There’s nothing more challenging than scaling your business as an entrepreneur. Well, maybe there is, but for the sake of this article let’s just go with it.
Turning an idea into your own genius product or service that’ll change the world is one thing. After all, everything about that product represents you,the founder, and your brand. Then, once that product takes off,you need people at both the front end (sales) and back end (staff) to support its global domination.
Of course, the big challenge is finding the right people.
To grow as an organization you need to develop not only the systems and processes that support product demand but also the rightpeople that contribute to its growth.
Carol Dweck introduced us to the term growth mindset years ago in her bestselling bookMindset: The New psychology Of Successand what it meant for inpiduals to develop one. The cliff notes version is this: Someone with a growth mindset believes that skill development and talent are derivatives of personal will and effort. Conversely, the evil counterpart of the growth mindset is the fixed mindset, which believes that success is a personally defining label. So, if one is considered “smart” then any criticism that threatens his or her intelligence is a threat because it takes away from his or her self-defined success.
I know -- pretty deep stuff and way past my intellectual pay grade.
A growth mindset is where opportunities lay andis ideally what you want your employees to bring to the table. To inculcate a growth-minded culture, here are five questions to ask (and drill into employees every day):
Here, you’re looking for two things: self-awareness and keywords. In other words, is the employee cognizant of his or her developmental progress thus far as well as growth opportunities? What specific words does he or she use to demonstrate that awareness and achievement? Does he or she use qualifiers such as, “I think,” “I’d like to,” “supposed to,” or more assertive phrases such as, “I believe,” “I’ve learned,” or “I will?”
The goal of this question is to identify inter-departmental awareness, or the degree to which one is focused on the macro (the organization) rather than just the micro (his or her silo). The more aware people are of each other’s efforts, the less the propensity for duplicative efforts and miscommunication.
Each piece of the organizational puzzle must do its part to fit (play nicely) with the other puzzle pieces. If there’s no fit, then the puzzle doesn’t operate smoothly -- and just looks ugly. Constant and never ending improvement isn’t just something one “checks off” for the day. Rather, it’s a mindset of perpetual improvement displayed through habit.
From the people perspective, training and development curriculums are good because they fill knowledge gaps, but they fall short of the experiential component that reallydrillsdown into one’s emotions and makes that learning stick. A good way to promote personal growth is to continually push for mentorship and coaching, just as David Farr, chairman and CEO of Emerson Electric, continually asks, “When did you last receive coaching?”
Ideally, the answer should be the company’s external competitor rather than another internal department or inpidual. Unfortunately, many times our greatest enemy is not only ourselves but also others within the organization. If this is the case, there’s a lack of shared purpose that binds the company together.
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