to workshops. We have found that teams manage their work and time based on their meetings. So, if they have something important to solve, they often don’t just call the team and add a quick meeting to their calendar because there is no time available. This leads to the inability to adapt to what is important now and puts things on hold. These are the meetings (workshops and troubleshooting meetings) that we should be having more of as they bring instant progress — but instead, we are spending a lot of time checking in and sharing information when that should be done asynchronously.
So let’s discuss a few of the things you can do:
- Leverage technology to track progress. It’s important that you know if things are done or in progress without having to depend on a meeting or without having to send a message. To start, you can use any task management platform.
- Document and track of how decisions are made over time and how stakeholders are involved in each decision. You can do that by organizing your projects and documents effectively and defining a process for it or using tools like Nova.
- Move some of your meetings asynchronously. You can start simple, like moving all your check-ins into a message, where a team member sends the team or client an email with all the updates. Ideally, this is not done manually. You can also move your informative meetings asynchronously by using a tool like Loom or any other video recording tool. You can also keep track of who has watched it and make it more interactive by using Nova [watch this quick video]— and you can move a lot of your meetings asynchronously with tools like Nova.
Do you spend your entire day in meetings, wondering how you’ll find time to get things done?
You’re not alone!
However, let me clarify, meetings themselves aren’t the issue. Meetings play a crucial role in bringing teams together and facilitating progress. The problem lies in how we’ve been using them lately — excessively and inefficiently.
So, let’s examine your calendar and review the various meetings you have.
- One on ones: These are excellent meetings for establishing a connection between two people, especially when working remotely and social interactions are limited. Leave these as traditional meetings or go out for coffee whenever you have a chance to build a stronger relationship with your team.
- Workshops and Team Building Meetings: These meetings are valuable for fostering teamwork and often involve hands-on activities that engage everyone’s minds. Well facilitated, this workshop and team buildings will help you build a workplace where people want to work.
- Check-Ins: Consider how frequently you meet with your team to assess progress. Some check-in meetings can potentially be moved to asynchronous formats, and I’ll show you how shortly. To give you an example, at Nova we only have one check-in meeting a month using this tool, the rest of check-in meetings are done asynchronously.
- Team Formation or Planning: Meetings of this nature are essential for discussing and devising plans collaboratively. They provide opportunities to define roles, responsibilities, and identify areas where the team may require additional support or anticipate challenges.
For all these meetings, except check-ins, it’s often best to keep them as they are. Ensure that these meetings include an agenda and have a facilitator or leader to guide discussions and achieve meeting goals effectively.
Now, certain meetings occur regularly and can be effectively shifted to asynchronous formats, often working better than traditional meetings because it lets participants have a bit more time to digest information and provide well-thought input.
Here are the meetings that you can move to asynchronous formats:
- Informative Meetings: Meetings where one person shares updates or information about a topic or project and may conclude with a few questions or seek feedback on how participants feel about it. This meeting can be conducted asynchronously.
- Feedback and Approval Meetings: Teams often spend a significant amount of time requesting feedback or approvals from managers or team members, or even clients. However, these meetings can be ineffective because people struggle to digest information in a way that allows them to provide valuable feedback. This leads to more meetings, more emails and more questions.
- Document Approval: Often, team members ask managers or clients to review and approve documents, and these requests can get delayed or lost.
- Idea Feedback.
In this video I will be walking you through each type of meetings and how you can work asynchronously.
Changing your business culture to be more productive is a deliberate choice. Even agencies working extensively with clients have managed to reduce the number of meetings without compromising collaboration or productivity. It’s a matter of making that choice and implementing a few small changes initially. Once everyone becomes familiar with this way of working, scaling and achieving results become more attainable.
To start choose one or two types of meetings and move them asynchronously and then keep adapting overtime.
For further tips, please follow our blog and our social media channels, where we regularly share tips about productivity, innovation and collaboration.
Meetings have become essential for any role, and having strong skills and understanding how to best run productive meetings can help you improve how you work, save you time, enhance your relationships with coworkers and how they perceive you, improve your output, and even access more and better career opportunities.
This skill is not just about being able to share a good story (storytelling) or creating a good presentation/deck; what makes a meeting productive is the ability of the person leading the meeting to achieve the meeting objectives efficiently. In other words, having one meeting to accomplish the objective and making decisions during that meeting is better than having two meetings to discuss the same thing and still needing to chat on Slack about it for a week.
However, even facilitating meetings is a key skill; the majority of us haven’t been trained to be good at it, so we often make the same mistakes everyone makes because we have learn by mimicking our leaders.
So we often make these mistakes:
- We tend to start the meeting by sharing the agenda but don’t often share or clarify what the objective of the meeting is.
- We often share information (proposals, designs, strategies, updates…) and ask people to ask questions or raise their hands if they have any additional comments.
“Do you have any questions or comments?”
This is very similar to what we have seen in our school. The teacher shares information, and people have a chance to ask questions. It also follows traditional organizational hierarchy — where “the boss” used to be the one making decisions. So he/she would be presenting and then just letting everyone else ask questions.
This traditional way to lead meetings ….are just not aligned with the way we work anymore. Especially for knowledge workers and specialists, where each person (or stakeholder) in the meeting is there because they bring certain knowledge, perspectives, ideas, etc., to the table. So what you want is to leverage that!
To help organizations and teams have access to a training course that anyone can watch to improve their facilitation skills, our team has decided to start a training course on YouTube.
We wanted to make it accessible to everyone and ensure individuals and teams can use it to train their teams and ensure they have the basic skills to lead productive meetings. So this post can be shared with your team, or you can copy the links from the videos and make your own onboarding or training course for your team.
Intro
Run Productive Meetings
- What to Do and What Not to Do During Meetings.
- How to Run a Productive Meeting.
- How to Run a Productive Meeting — A Practical Framework That Your Team will Remember. The OFQ Meeting Framework.
- How to Encourage Your Team to Get Better? They can Ask for Feedback Like This! Learn About PI Meetings.
Move your meetings Async. Less meetings, more productivity: Get things done!
You can access the training program here for free.
You can also begin by familiarizing yourself with the QFQ Meeting framework, a simple system that outlines three fundamental rules for all meetings. These rules are easy for your team to memorize and learn – and you can set the precedent by being the first to follow them (leading by example). The framework concentrates on aspects that can readily improve your meetings, making them more productive and engaging. Over the last three years, our team has tested these principles with multiple organizations, effectively evaluating their positive effects. Watch the video below to learn more.
One-on-one meetings with direct reports often feel disorganized and even a bit strange.
It’s important to check in regularly with each of your employees, but how can you make the best use of the time? How can you make the meetings about their growth? How can you better support them? What do you need to change as the manager, and what do you need to ask your direct report to do differently as well?
Experts say that your main goal as a manager during these one-on-ones is to show your “commitment to helping them develop and grow,” while also “bringing the organizational perspective to the table and thinking about how best you can work side-by-side with this person to get things done while ensuring the organization also achieves its goals”
Hiring and onboarding can be challenging, especially because it doesn’t always happen at the most convenient time. It often takes longer and involves more work than expected.
As a manager, it can consume a lot of your time.
I believe managers and HR teams need clarity on the skills and competencies candidates must possess. These should be evaluated based on the tasks they will actually perform 60–80% of the time. Achieving this clarity begins with defining a framework for everyone involved in the process.
Looking for the ideal candidate for your company? The key lies in asking the right questions during interviews!
By delving into the individual beyond their resume, you can assess whether they possess the suitable personality for the job and whether they will flourish in your company culture. Don’t pass up the chance to genuinely understand your candidates — incorporate these questions into your interview process and manage the whole process easily.
Best Interview Questions
Screen Call Questions:
- Can you tell me a bit about yourself and your professional background?
- How do your skills and experience align with the requirements for this position?
- Tell me a little bit about your experience in [X]?
- What are your salary expectations for this role?
- What is your availability for interviews and potential start dates?
Interview Questions:
General questions to learn about the candidate.
- Introduce yourself: Tell me about yourself. Maybe add: 👉What are your greatest strengths? What do you consider to be your weaknesses?
- What do most people get wrong about [business/marketing/product…]?
- How do you handle unexpected changes or challenges? or Tell me about a time when you were under extreme pressure and remained calm and focused at work.
- At times, you may be asked to do many things at once. Tell me how you would decide what is most important and why.
- What’s your motivation for choosing to leave your current employer? or What are you looking for in a new position?
- If you could have a superpower, what would it be? 🤓
- What was the last gift you gave? 👾
- What is your proudest achievement outside of your career?
- Are you a hunter or gatherer?
Accountability Questions:
- Tell me about a time when you had to deliver on a commitment that was difficult for you. What did you do to motivate yourself?
- Have you ever been in a situation where your role or responsibilities haven’t been clearly defined? What did you do?
- Tell me about a time when you felt compelled to immediately address a difficult situation with your boss or supervisor when others wouldn’t. (You had to do the right thing). What happened? What was the outcome?
- Describe a situation in which you forecasted a problem and prepared a strategy for handling it. How did it turn out?
- We can sometimes recognize a small problem and fix it before it becomes a major problem. Give an example of how you acted to prevent a larger problem from occurring.
Teamwork Questions:
- Tell me about a time when someone else neglected or failed to deliver on their work commitments — and it had a negative impact on your productivity. How did you react?
- Describe a time when you put your needs aside to help a co-worker understand a task. How did you assist them? What was the result?
- Tell me about a time when you improved a process by creating a cross-functional team. What was the issue, and how did it turn out?
Communication Questions:
- At times your workload may feel unmanageable. Describe a time when you recognized that you were unable to meet multiple deadlines. What did you do about it?
Problem Solving Questions:
- How many balloons could fit on a Tesla?
- How would you describe the taste of salt to someone who has never had it?
- If given no other choice, would you rather fight one duck the size of a horse or 100 duck-sized horses?
- In terms of square feet, how much pizza do people eat each year in the U.S.?
Learning and Adaptability Questions:
- Describe your biggest failure related to your respective field. 👉
- Tell me about a time when you used creativity to overcome a dilemma. 🤞
- What’s the best idea you’ve come up with on a team-based project? 💥
At the same time, if you are managing an interview process, you know how difficult it is to manage all that process. Sometimes you want to get your team involved in the process or the HR manager or the leadership team is involved; sometimes the process is just complex, includes multiple interviews, multiple steps, and you have way too many candidates to evaluate. It’s never easy to manage all of that effectively. If you are looking for some tips and solutions, you can stay on this post and read further; if this is not a problem for you, we hope the list of questions provided above was helpful. Please share your favorite questions with our community in the comments below so we can all ask the right questions.🤞
When Managing a Complex Hiring Process:
When managing a complex hiring process with multiple interviews, a lot of candidates on the backlog, and maybe even a lot of team members that are involved in the interview process, it’s not easy to manage the process, know what’s done for each candidate, what are the notes from each interview, and even have a cohesive framework where all team members involved are evaluating candidates fairly and based on key competencies for the role.
If this resonates with you and your team, you may want to leverage a visual process, where you can see how the process starts. For example, you can see what the key competencies needed for the role are; you will have the first questions the team will have to ask during the first call, and then even each candidate that has passed the first screen call and will move to the first round of interviews. In there, the team can even have the questions ready and a way to evaluate the candidate as a collective. Also holds all notes from all interviewers.
Also, it provides even templates for parts of the process when the candidate doesn’t move forward and when the candidate actually does. Like the email they will receive so the team just has to copy and paste this and send the email or automate this on the platform they use to accept and decline resumes.
Every year when we define our objectives. We ask each department to define their action plan, their commitments, and their team norms.
This is something that helps us create a plan and especially helps us create the environment and mental models to work with clarity and velocity.
You start by adding or defining your company vision and mission.
Step 1: Define your Vision & Company Mission
Think about: ‘What do you want to be? What’s your dream and ambition?’
How is your team going to reach that vision? What motivates you every day?
Your company’s Vision and Mission are going to define everything else. Your team needs to be excited and committed to that vision and mission.
Step 2: Company objectives.
Create a list of objectives. How would your team reach your ‘Vision’? What are your main objectives for the next 12 months? What are the ✔💯 key priorities?
What choices do you need to make based on your strategy, current resources, and vision?
🔥🔥Tips:
- Select 3 to 6 priorities for the year.
- Be specific. Define the objective and key metrics.
If your organization and team is driven by results, metrics should serve as a guiding force. Rather than focusing solely on what needs to be delivered, encourage your team to shape their strategy around achieving specific results, rather than completing a list of tasks. While plans may change, the desired results should remain constant. This can help to ensure that efforts are focused on achieving meaningful outcomes, rather than simply completing actions.
Step 3: Actions.
What needs to be done?
What actions need to be done in the next 90 days to help you achieve those objectives?
What actions need to be done in the next 12 months to help you achieve those objectives?
This will be your action plan and it will include key projects and activities.
Step 4: Define your intentions and commitment.
Now that you’ve identified the actions required to get what you want, you must set intentions to implement them. We call them implementation intentions (also known as commitments)
They are commitments to perform an action at a specific time and location — you specify what you’re going to do when you’re going to do it, and where.
Add each implementation intention should follow this framework:
“I will [ACTION] at [TIME] in [LOCATION].”
Step 5: Values and Principles.
Define your company or team values and work principles. Culture’s values are the ideas and behaviours that determine what is good, right, fair, and just — and ultimately these values and principles should help people make decisions with confidence (having a fair and just system that supports them)
I highly recommend reading this book >>‘ Principles’ by Ray Dalio. My business partner got one for me when we decided to incorporate our business years ago — and today we use some of the principles he highlights inside the book.
Here are a few examples from that 👆👆book that we love:
✔ Perceive and don’t tolerate problems. Inventing and implementing solutions for them — move us forward.
✔ Be loyal to the common mission and not to anyone who is not operating consistently with it.
✔ Don’t let loyalty to people stand in the way of truth and the well-being of the organization.
When stepping into a management role for the first time, one of the biggest challenges is delegation. As you gain experience in your industry, you quickly realize that effective delegation is an art that requires careful planning, clear communication, and well-defined processes.
In this educational blog post, we’ll discuss some of they key tips you need to follow and walk you through the process of building a good structure for your team.
Let’s start with eight most important criteria you should keep in mind:
- Know Your Team: Get to know your team members, what they’re good at, and what they like. Give them tasks that match their skills.
- Make Things Clear: When you give someone a task, be very clear about what you want. Tell them what the job is, when it’s due, and why it matters.
- Define What You Want: If you have specific things in mind, like how the task should be done, be sure to explain it. People have different experiences and ideas, so it’s important to be clear. If you don’t have preferences, say so. It’s frustrating for everyone to redo work because the boss changed their mind.
- Set Priorities: Before adding more work, think about what’s already on your team’s plate. Help them understand how the new task fits in with everything else. Not everything is equally urgent or important.
- Define the process and the thinking criteria: Think about how your team works together. Create some basic rules for everyone to follow. It’s like a structural roadmap to help your team work well and understand what needs to be done.
- Lead by Example: Be a good role model. Speak up, ask questions, and use the company rules. For example, if you set a deadline for your team, stick to it.
- Trust Your Team: Once you give a task to someone, trust them to finish it. Checking every little thing can make your team unhappy and less productive.
- Learn from Mistakes: If something goes wrong, figure out how to do better next time.
Now that you have this simple list, let’s see how you can put it into practice.
Many times, as organizations grow and hire more people, they forget to set up good ways to share tasks, make decisions as a team and work together.
Even with a bigger team, the work might not get better or faster, and things might feel more confusing.
To make sure your team can work together and get things done as your group gets bigger, focus on number 5, which is defining the process.
Create some simple rules for how your team works and what’s the thinking criteria.
This won’t take a lot of time, and you already define this on daily and weekly basis whenever you explain things to your team. Now is time to turn your “silo conversations” and emails into processes that will help you scale and delegate.
Understanding the Delegation Dilemma
Delegating work isn’t just about handing them over; it’s about ensuring everyone is on the same page, working efficiently, and making informed decisions collectively.
However, as a manager, you are often held accountable for the success of the team, the department, and the decisions made therein, all of which significantly impact the organization’s success.
It’s not easy to let teams determine what to deliver, how decisions are made, and not have clarity on what is happening, how decisions are reached, or have visibility on progress.
For a good leader to effectively delegate, there must be clarity on decision-making processes, a basic structure defining deliverables, and a common standard of work across all team members, departments, clients, and other stakeholders.
In other words — a process!
While some team members are better at keeping their managers informed, it’s not always that simple. Even with constant communication, the delegation process can fail. Frequent manager-employee communication might make the team member feel micromanaged, eroding trust.
The only way a manager can effectively delegate is by first having a good organization. Ensure your documentation is well-organized so that people can find information easily, including yourself.
Secondly, define your processes. It’s not about specifying every single detail; it’s about outlining what is most likely to be delivered and considered during the process. Define the thinking process and criteria for making decisions.
Think about the emails or Slack messages you send, explaining what your team needs to deliver and the factors they must consider.
For example, perhaps your team always needs to evaluate costs, examine case studies, and factor in delivery costs.
Here lies the dilemma:
Should you continue delegating as you are doing now? This often involves sending various messages, arranging multiple check-in meetings to track progress, and frequently requiring people to redo their work.
Alternatively, should you try delegating effectively? This approach involves fewer messages, fewer check-in meetings, and automatic tracking of progress, decisions, and overall work. The process becomes transparent for everyone involved, enabling smoother collaboration and ensuring tasks are completed with precision and efficiency.
Writer: Ro Fernandez
As a manager, one of the most challenging tasks is to help low-performing team members improve their motivation and skill levels. It’s essential to understand that these team members are still valuable and can contribute significantly to the team’s success with the right guidance. To assist managers in this endeavor, I introduce the CARES framework — a five-step process designed to transform low performers into key contributors.
It’s also important to be aware of what their goals are and their motivations, as certain employees may be just not right for the role or the company and aren’t simply a good fit. I have personally tried to coach a few employees and spent months supporting them, taking away a lot of time from other team members, and it didn’t work out. So I don’t want to say that every time it is possible to improve things with coaching. If someone doesn’t want to improve and is not motivated by the role and the company, they may simply not be the right person for your team.
I am personally someone who will try everything and invest a lot of time and resources on my team but I have learned to also identify when I am just “forcing things” to work.
What is C.A.R.E.S?
CARES stands for Communicate, Accountability, Roadmap, Execution, and Support.
This framework is not another HR-initiated performance improvement program but a managerial tool to help team members enhance their performance without the fear of job loss.
Let’s dive into each step of the CARES framework:
Step 1: Communicate
Effective communication is the foundation of improving performance.
As a manager, you must address performance issues early and clearly, rather than waiting for year-end reviews. Here’s how to communicate effectively:
- Document Performance Issues: Before discussing performance, gather evidence of multiple instances over at least six months. Document the expected results, actual results, and how they relate to performance issues.
- Engage in Dialogue: In the meeting, listen to the team member’s perspective. It’s crucial to have a two-way conversation.
- Summarize and Share: After the discussion, send a summary email or document outlining the issues, agreements, and next steps. This sets a clear tone for the process.
What to Say: “Hi [Team Member], I wanted to discuss your recent performance. Over the past few months, there have been several instances where your work hasn’t met expectations, such as [specific examples]. I’d like to understand your perspective on these issues and work together on a plan to improve.”
Step 2: Accountability
Once performance issues are acknowledged, establish clear accountabilities. Define the specific responsibilities the team member must fulfill to meet their goals.
- Define Responsibilities: Outline clear and specific tasks, such as requirement clarification, timely task completion, and regular updates.
- Agree on Accountability: Ensure the team member understands and agrees to these responsibilities. Adjust if there is any disagreement.
- Document Accountability: Share a written record of the agreed-upon responsibilities.
What to Say: “Let’s clarify your responsibilities. For example, you’ll need to provide requirement clarifications before starting any coding, ensure timely completion of tasks, and regularly update me on any dependencies or issues. Do you agree with these expectations?”
Step 3: Roadmap
Create a detailed roadmap to guide the team member’s improvement journey. The roadmap should include granular tasks and milestones.
- Detail Tasks and Milestones: Break down tasks into manageable steps with clear milestones.
- Set a Timeline: The roadmap should span at least three months to allow for meaningful progress.
- Consider Role Adjustments: If needed, discuss potential role changes within the organization for a better fit.
What to Say: “To help you improve, we’ll create a roadmap with specific tasks and milestones. For the next three months, your milestones will include completing project documentation and attending relevant training sessions. We’ll review your progress regularly to ensure you’re on track.”
Step 4: Execution
With the roadmap in place, the next step is execution. The team member begins working on the agreed tasks while the manager monitors progress.
- Track Progress: Monitor the completion of tasks and milestones.
- Evaluate Regularly: Conduct evaluations at each milestone based on predefined criteria.
- Adjust as Needed: Make necessary adjustments based on progress and feedback.
What to Say: “Now that we have our roadmap, let’s start working on these tasks. We’ll review each milestone together to ensure you’re progressing as expected. If you encounter any issues, let me know immediately so we can address them.”
Step 5: Support
Provide ongoing support throughout the execution phase. Your involvement and encouragement are crucial for the team member’s success.
- Offer Regular Feedback: Give constructive feedback and course-correct as necessary.
- Provide Training: Arrange small training sessions if needed.
- Maintain Open Communication: Conduct regular one-on-ones to discuss progress and challenges.
What to Say: “I’ll be here to support you every step of the way. We’ll have regular check-ins to discuss your progress and any challenges you might face. Remember, this is a collaborative effort, and your improvement is my priority.”
As a new manager, it’s crucial to realize that each team member has different skill levels and varying degrees of motivation.
The situational leadership framework allows managers to view their team from multiple dimensions and adapt their approach accordingly.
Typically, the framework uses skill and motivation as key dimensions. For instance, you’ll need a different strategy for managing a highly skilled and highly motivated individual compared to someone who is highly skilled but lacks motivation. Without adapting your approach, a team member with low motivation, despite their skills, won’t deliver the desired results.
Situational Leadership Framework
In my experience, situational leadership is effective for any leader within an organization, regardless of their position. Here are two variations of the framework I use:
Skill vs. Motivation
- High Skill, High Motivation: These team members need minimal guidance and should be given challenging tasks to keep them engaged.
- High Skill, Low Motivation: These individuals may need more encouragement and incentives to boost their motivation.
- Low Skill, High Motivation: Provide training and development opportunities to enhance their skills while leveraging their enthusiasm.
- Low Skill, Low Motivation: These team members require the most support, with clear instructions and consistent motivation to improve both their skills and interest.
By understanding and applying these dimensions, you can tailor your management style to each team member’s needs, fostering a more productive and harmonious team environment.
In general, I can say that managing low performers can be challenging, but with the CARES framework, you can provide structured support to help them improve. By following these steps — Communicate, Accountability, Roadmap, Execution, and Support — you can turn performance issues into growth opportunities, fostering a more motivated and skilled team.
Remember, the goal is to help your team members succeed, not to push them out. With patience, clear communication, and ongoing support, you can guide your low-performing employees to align with the rest of the team and achieve their full potential.
When considering OKRs, it’s common to focus on only one or two concepts. For instance, some organizations may solely concentrate on revenue when defining their OKRs. However, it can be helpful to broaden the perspective and think about objectives, results, and activities related to the following areas:
- People: Consider team members, necessary knowledge, and experience. Identify training requirements for continuous improvement and the implementation of other objectives.
- Cash/Revenue: Focus on financial aspects and revenue generation.
- Processes: Evaluate things that need removal, improvement, or change. Determine the type of training and implementation needed to achieve the objective.
- Strategy: Encompass various elements such as product, service, communication, branding, etc.
How to build systems that help us achieve our objectives?
As the new year begins, we often find ourselves contemplating “what’s next” and setting new objectives for the year.
This process can bring about a wave of insecurities and may be particularly overwhelming for those who have held the same goals for years or for those who are unsure of where to start.
These goals not only extend to the business realm but are also prevalent in individual team members who are taking action.
We will share insights on how to define your goals for greater success, guide your team in defining their goals if you hold a leadership role, and help you articulate goals for your team or organization. We’ll delve into where to start, what distinguishes a good goal definition from a bad one, and identify approaches that consistently yield positive results. By exploring these details, your likelihood of success will multiply.
Before we provide a few actionable frameworks to define your goals, we want to give you more insights into what can influence your success, as some of us need more support than others or certain things to be true to feel “confident” about it. Here are several factors that contribute to increasing the likelihood of achieving goals:
- Specificity: Clearly define your goals and commitments. The more specific and well-defined they are, the easier it is to create a plan and take actionable steps. It’s essential not to think about goals as mere “one-sentence” statements to write and forget; define your goals as if you were outlining a commitment. Instead of saying “I want to go to the gym this year” or “I want to grow my business by 10%,” define the commitments you will have to make.
- Measurability: Establish measurable criteria to track your progress. This allows you to assess how far you’ve come and provides motivation to continue.
- Achievable: Set realistic goals. It’s not just about how big your goals are; it’s about understanding that our time is limited. We tend to add things to our lives without considering what we would have to change or remove to make time for that new thing.
- Relevance: Align your goals with your values and long-term objectives. When goals are meaningful and relevant, you are more likely to stay committed to them. Additionally, explore other commitments you have and determine if this “new” goal is actually a priority.
- Time-bound: Set deadlines for your goals. Having a timeframe creates a sense of urgency and helps prioritize tasks, preventing procrastination. When thinking about timelines, consider the amount of time you will need to achieve it and to maintain it. Things and people don’t stay if you don’t dedicate time to continue to nurture them.
- Planning: Develop a detailed plan outlining the steps needed to reach your goals. Break down larger goals into smaller, manageable tasks.
- Consistency: Consistent effort over time is crucial. Establishing daily or weekly routines can help maintain progress and build momentum. This is probably the key ingredient for success.
- Accountability body: Share your goals with someone who can hold you accountable. This could be a friend, family member, or a mentor who can provide support and encouragement.
- Adaptability: Be open to adjusting your approach based on feedback and changing circumstances. Flexibility is key to overcoming unexpected challenges.
- Positive Mindset: Cultivate a positive attitude. Believing in your ability to achieve your goals can have a significant impact on your motivation and perseverance.
- Social Support: Surrounding oneself with a supportive network can positively impact goal achievement. Building relationships with people who share similar goals or who encourage and inspire can enhance motivation and accountability.
- Peer Influence: Positive peer pressure can be harnessed to create a supportive environment. When individuals are part of a group that values similar goals, the shared commitment can drive motivation and persistence.
- Role Models: Identifying and learning from role models who have successfully achieved similar goals can provide guidance and inspiration. Observing others’ success stories can instill confidence and determination.
- Feedback Mechanisms: Establishing regular feedback loops, whether through mentors, peers, or self-assessment, allows individuals to monitor progress and make necessary adjustments. Constructive feedback can be a powerful motivator.
- Cultural Expectations: Shifting cultural norms to value and prioritize personal development and goal achievement can create a more conducive environment. Encouraging a culture that embraces lifelong learning and growth fosters a mindset conducive to goal attainment.
- Educational Programs: Implementing educational initiatives that teach goal-setting strategies, time management, and resilience can empower individuals with the necessary skills to pursue and achieve their objectives.
- Recognition and Rewards: Creating systems for acknowledging and rewarding goal achievement, either within social groups or organizations, reinforces positive behavior. Recognition can enhance motivation and encourage continued effort.
- Reducing Negative Influences: Minimizing exposure to negative influences or environments that hinder goal pursuit is crucial. This may involve distancing oneself from individuals or situations that undermine progress.
- Public Commitment: Making goals public, whether through social media or other platforms, can create a sense of accountability. The awareness that others are aware of one’s objectives can provide an added incentive to stay on track.
- Mindset Shift: Encouraging a growth mindset, where challenges are viewed as opportunities for learning and improvement, can reshape individuals’ perceptions of setbacks and foster resilience in the face of obstacles.
Not all have to be true, and you don’t always need a new objective for the year. In fact, for some objectives, you may only need two of these factors to be true, and maybe some years you don’t have any new goals. Remember that even in a fast-paced world, you are the one defining what success means to you and to your company(or team).
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