I’m fortunate to work with a cross-section of growth-stage leadership teams helping them reset, strengthen, and sustain team performance in a post-investment operating environment.
The commitment of time towards team health and performance generally comes with an understanding and expectation that the total dollar investment put into the hiring and incenting of a Founder/CEO and their team must translate into a meaningful return on investment over time. With a multitude of challenges, opportunities, and choices to be made, the pressure to coalesce and perform is very real if growth and profitability goals and targets are to be met.
While most, if not all, teams display behavior patterns which help or hinder their performance, what often comes up—and is often unseen or named, until brought to light—is situationally effective objective and subjective thinking and decision making.
Two Sides of the Coin
Objective thinking and decision making are generally viewed through the lens of analysis, or a belief in a specific set of behaviors and outcomes. They can also be seen as somewhat of an arms-length mindset, or a view free from assumption. They may also underscore or “reward” particular personality and thinking styles. In growth-stage companies, where resources (and cash) are often limited, and the stakes are quite high, objective thinking and decision making are virtually indispensable.
Subjective thinking and decision making, on the other hand, are especially important when uncertainty and change are heightened, a dynamic that is central to the life of growth-stage culture. In an increasingly EQ-centric workplace, strong intuition can be seen as a real strength -- more personal, empathetic, human and inspired. It can also be seen as somewhat disconnected to the task at hand and too open-ended, or lacking in discipline and focus, and less quantifiable.
Situational Self-Awareness
Using team diagnostics such as AIIR Team Effectiveness Survey, early post-investment leadership team assessments often reflect weakness in team situational self-awareness rooted in a lack of healthy debate and/or deferment to CEO demand or expectation of action. Absent self-reflection, CEOs and their team’s fall on past habits to the detriment of themselves and the individuals they lead. Already under immense pressure and scrutiny to deliver results, many leadership teams overly lean in the direction of action and objectivity, while neglecting subjective leadership traits. An unintended consequence of such an approach is the undermining of culture and trust.
Leadership teams who score high on team culture, but lower in areas around productivity, often suffer from decision paralysis, while overweighting on the need to be liked (especially by the CEO) in the face of tough choices and decisions. The lack of timely decision making becomes an anchor to team performance while negatively affecting the wider organization.
Improvement Through Deliberate Practice
Effective team leadership is always situational and context-dependent. For growth-stage leadership teams, the stakes are often more acute. Through deliberate action and practice, leadership teams can cultivate timely objective and subjective decision-making skills. With help from a skilled HR leader or third-party facilitator, here are a few team exercises (lasting up to 2 hours) designed to help your team explore and apply balanced, situationally appropriate thinking and decision-making during key moments.
The following examples focus on performance and potential among key leaders and SMEs:
Using data and measurable criteria, focusing on team performance assessments:
Encouraging subjective thinking by understanding perspective and context:
Creating balance, using objective metrics and subjective insights to gauge performance:
Revealing potential blind spots that can be assessed and addressed:
Promoting decisions that blend objective data with subjective understanding:
While there may certainly be other viable and effective approaches for arriving at similar outcomes, by facilitating exercises that highlight both objective and subjective thinking in decision making, individual leadership team members will learn when to lean in one direction vs. another, become more aware of personal biases or situational misapplications, and – ultimately – adapt more holistic approaches that will encourage and promote a more fully formed understanding around the value and importance of each.