— By Vasiliy Ivanov, CEO of KeepSolid.
So, to agreements! For me, this is one of the most sore subjects in professional life. This is due to the fact that there a lot of people in the company and it is impossible to pay everyone enough attention and discuss all the details of a work process or task. And the last thing I’m going to do is to prepare documents for every sneeze of an employee. Usually this only leads to a terrific decrease in the efficiency of the entire company and the creation of jobs for the most uninterested members of the team. My partner has a favorite anecdote on this topic:
During an interview, the candidate was given a document with a huge list of what’s forbidden during working hours. The candidate passed eyes over it and signed it.
– You agree so calmly? So much is prohibited there, have you understood everything?
– Of course, my favorite occupation is not on your list anyway.
– What is your favorite occupation?
– I love building chains of paper clips!
The problem with agreements, as I see it, lies in a different understanding of the issue by opposing sides of the dialogue. Often this results in remarks like “if we agreed on this, there would have been a document.” As you know, arguing whose understanding is closer to the truth is a fascinating and endless process for those who want to burn time to the detriment of the company. I like to dig into the essence of things and define the meaning of words, so as not to insist on subjective understanding. So, an agreement is a consent reached through negotiations or a kind of diplomatic arrangement of the parties without detailed elaboration and legal registration (Wiktionary).
An agreement usually gets violated as the result of inflated or false expectations. These may include the area of responsibility of a certain position in the company. It is no secret what mother expects when she tells her son: “Go to the store, buy yeast bread.” We expect that he’ll go today, and will buy exactly yeast
Am I trying to say that this is the fault of specific people who are holding onto their seats? No! It’s more of an education problem where we (in bulk) are not taught to dig into the essence of things and find answers at the bottom of the issue. As well as to search for the guilty party starting with yourself instead of trying to apply someone else’s successful actions. In practice, we get this: any social person is ready to take patronage over the team, but is not ready to consider himself the cause of what is happening. Even more: if successful, manager places himself at the root of the project success and chalks it up; in case of failure, manager often finds from 2 to 10 reasons for what happened and about the same number of candidates to blame, among whom he does not name himself.
I discovered the most interesting thing for myself not so long ago. The higher the position in the organizational structure, the more divergent expectations of a person occupying a position from the reality. After all, it is easier to explain an ordinary employee what is expected of him in layman’s terms. His area of responsibility is small and the amount of possible solutions is not too large. Moving higher by the organizational structure, the amount of possible solutions for any task/issue increases, which some managers don’t realize and in general are not really able to seek solutions until they are sure there are no more left. Indeed, who determines if there are solutions left? Only the manager, therefore it is not too difficult to come into agreement with yourself.
Technologies
Have you ever tried jelly? Beautiful and stirs when you knock it with a spoon.
For a long time we tried to describe all the job descriptions, duties, and responsibilities of each employee,
Common sense
I believe every successful leader will smile if you ask him to recall a colleague with whom there were no
In other words, he is guided not by contract and personal interests, but by common sense for the benefit of the group he works with. That’s how I describe the employees whom I want to see at the key positions in my company.