Thriving collaboration and employee engagement result from well-conceived approaches to “How we Operate”. Core Values are clearly defined and measured. Explicitly communicated cultural norms and expectations enable teams to work together more fluidly and generate the market breakthroughs needed to sustain growth.
Autonomous, Cross-functional Teams, Distributed Authority, Transparency and Peer Accountability are part of the next generation of organizational design.
In the last post, we explored the power of Peer Accountability to create ownership within the ranks. Relationships with colleagues are important in today’s workplace. Tapping these bonds can create greater accountability than traditional superior/subordinate systems. Peers hold one another responsible for deadlines and deliverables as well as inspire teammates to perform at their best and break new ground. Side by side every day, co-workers have the richest insight on how teams are operating and steps to improve.
While a powerful source of productivity, Peer Accountability is not without downsides. There have been several well-publicized accounts of this new approach gone wrong. So how do we create the ideal situation for success?
Peer Accountability is most effective when companies promote organizational trustworthiness, authenticity and healthy conflict.
Strong connections among colleagues as well as management engender a setting for effective Peer Accountability. Authenticity and candor are cornerstones. People are real with one another; open, direct and honest. There are no masks or curated reputations. They respect each other enough to speak the truth. And they are unafraid of being transparent about who they are and what they stand for. Staffers feel safe enough to be vulnerable, admitting fears or concerns, disclosing mistakes or willingly facing the inevitable failures that come with innovation.
Peer Accountability is natural when trust and authenticity are norms. Individuals are open to input, valuing the constructive feedback of their co-workers to further their professional development and improve team dynamics.
For many, Peer Accountability seems like a formula for conflict. Truth is, conflict is unavoidable in a robust, growing organization. Bright, passionate people will have differing opinions. Sadly, too many companies wrestle with unruly, rancorous conflict or worse, conflict avoidance.
We have all experienced interactions on the conflict continuum, some constructive and others damaging. Neither extreme is ideal, either. Healthy conflict is a balance point where parties share relevant information, feel heard and respected while having optimism in each other. Debate is open and unfiltered. There is a willingness to disagree yet a commitment to support the resolution regardless of the outcome.
With healthy conflict, teammates are not worried about questioning the ideas of others regardless of where they sit on the Org chart. The best idea does not have to be one’s own and deliberations among one another are simply part of reaching the optimal solution.
With a foundation of trustworthiness, authenticity and
healthy conflict, the power of Peer Accountability can be fully leveraged to help businesses thrive and scale.
In our next post, we will more examine how Transparency
augments Autonomous Teams, Distributed Authority and Peer Accountability as
well as laying the groundwork for leaders to serve as Catalysts and Coaches.
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