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Why you need to be challenging your credit union team more

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You are surrounded by ingenuity that you’re not taking advantage of.

Probably.

Most leaders are. And the reason most leaders are is actually pretty simple.

It’s becausemost leaders spend too much time focusing onHow.

A leader should be focused on theWhat, and theWhere.A leader should provide the destination, but not the route.Why? Two reasons.

First, as a leader, planning the route is a waste of your time and energy. Your greatest value is in creating and communicating the vision, not in micromanaging the execution of that vision.

Second,your team — if they’re any good — loves a challenge. They love to stretch their skills, their creativity — their ingenuity.

You’ve no doubt heard of “flow.” Some people refer to it as “being in the zone.” It’s defined as “the mental state of operation in which a person performing an activity is fully immersed in a feeling of energized focus, full involvement, and enjoyment in the process of the activity.” The state of flow is achieved when a high perceived challenge is matched by a high perceived level of skill. In other words,when you give your credit union team a compelling challenge that forces them to work at the top of their skill level, there’s a good chance they’ll hit that flow state.

And that’s where a fully engaged team thrives.

Let’s take a brief history lesson.

On May 25, 1961, President John F. Kennedy stood before Congress and said, “…this nation should commit itself to achieving the goal, before this decade is out, of landing a man on the Moon and returning him safely to the Earth.”

Now — and this is the important part — Kennedy didnotfollow that with, “And here’s how we’re going to do it. First, we’ll develop the Saturn V rocket. Then…” No, what Kennedy did was to provide the destination: the Moon. But for the route — thehow— he relied on the ingenuity of others.

“But Bill,” you say, “Kennedy didn’tknowhow to get to the moon. Idoknow how to do the things I’m asking my team to do.”

Fair point. But let me give you a bit of pushback.

First, you don’t know how to do the things you’re asking your team to do. What youdo know ishowyouwould do the things you’re asking your team to do. Andyourway isn’t necessarily thebestway. There’s a very good chance that your team, when left to play with their own ingenuity, will come up with a better way (or ways).

Second, when you tell your team not onlywhatto do, buthowto do it, you create a team that is bored and, eventually, demoralized — because they’re not being challenged.

So the choice is yours. Bored and demoralized, or energized and “in the zone.” I know which oneI’dprefer.

Bill Stainton

Bill Stainton

Producing Results