“Stop holding people accountable and inspire accountability.” – Kari Granger
What if there were a way to have your team’s performance improve without “holding them accountable” or “holding their feet to the fire” or “enforcing standards”? There is a more effective and less painful way to generate results. Join Kari Granger and Paul Adams as they debunk these traditional methods and show us how to, instead, inspire accountability.
In This Episode:
01:12 – Introducing today’s topic: Stop “Holding People Accountable”
03:08 – Kari speaks to her experience working with the military in enforcing standards
05:06 – Kari reflects on the importance of shifting our language to achieve what we’d like to happen
05:54 – Paul breaks down the difference between having moral responses versus focusing on workability
06:57 – Kari expounds on what happens when organizations introduce morality into their commitment structure
08:08 – Unpacking the phrase “Holding People Accountable”
09:37 – Kari’s experience working with a client who kept their needs vague and ambiguous
11:59 – What ambiguous language sounds like
14:22 – Recognizing who is more committed to the outcome, you or the person who is supposed to be doing the actions
16:03 – The importance of reaching a shared future and outcome
18:28 – Kari provides language that can help to enhance communication for mutual partnerships
21:24 – Paul challenges the audience to inspire accountability and demonstrate what it means to have a culture that does what they say they’re going to do
Quotes:
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Links:
The Mission Control Productivity and Accomplishment Course
Paul’s Other Podcast: Your Business Your Wealth
LEADERSHIP IMPACT PODCAST
See more episodes
Acknowledgements:
Our work is mosaic art. We read, study, and practice many philosophies, methodologies, and modalities of human performance, to ensure that our approach best serves our clients. We would like to acknowledge all of the thought leaders and organizations, whose ground-breaking work has influenced the Granger Network approach – especially Fernando Flores, Jim Selman, Michael C. Jensen, Julio Olalla, Pluralistic Networks, The Newfield Network, and the Strozzi Institute.
Podcast production and marketing provided by FullCast.