PerformanceVertical consulting Welcomes You!

This blog, brought to you by PerformanceVertical consulting, will cover major leadership issues of the day. I will attempt to find the topics and issues that business people as well as others will find relevant and interesting. I hope to make a difference and have an impact. Please join me in this quest.

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Leadership During Turbulence


The economy is in peril. The fear is real. Uncertainty is everywhere. The bailout is stalled. Congress is gridlocked. Companies are ramping down. Orders are down. Sales are way down. Costs are rising. Firings and layoffs seem likely. Projects are being delayed or cancelled. Could things get any worse?

Now is the time to plan your rebound. This is no time to panic. There is no time to panic. I have some things for you to consider as you lead yourself and others through times that many anticipate are the worst since the Great Depression.

Here are some excerpts from an article that I wrote soon after the 9/11 tragedy that still apply.

Leadership During Turbulence


The business landscape is changing by the hour. Companies are no longer just working to achieve profitability, they are now struggling for survival. Most executives talk of being in crisis. Sales and revenue are predicted to plummeted as consumer spending is drastically curtailed. Business activity has already taken a severe hit. Capital investments and large-scale projects will be or have been postponed or canceled. Workers are being laid off. Despite our lack of confidence and trust, all eyes are focused on our leaders and their ability to guide us out of the chaos. Thus far, no one has seemed to step up effectively.


Leadership is About Character


Through me coaching with numerous leaders and executives, we have found that crisis or not, leadership is about character. Leadership must be displayed at all levels of any organization. Success is preceded as well as sustained by strong leadership character. We know that leadership character is based on a foundation of integrity and accountability. A successful leader must balance both sides of the scale.


The New Scorecard: Leadership’s Top Ten


1. Emotional Resilience


Both Franklin Roosevelt and Winston Churchill were able to hold the Allied forces together through World War II through their ability to persevere and withstand. Leaders, as well as the organization, must display this same type of emotional resilience. Immediate results or mixed reviews from internal or external critics can be difficult to swallow. A great leader must stand without wavering or communicating a lack of confidence. The great leader is able to ensure that the organization can bounce back from bad news. He or she must not only be a cheerleader but must also be willing to ensure that expectations are not too high or too low.


2. Mobilization of Talent


Once a crisis is upon a great leader, special attention must be paid to the mobilization of talent. Though one may have an executive team in place, it must be determined which key individuals and key roles will be necessary to get through the crisis. Two teams may need to be formed: one to focus on day-to-day operations critical to running the business, and one to focus on the crisis management issues that re-define or change the business. Moreover, a successful team fully understands and embraces the mission. Team members must be fully motivated to deal with change and be fully prepared to shift at a moment’s notice. Having the right people eliminates the need to motivate them and hold them accountable. They hold themselves accountable. Once the crisis teams are in place, the leaders must be willing to delegate and allow others to do work, perhaps including that which is not normally assigned to them.


3. Energizing Others


Obviously, the fundamental ongoing task in times of crisis is that of energizing others. Team building takes on a new meaning. A strong emphasis must be placed on working together, displaying teamwork, setting aside differences and petty conflicts and sacrificing individual goals for the good of the whole. People must think collectively and understand how their work impacts and interconnects with others. Crises involve taking people beyond what they think they are capable of attaining. During difficult times, energizing others can take on special significance. Crises can quickly deplete the organization of spirit and inspiration. Some people want to react quickly, while others take time to react. Leaders must provide people with inspiration as well as direction. Move too quickly and the target may be missed, move too slowly and momentum may be lost forever.


4. Anticipating More Change


Of course, the most important time to prepare for crises is during times of normalcy. The ability to anticipate change can make or break an organization. Fighting and mastering panic and paralysis can ensure that one business thrives while another struggles. Building a leadership team that can avert a crisis through preparation and prevention is a must. Leaders must be flexible, creative and capable of fostering creativity and innovation with an eye toward the future. "Business as usual" is not an option.


5. Communication


Successful leadership involves instilling confidence through communication in the organization. This involves a broad range of communication skills used in a continuous, consistent fashion. Slow memos requesting authorization and traditional chain of command processes will not work. Communication must be more direct, informal and impromptu. The organization needs people going straight to those who can fix problems or offer effective solutions. Whatever communication tools are used, people must believe that things will be controlled and that chaos will be quickly eliminated.


Likewise, the membership of the organization must also believe in the leadership team and their ability to manage the crisis at hand. The leader must maximize credibility, believability and integrity. What is communicated to the organization must address key constituencies about status, on-going progress, and plans for the future. There must be a willingness to hold regular briefings and updates to ensure that the workforce understands what is going on, can ask questions, can clarify issues and, ultimately, can support what is being done.


6. Front Line Presence


This is no time to hide. To support their communication, leaders must maintain a "front line presence" and responsiveness to underscore their control, command and commitment to seeing the crisis through. We are not talking about proverbial "face time". We are talking about real visibility and real work. The leadership team as well as the workforce must be able to see, smell, hear, feel and taste leadership.


7. Clear Purpose and Mission


It must be plain to the organization that there is a clear purpose and mission. The mission must be meaningful. The good leader must carefully construct goals to ensure understanding of the results to be obtained. Nothing is gained, however, by taking a "ready, fire, aim" approach. Responding too quickly with an ineffective action plan can soon destroy the confidence and support needed for the long haul. The plan must be specific, concrete, realistic, measurable and attainable. The mission must have an objective around which people can rally and a destination.


8. Decisiveness


Crisis leadership requires decisiveness. Many leaders have failed at this crucial juncture. Critical decisions must be made that could bring risk to the organization. These risks must be weighed accurately. The risks themselves must not paralyze the leader or the organization. Crises often increase the level of risk and create more unknowns as was the case in the Cuban Missile Crisis. President John Kennedy is considered to have prevented a major military conflict with Russia through his decisive handing of the situation.


A leader can not ignore his team. A leader must have the right people, as well as be able to quickly decipher information to determine the right course of action. With the input and advice of his team, leaders must choose options as presented, often based on incomplete or unavailable information. Frequently, crises have no real precedent. Leaders must be able to take risks and make decisions without the luxury of having seen the given scenario before.


9. Taking the Long View


Decisions must be made with the proper perspective. All great leaders are defined by history. Greatness is measured over time. Decisions must be made by taking the long view. Leaders must keep an eye on the overall mission of the organization and what is best for the long-term sustainability of the enterprise. Speed, creativity and innovation must be balanced with an understanding of the future possibilities and implication of any action or set of actions. Leaders must be willing to ensure that their perspective maintains a broad, strategic view. Emotions that can energize or mobilize in the early stages of a crisis must not drive decisions during later stages.


Long-term strategy can be difficult to support. Not only does a leader in crisis need to help the workforce with getting beyond the initial shock of the crisis, a leader must also be able to keep resolve high over time. Early failures and setbacks can erode confidence in the mission. A leaders’ role must include helping the organization down the long road ahead.


10. Execution and Delivery


Finally, crises require execution and delivery. Crises are often defined by the initial stages involving survival and immediate danger. Once the clear and present danger is over, individuals and organizations may breathe more easily. Often, the crisis is not really over. Leaders must understand that the mission that was so clear at the beginning of the crisis can be blurred. Leaders must do all that they can to ensure that the sense of urgency is not lost and that the eye on the initial goals and objectives is maintained. The goals must be restated again and again.

Conclusion: Taking Business Off Hold


As a nation, we may never be the same again. The landscape has changed dramatically. There is no road map. We have not been here before. Leaders must be realistic with themselves as well as others about what it takes to be successful. Crises require an acknowledgment that things will change and then change again. Organizations that survive and then thrive understand that panic, paralysis, and complacency can be deadly. The real leadership challenge is to ensure that organizations can deal with change after the fact, but can also predict, anticipate and prepare for change. Leadership requires more skill than ever before. There is no time to lose. Businesses will stand or fall on the ability of their leadership to meet the challenge.


Best wishes.

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Eve Ensler on Sarah Palin


By Eve Ensler



Eve Ensler, the American playwright, performer, feminist and activist best known for "The Vagina Monologues", wrote the following about Sarah Palin.

Drill, Drill, Drill



I am having Sarah Palin nightmares. I dreamt last night that she was a member of a club where they rode snowmobiles and wore the claws of drowned and starved polar bears around their necks. I have a particular thing for Polar Bears. Maybe it's their snowy whiteness or their bigness or the fact that they live in the arctic or that I have never seen one in person or touched one. Maybe it is the fact that they live so comfortably on ice. Whatever it is, I need the polar bears.



I don't like raging at women. I am a Feminist and have spent my life trying to build community, help empower women and stop violence against them. It is hard to write about Sarah Palin. This is why the Sarah Palin choice was all the more insidious and cynical. The people who made this choice count on the goodness and solidarity of Feminists.



But everything Sarah Palin believes in and practices is antithetical to Feminism which for me is part of one story -- connected to saving the earth, ending racism, empowering women, giving young girls options, opening our minds, deepening tolerance, and ending violence and war.


I believe that the McCain/Palin ticket is one of the most dangerous choices of my lifetime, and should this country chose those candidates the fall-out may be so great, the destruction so vast in so many areas that America may never recover. But what is equally disturbing is the impact that duo would have on the rest of the world. Unfortunately, this is not a joke. In my lifetime I have seen the clownish, the inept, the bizarre be elected to the presidency with regularity.



Sarah Palin does not believe in evolution. I take this as a metaphor. In her world and the world of Fundamentalists nothing changes or gets better or evolves. She does not believe in global warming. The melting of the arctic, the storms that are destroying our cities, the pollution and rise of cancers, are all part of God's plan. She is fighting to take the polar bears off the endangered species list. The earth, in Palin's view, is here to be taken and plundered. The wolves and the bears are here to be shot and plundered. The oil is here to be taken and plundered. Iraq is here to be taken and plundered. As she said herself of the Iraqi war, "It was a task from God."



Sarah Palin does not believe in abortion. She does not believe women who are raped and incested and ripped open against their will should have a right to determine whether they have their rapist's baby or not.



She obviously does not believe in sex education or birth control. I imagine her daughter was practicing abstinence and we know how many babies that makes.



Sarah Palin does not much believe in thinking. >From what I gather she has tried to ban books from the library, has a tendency to dispense with people who think independently. She cannot tolerate an environment of ambiguity and difference. This is a woman who could and might very well be the next president of the United States. She would govern one of the most diverse populations on the earth.



Sarah believes in guns. She has her own custom Austrian hunting rifle. She has been known to kill 40 caribou at a clip. She has shot hundreds of wolves from the air.



Sarah believes in God. That is of course her right, her private right. But when God and Guns come together in the public sector, when war is declared in God's name, when the rights of women are denied in his name, that is the end of separation of church and state and the undoing of everything America has ever tried to be.




I write to my sisters. I write because I believe we hold this election in our hands. This vote is a vote that will determine the future not just of the U.S., but of the planet. It will determine whether we create policies to save the earth or make it forever uninhabitable for humans. It will determine whether we move towards dialogue and diplomacy in the world or whether we escalate violence through invasion, undermining and attack. It will determine whether we go for oil, strip mining, coal burning or invest our money in alternatives that will free us from dependency and destruction. It will determine if money gets spent on education and healthcare or whether we build more and more methods of killing. It will determine whether America is a free open tolerant society or a closed place of fear, fundamentalism and aggression.



If the Polar Bears don't move you to go and do everything in your power to get Obama elected then consider the chant that filled the hall after Palin spoke at the RNC, "Drill Drill Drill." I think of teeth when I think of drills. I think of rape. I think of destruction. I think of domination. I think of military exercises that force mindless repetition, emptying the brain of analysis, doubt, ambiguity or dissent. I think of pain.



Do we want a future of drilling? More holes in the ozone, in the floor of the sea, more holes in our thinking, in the trust between nations and peoples, more holes in the fabric of this precious thing we call life?






Eve Ensler

September 5, 2008

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Palin: Ostrich Puts Head in the Sand


"I thought it was hilarious. I thought she was spot on. Didn't hear a word she said, but the visual, spot on."

--Sarah Palin,, who admits that she watched Tina Fey impersonate her on "Saturday Night Live" — but only with the volume turned off.

What else do you think she might refuse to listen to or lie about?

Thursday, September 4, 2008

Bush One and Bush Two


"You know, it was once said of the first George Bush that he was born on third base and thought he’d hit a triple.

Well, with the 22 million new jobs and the budget surplus Bill Clinton left behind, George W. Bush came into office on third base and then he stole second. And John McCain cheered him every step of the way."

--Ted Strickland, Governor of Ohio, speaking at the Democratic National Convention.

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Listen to the Issues, Ignore the Media and the Hype


“Our nation is in trouble on two fronts. The American dream is under siege at home, and America’s leadership in the world has been weakened. Middle-class and low-income Americans are hurting — with incomes declining; job losses, poverty and inequality rising; mortgage foreclosures and credit card debt increasing; health care coverage disappearing; and a very big spike in the cost of food, utilities and gasoline.

“And our position in the world has been weakened by too much unilateralism and too little cooperation, by a perilous dependence on imported oil, by a refusal to lead on global warming, by a growing indebtedness and a dependence on foreign lenders, by a severely burdened military, by a backsliding on global nonproliferation and arms control agreements, and by a failure to consistently use the power of diplomacy, from the Middle East to Africa to Latin America to Central and Eastern Europe.”

--Bill Clinton.