Open for business (December 4, 2010)

Organisations of all types and sizes are currently engaged in social media experiments. Very limited, very cautious experiments. A little measurement here, a bit of coy chat there, you know how it is, we're currently in that in-between stage — curious but fearful of leaving known comforts for the brave new world. Where are you and your organisation in this spectrum:

1. Conservative — traditional marketing and pr + some social media monitoring
2. Progressive — senior managers blog, some tweets broadcast. Marketing orchestrate and tightly control all that's said
3. Enlightened — blogs and tweets flow, communication rules have been replaced with principles that protect personal, organisational and client interests. *Everyone* knows the values and opinions of the organisation. Conversations across porous boundaries are natural, human, honest, accountable

Level 2 organisations are giving social media a trial run but their understanding is still entombed in old-marketing paradigms. They have fears. Nightmares actually. Someone might do something like this…(pokey tongue shot of my daughter) metaphorically speaking.

Pokeytongue

 

Speaking openly about my own characteristics, I'm an odd mixture: a techy with EQ. I like facts not waffle, I love straight-forward honesty. Here's the worrying bit…even if being honest is going to cost me somehow, I will say it any way. Can't see the point in not!. All this means I can be seen as a maverick. Yet it's my belief that people want transparency and honesty, they want to know you're capable of saying *this is the wrong product for you, I shalln't take any more of your time* if that really is the case. My daughter has inherited a fair number of my wacky genes; she has the ability to shock me to the core and yet she is loved for her honesty and good heart.

Organisations cannot afford gaffs; leaks of a confidential matter, betrayal of a commercial secret or an expression of a sentiment, opinion or idea that's orthogonal to the group. So being a level 2 is seen as the practical solution. Audiences, however, know they're not getting the real deal. They're not seeing the people. This is the main difference between levels 2 and 3. It is the existence and universal understanding of a set of guiding principles. Rules and principles differ greatly, the latter offering a great deal of flexibility over the former. Take for example the stick man below. He's throwing and catching a package. Never once does he drop and break the item. So he's never broken the rule which states: "do not drop". But he has violated the principle: FRAGILE.

Fragile

 

To be a genuinely social organisation, the old rules of marketing have to be binned. People across the organisation need "to be on the same page" if they're to tweet, blog or write comments in the open forum of social media. To get to level 3 involves:

1. Trusting a wider group of people to engage directly with their peers and audiences (internal and external)
2. Equipping the organisation with a set of guiding principles — see Values and Opinions
3. Working through the pain of level 2
4. Scrapping old-world paradigms and replacing the velvet tongue of marketing with the authentic voice of individuals

An organisation that's genuinely open — engages with competitors to discuss ideas, engages with audiences openly and frankly — is not the same as the one that thinks the illusion of one-to-one marketing is a great ambition. The promise of 1-to-1 marketing appeals to the old-world marketer.

A social organisation is one that's confident in the power of ad-hoc, transparent communication. A social organisation empowers its people to engage in open conversation. A social organisation participates in authentic dialog not pseudo 1-to-1 marketing. A social organisation is *open for business* in a very real sense.

360 the SMT

In modern workplaces it is common for employees to have their performance measured and monitored by both managers and colleagues. It’s normal to align performance with pay too. Far less common is the practice of measuring and publishing the performance of senior managers. This is a practice that inspirational leaders like Ricardo Semler would sponsor and its an attitude, a corporate modus operandi, that can prevent poor performance in the top team by surfacing issues resulting from poor management practices and sub-optimal decision making skills.

Why measure the Senior Management Team (SMT)?

Ricardo Semler once stated “Growth and profit are a product of how people work together….” Therefore, highly effective senior managers are the key to successful, profitable businesses. It is the task of the SMT to formulate strategy and to communicate this clearly. Strategy must be converted into action by the SMT so that staff members understand how their work helps their company meet clearly understood targets and goals.

SMT staff must communicate what is needed and by when. Note this doesn’t mean staff should be told how a task must to be achieved! There is no place for switherers, ditherers, muddle-heads and procrastinators in the SMT. Policemen style managers are not helpful either. Have you ever experienced the frustration of working with a manager whose sole purpose in life is to apply corporate rules and to book anyone found transgressing? You know the type: they focus on time, attendance and other minutiae. Of course it’s important to maintain a level of discipline, so let HR take care of that stuff.

Why measure the SMT? Because their performance means the difference between life and death of any company. The SMT must set direction, pace, tone and priorities, it is a collection of leaders not managers! And who better to measure them than their staff.

How to measure the performance of the SMT?

Using the SMT attributes list below, have each member of staff rate each member of the SMT. I’d recommend a scale of 6 to 1, where 6 is excellent and 1 is rubbish. Make the review process anonymous — this is essential. Perhaps use an external service such as survey monkey. Gather the data and publish the results!

SMT attributes

Ambition
Approachable
Assertive
Business acumen
Compassion
Composure
Control skills
Creativity
Customer focus
Decision quality
Dependable
Delegation
Fair
Fun to work with
Good listener
Helpful
Humble
Humor
Imaginative
Interpersonal skills
Keeps up-to-date
Knowledgeable
Listening skills
Managerial courage
Managing diversity
Motivating others
Negotiating
Organising
Patient
Perseverance
Perspective
Planning
Presentation skills
Priority setting
Problem solver
Punctual
Self knowledge
Shares ideas
Ability to size up people
Strategic agility
Supportive
Technical skills
Trusted
Understanding others

“We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit”. — Aristotle