When we work with organizations in a coaching, training or software co-development capacity, we often find that the organizations, leaders and teams that are best equipped to thrive in today’s high-demand business landscape have adopted a modern mindset shift in a few key areas.
We’ve outlined and provided video explanations of these key mindset shifts modern leaders and teams must adopt now. Read on, listen and let us know what you think!
When you focus more on why you do something as opposed to how or what gets done, it’s far more likely that you’ll be satisfied with the outcome.
Project management is great for getting things done, but it’s often focused on getting things done on budget, on time and within a specified scope. This isn’t necessarily a bad thing, but sometimes we lose sight of how valuable the thing we’re getting done is. Product-based mindsets keep the focus on the value of what we’re delivering.
The best products or services we deliver are discovered over time where a feature or upgrade is tested in the marketplace and the organization has the freedom to respond quickly and accordingly.
Complex systems are treated differently than complicated systems. Complicated projects can rely on repeatable plans. Complex systems—building a new strategy, service or software—require transparency, inspection and adaptation.
There’s a lot more benefit in a style or relationship where cross-functional teams work together. If the person who has the authority and capability to understand what gets created next is not part of the team, then that team is incomplete.
If what you want is “compliance” out of your people, then management is great! If what you want is engagement, then traditional carrot-and-stick management isn’t going to do the trick.
Thanks to Carol Dweck’s growth mindset research, we now know that organizations become more powerful when they learn. Trying to be the smartest person in the room can be detrimental to the organization and your personal growth.
Rather than relying on expertise and “the way it’s always been done,” we must recognize and value the fact that innovation comes from entering uncharted territory. This requires fast feedback and high awareness.
Human beings cannot be controlled. We make decisions and take actions that our fellow humans simply can’t predict. Since we can’t control humans, the best—and most impactful—thing we can do is influence and trust.
Traditional workplaces value control and command, but this has been switched upside down thanks to complexity. We must trust the people we have brought on board to deliver value.
The way to get good at a specific practice is to understand and adopt modern workplace principles first. It takes a shift in mindset and consideration of your specific environment to truly know how to develop effective practices.