What Are You
Tolerating?
By
Eric M. Twiggs
“What you allow is what will
continue”
Are you holding your people accountable? When I was a
district manager for a national automotive chain back in 2001, I would have
answered this question with a definite “YES!”. After all, I always
“preached” the right things.
During team meetings, I preached about the habit of
filling out a courtesy check for every customer. I preached about
the importance of wearing safety glasses and safety toed boots while working in
the shop. I would preach to the writers about doing a vehicle walk
around at the car with each customer.
“Mike”, The National Vice President of Operations, was
scheduled to visit my shops and audit the previously mentioned processes.
Since I had given my people specific direction of what to do, I was looking
forward to the upcoming visit.
We visited three locations, and I watched with growing
despair as my people failed to fill out the courtesy checks, wear the safety
equipment, or do the vehicle walk arounds! I found myself repeating
the following phrase throughout the day: “Mike, I told them to do it!”
After this visit, I
wondered what I could have done to make the message clearer. I now
realize that my problem was best summed up by the former Navy Seal and author Jocko Willink, when he
said: “It’s not what you preach, it’s what you tolerate.”
I may have preached about doing courtesy checks, but my
failure to confront the technician who handed me a blank form, sent a different
message. I was tolerating non-compliance.
What are you tolerating? This is an important
question because your silence is your acceptance. How you respond to non-compliance
is where the rubber meets the road.
A one-hour meeting without follow up and follow though, is
an hour of your life that you just wasted! Keep reading to learn two simple strategies to help you hold
your people accountable.
Consistency
When I worked for the national automotive chain, we had
something we called “the flavor of the month.” This was when
the corporate leadership would communicate what they believed was a game
changing directive. For thirty days this initiative was preached during
conference calls and store visits.
Employees were told that compliance was mandatory and that
the failure to comply was a career limiting move. An example of
this was the directive to place the work orders in special plastic pouches and
to hang the pouches on the customer’s driver side mirror, once the vehicle was
in the bays.
After about forty days however, things changed.
The initiative was no longer enforced and the leader would walk past a
technician failing to hang the pouch, with no reaction.
The experienced employees knew that eventually the focus
would change, because the directive was just “the flavor of the month.”
Since there was no consistency, there was no accountability.
Holding your weekly one on one meetings at the same day
and time is a great way to leverage the power of consistency.
Pick
two or three standards that you constantly preach about, but struggle to get compliance on. Make a
point to keep those three items on your agenda every week.
For example, if exit appointments are your struggle, get in
the habit of asking your writer how many appointments he has scheduled since
the last meeting. He will get the message that the exit appointment isn’t
just the flavor of the month, and will dread having to tell you he’s
non-compliant every week.
Consequences
I was talking with a shop owner named “Laura” recently who was
blaming her people for the shop falling short of its benchmarks. She said she has
regular team meetings, but her technicians are still failing to arrive to work
on time.
I asked her what the consequence was for those who failed to
do what she asked. There was silence on the other end of the
phone! Before laughing at Laura, consider the following scenario: If I
work for you and am not doing what you ask, what are the consequences?
The progressive disciplinary process is the best
place to start. Let’s say, the issue is that as your employee, I am late
to work every day.
The first step of the process is the verbal warning.
Acknowledging that you noticed I was late, reminding me of the
importance of timeliness, and asking if you can count on me to be punctual,
will certainly get my attention.
If I continue to come in late, the net step in the process
is the write up. With the first write up, it’s important to notate
the day and time of the verbal warning. This shows a pattern of poor
performance.
Once you have a verbal warning and three write ups, you will
have provided consequences for non-compliance, and have the necessary
documentation to terminate the employee. For additional
information on the progressive disciplinary process, contact SESCO at 1 800
764 4127.
Conclusion
So there you have it. Leveraging the power of
consistency and providing consequences for non-compliance, will
enhance your ability to hold people accountable.
My visit with Mike
would have gone better if I had embraced
these strategies. What do you need to stop tolerating?
Eric M. Twiggs
The Accountability Coach
PS. Don’t know what to say during your weekly one on
ones? Email etwiggs@autotraining.net to receive a weekly on one meeting agenda.
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