What organizations say they want and what they do is in complete opposition:
- you say you want your people to become leaders and independent thinkers but you send them to cookie-cutter leadership schools making them followers of someone else's doctrine.
- you say you want to attract people with strong skill-sets but advertise titles and job descriptions and base who gets an interview on looking simply at a resume.
- you say you want to attract, hire and retain the best but you take out mediocre ads just like everyone else and post the same "Now Hiring" signs as everyone else - attracting the available, not the best.
- you say you want to have a strong Culture of Excellence in your organizations but at the first sign of financial crisis, you cut, slash and burn budgets that would help build morale.
- you say you want to have strong managers capable of handling issues but you force them into pointless meetings and force them to fill out reports no one looks at.
- you say you want to have your front-line staff be more engaged in their work but you don't empower them to make decisions.
- you say you offer an innovative place to work but institute blanket policies and refuse to be flexible with work hours, job duties and telecommuting.
- you say every person is important but don't encourage senior executives to get out of their ivory towers and press-the-flesh with front-liners.
- you say you have open-door policies but won't say the hard things that need because your fear of offending or hurting is greater than your need to be honest.
- you say everyone in the company is equal yet senior management act like they're members of an exclusive club of perks and benefits.
- you say you encourage ideas and free flow of thoughts but rarely implement employee's ideas or even respond to many of them.
- you say every employee is important but you only give awards to and reward your salespeople.
- you say you offer superior customer service but when polled, only 8% of customers agree.
- you say you want more sales built on your value proposition but at the first sign of competition, you crumble on your value cut the price.
- you say you want fewer meetings but you keep on meeting to find ways to reduce the number of meetings.
- you say you have the best staff but you put hiring in the hands of old-school HR departments who, by their very results to date, have proven incapable of finding that staff.
- you say you want high-performers but don`t arm middle-managers with the skills to coach high-performers.
- you say you want to grow but aren't prepared to make a major investment in that growth without absolute certainty.
- you say that you want to be the best but compare yourselves to mediocre and low-performing competitors.
- you say that you really care about being better than you are but no one is prepared to take the risks and make the moves that elevate the organization for fear of personally looking foolish.
- you say that you want loyalty from your employees but slash their jobs when shareholder profits are in jeopardy.
You say a lot of things. But the measure of organizational success isn't in what you say - it's in what you do. So what will you do today?
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