The Hamilton Spectator

Six resolution­s for 2018 from last year’s top titles

BUSINESS BOOKS

- JAY ROBB

Here are six New Year’s resolution­s to take to work in 2018, based on some of the best business books I read and reviewed this past year.

Add an accountabi­lity filter to your 2018 employee engagement survey.

Add questions that will let you separate out answers from two very different kinds of employees.

Pay close attention to what highaccoun­table employees are telling you. They’re the high performers who’ll suggest ways to make your organizati­on better for customers, clients, patients or students.

Don’t waste time, money or effort in trying to shore up satisfacti­on scores of low-accountabl­e employees, who’ll only give you demands on how to make their lives easier.

“If we really want our engagement surveys to drive workplace results, then we need to be honest,” says Cy Wakeman, author of “No Ego — How Leaders Can Cut the Cost of Workplace Drama, End Entitlemen­t and Drive Big Results.”

“Not all employees contribute equally, and the feedback they offer isn’t equal either. Treating all feedback equally is crazy.”

So, too, is holding managers accountabl­e for driving up satisfacti­on scores among employees who contribute little or nothing to the organizati­on.

Help yourself by helping others first. Adopt what Ryan Holiday calls the canvas strategy.

“Find canvasses for others to paint on,” says Holiday in “Ego is the Enemy.”

“Whereas everyone else wants to get credit and be respected, you can forget credit. You can forget it so hard that you’re glad when others get it instead of you — that was your aim after all. Let the others take the credit on credit, while you defer and earn interest on the principle.”

This is one way to keep your ego in check in 2018 and not allow a false sense of superiorit­y to exceed the bounds of confidence and talent.

Start practising radical candour. Care personally and challenge directly in 2018. Find the courage to deliver difficult, yet necessary feedback. Make tough calls and set a high bar for results. At the same time, let people know you care about them.

“When people trust you and believe you care about them, they are much more likely to accept and act on your praise and criticism,” says Kim Scott in “Radical Candor — Be a Kick-Ass Boss Without Losing Your Humanity.”

You do yourself and the people around you no favours when you put being liked ahead of saying and doing what needs to be said and done.

Pick an event your organizati­on runs every year and shake up the status quo. Don’t settle for what Chip and Dan Heath call the soulsuckin­g force of reasonable­ness. Invest the time and extra money to create a standout experience in 2018 that everyone in the room will remember and everyone else will wish they had attended.

“Moments matter,” say the Heaths in “The Power of Moments.”

“And what an opportunit­y we miss when we leave them to chance. Teachers can inspire, caregivers can comfort, service workers can delight, politician­s can unite and managers can motivate. All it takes is a bit of insight and forethough­t. We can be the designers of moments that deliver elevation and insight and pride and connection.”

Make sure everyone in your organizati­on has the same answers to two fundamenta­l questions: What do we stand for? And what do we want to be known for? The answers will define your organizati­on’s culture this year.

Average organizati­ons have mission statements. Great organizati­ons have people who are on a mission. The difference comes down to culture.

“Your most important job as a leader is to drive the culture,” says Jon Gordon in “The Power of Positive Leadership.”

“You must create a positive culture that energizes and encourages people, fosters connected relationsh­ips and great teamwork, empowers and enables people to do their best work.”

@jayrobb serves as director of communicat­ions for Mohawk College, lives in Hamilton and has reviewed business books for The Hamilton Spectator since 1999.

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