Fiji Sun

7 Ways To Turn Yours Into The Winning Team

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Most successful qualities have common quality called “low tolerance threshold.” Mark Wager Expert, Internatio­nal leadership

Taking over as a leader of any team can be a daunting task. But if the team is an underperfo­rming team, the task is monumental.

When a team is underperfo­rming, it is usually because there has been a lack of effective leadership over a period of time which has led to a series of bad habits within the team. It’s incredibly rare that the reason for poor performanc­e is anything other than poor leadership.,

In fact, when someone tells you that the performanc­e of the team wasn’t because of poor leadership, it usually tells me two things. Firstly, the previous leader was a nice person who worked hard yet was still a poor leader, and secondly, the person telling you this doesn’t know anything about leadership. Either way, taking over a poor performing team is an excellent opportunit­y for you to shine and demonstrat­e your leadership skills.

A leader is measured by the obstacles they have overcome

A leader should only be measured by the obstacles that they have overcome.

I know when I look over my 30 years of managerial experience, the most rewarding times were when I had the opportunit­y to turn an underperfo­rming team around. The truth is undeniable, no one comes to work with the intention of deliberate­ly performing poorly. There are a multitude of reasons for their poor performanc­e, all of which can be addressed by a quality leader.

The multitude of reasons include: poor communicat­ion, lack of clear expectatio­ns, lack of informatio­n, and lack of skills.

People do not go searching for failure.

People easily find themselves in a losing mentality, if there are no clear directions to go from losing to winning.

This direction can be supplied by a leader when they follow these seven steps to success.

Step One: Explain your philosophy

When you walk into a new environmen­t, you will be greeted by a mixture of emotions from your team.

Some people will be excited, some will be apprehensi­ve, others may not even care.

These emotions arise because they don’t know the type of person you are.

The relationsh­ip between a team member and the leader is the biggest

factor in determinin­g whether the team member is happy or not. Your first talk is to eliminate any misunderst­anding by explaining your leadership philosophy, and describe your expectatio­ns of your team and what expectatio­ns they should have from you.

Step Two: Bring the pain

The next stage is to create a new winning culture.

A successful culture has the perfect blend of pain and belief.

The team needs to have a reason to change and a reason to try.

This starts by fully establishi­ng the reality of the current situation, and the consequenc­es, if the current situation is allowed to continue.

The impact on the club and the individual­s need to be described in such a way that no one is left in any doubt that change is not just desirable, but essential, and needs to happen immediatel­y.

Step Three: Install belief

The other ingredient to a new culture is giving people the belief that the change required is achievable.

People need to believe because belief

is the foundation of success.

You can communicat­e this belief by having strategy, tactics and behavioura­l discussion­s.

The strategy is a one line statement that summarises a clear understand­able reason why success can be achieved.

The tactics need to explain how the strategy can be made real and the behaviours are what individual­s do everyday that enable the tactics to be realised.

This method creates what every successful team has and that is a clear link between individual behaviours and the overall strategy and having this link improves belief and overall motivation.

Step Four: Identify personal ambitions

People will work hard for other people, but will sweat blood for themselves.

To tap into the higher levels of motivation as a leader, you need the individual ambition for each member of the team.

Once you know this ambition, you need to be able to align that ambition to the overall objective.

If people can see that they can achieve what they want as an individual by achieving the team’s overall objective, you will see a level of commitment and passion that you wouldn’t have seen before.

Step Five: Establish a greater purpose

Psychologi­st, Martin Seligman, theorised that one of the fundamenta­l needs of every human being was the need to be part of something greater than themselves.

The most successful team in profession­al sport is the New Zealand Rugby team, the All Blacks.

The former World Cup winners have a team of world class players. But if you talk to any of them, they are clear that their role is just a custodian of the jersey.

They are aware of the history of the team and the responsibi­lities they have to uphold that legacy.

This humility allows the leader to manage the emotional intelligen­ce of the players as the egos of the individual­s are easier to deal with.

Step Six: Create a leadership team

Studies have shown that to create a new culture, you need at least 1518 per cent of the team to become passionate supporters of change. This creates enough momentum to switch the whole team to your way of thinking.

You will need to create a leadership team, a collection of team members who have the extra responsibi­lities to demonstrat­e and uphold the new desired behaviours. You need to avoid the common mistake of selecting the leadership team based on seniority or length of service.

The team needs members who are most capable of influencin­g those around them; they are not always the most senior members.

Look at the personal qualities within the team; who has the passion, the emotional intelligen­ce, and the work ethic.

It is these qualities that influence people around them.

Look at these qualities, and you will find your leadership team.

Step Seven: Form a brotherhoo­d

The most successful teams I have ever been involved with share a common quality.

That quality is what is

“low tolerance threshold.”

This is when the individual­s are comfortabl­e to discuss issues, rather than internalis­ing the issue until it escalates to the level that it is so significan­t, the individual “blows up”, or reacts in a way that is not effective.

An effective team needs to continuous­ly improve.

This can only be done when people have the courage to raise issues whether they are suggestion­s for improvemen­t, or holding colleagues accountabl­e for their behaviours.

This requires courage from both, the person raising the issue, and from the person who is listening to the issue.

Success can not be achieved as an individual; it’s a team effort and each member of the team needs to be aware of their responsibi­lities, to help colleagues achieve success, and faith that their colleagues will do the same for them. called a

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 ?? ?? You will need to create a leadership team, a collection of team members who have the extra responsibi­lities to demonstrat­e, and uphold the new desired behaviours.
You will need to create a leadership team, a collection of team members who have the extra responsibi­lities to demonstrat­e, and uphold the new desired behaviours.

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