Without Consequences Managers Send the Wrong Message

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Ryan Lochte certainly did realize severe consequences to hischildish actions in Rio.他们打了他真的伤害——在痘痕etbook.

One hopes that Lochte learns from this experience, grows up and becomes a responsible adult. Maybe.

If, however, what happened to Lochte serves to influence other young athletes to be wise about their fame, that is a good outcome.

Do we learn from consequences?

As painful as some lessons of consequence are, they are (or should always be) learning experiences. They may hit you upside the head and make you say, “Whoa, I’ve got to do something different.” Or, they may subtly influence behavior the next time you contemplate an action. That’s not bad.

In many cases, we have lost the concept of consequences. I won’t even bother with the loss of consequences in our world and in our nation. Let’s keep this exploration at the organizational level, and the concept of the messages that are given to the workforce when there are no consequences for inappropriate action.

How it works at work

Imagine, if you will, a team of five people, all focused on providing excellent customer service. One of the five, let’s call him Ben, is not pulling his weight, and his team members are covering for him. You, as his manager, are aware that he is close to retirement, with the event planned for 18 months out. So you cut him some slack and he “retires” on the job.

The rest of the team sort of “gets it,” recognizing that Ben is probably not going to change his ways. And then your team lands a huge new contract, with no additional staff to accomplish the work. Tempers get testy as everyone but Ben take on the burden of learning the new customer, and finding ways to streamline the processing so that everything can be accomplished.

The laissez-faire attitude toward Ben become one of cynicism, particularly for anyone who is actually held to the higher standard. Over the course of 18 months, cynicism becomes dissatisfaction and disengagement, with a possible exit of the most productive team member. Performance deteriorates. And Ben is still hanging around taking up a head count.

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什么消息your actions hold?

If you think employees don’t hear a very loud messagefrom a deliberate lack of consequences for obvious behavior(or lack thereof), think again. Every move you make as aleader shouts a messageto your team. You have control over what message is sent.

Sponsors slammed Lochte with very visible consequences. Whether or not he learns a lesson is one thing. But the message to other young athletes is pretty loud: “Your personal behavior is important. Behave appropriately or suffer the consequences.”

The actions of leaders speak as loudly in an organization as the removal of sponsorship, and the outcomes can be just as devastating to organizational performance. Leaders don’t have to say a word to scream a message to their teams. All they have to do is act (or not.)

What are the consequences of your actions? Who is on the receiving end?

This article originally appeared on@ the intersection of learning & performance.

Carol Anderson is the founder and Principal ofAnderson Performance Partners, LLC, a business consultancy focused on bringing together organizational leaders to unite all aspects of the business – CEO, CFO, HR – to build, implement and evaluate a workforce alignment strategy. With over 35 years of executive leadership, she brings a unique lens and proven methodologies to help CEOs demand performance from HR and to develop the capability of HR to deliver business results by aligning the workforce to the strategy. She is the author ofLeading an HR Transformation,published by the Society for Human Resource Management in February 2018, which provides a practical RoadMap for human resource professionals to lead the process of aligning the workforce to the business strategy, and deliver results, and writes regularly for several business publications. Contact Carol atcarol@andersonperformancepartners.com

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