Leadership and Building a Great Team

Dave Roemer

Once you find that “right fit” franchise and sign on the dotted line, that’s when the work begins. One of the most important tasks you take on as a franchisee is building your team. What follows is an excerpt from chapter 3 of my book So, you bought a franchise, NOW WHAT?

Unless you bought yourself a job, you will never grow your business without surrounding yourself with great people and building a team.  I like to use sports analogies because I think they have great relevance in business, so here is the first of many you will see in this book. If you think about it, no successful person in any sport has done it alone. Even athletes in individual sports such as tennis, golf, swimming, or track have a team around them. They have a coach, a trainer, nutritionists, and family and friends to support them. Golfers have a caddy who does much more than just carry the clubs. In short, to be successful at anything, you need a team of people who believe in you and your cause.

Some might argue that building a great team is the most essential aspect of a successful business. While their argument certainly has merit, I would ask them how they plan to attract the type of people they need without being able to explain where they are going, why they are going there, and what success looks like. The people you want around you are people who want to be a part of something and are not just in it for the paycheck.

When I was a young manager running a 24/7 business, I thought hiring people with specific skills and experience was the way to go. I had a lot on my plate, and training new people took time and effort. I learned that my approach led to high turnover, which took more time than if I hired people who cared about customers and had the right attitude and trained them well. Those people stayed a lot longer and were instrumental in growing the business.

You have likely heard the phrase “attitude is everything,” and you probably think it’s true. My experience has taught me that it is. To illustrate and communicate this belief to my teams over the years, I have used this example. Take the letters in the word attitude and write down its corresponding number in the alphabet like this:

A           T             T          I           T            U         D          E

1          20        20       9         20        21       4         5

 

When you add up the numbers, the total is 100. Attitude is everything

As a leader, it is your responsibility to learn about what drives people in general and your people in specific. Then it is your job to provide them what they need to be successful as part of your team. If you want to create a successful company that will allow you to achieve your WHY, it is completely on your shoulders to set the vision that attracts great people and give those people

the tools to succeed, which includes creating the environment in which their needs are met, and they feel part of something larger than themselves. Think of it this way; your team members are your customers. To you, they must be your number one priority. Take care of them and they will take care of the paying customers who in turn will fuel the success of your business helping you achieve your WHY. It is the business life cycle depicted in Figure 3.1.

 

Another way I like to describe this diagram is this:

The experience of your customers will never exceed the experience of your team. Click To Tweet

Giving people the tools and setting them up for success is essential to you and them. Customers don’t understand when someone is poorly trained and cannot execute their job. They just think the person is stupid or incompetent, and the team member feels that way. When I encounter this, I always ask if the team member is new and tell them it’s OK. I don’t blame them; I blame the leader for not properly protecting his or her team member with proper training.

Don’t just take it from me, though. Here is what Lynn Given, a ComForCare franchisee in Orlando, FL, had to say about training her team:

“Training is the key to the success of the business. Without well-trained staff, we have unhappy customers, which then becomes a cycle of uncertainty. We start with four days of training in the field and then ongoing training each week in the office with reminders of our policies and techniques. We find that repetition is key. We coach and train on the go, daily. Then reward the team and share the joys.”

I have told many leaders and business owners over the years that if
they are not willing to spend at least 25 percent of each day in some form
of training, put the “for sale” sign on the door today because the value of
your business will only go down from here. I believe that statement with
my entire being. A leader’s number one responsibility is to train, coach,
and give feedback to his or her team. Everything else comes second.

Providing feedback is the key to developing your team but that topic will require another article so stay tuned.

Dave Roemer is a consultant at The Franchise Consulting company and an almost 40-year veteran of the franchise industry. Dave’s book So, you bought a franchise, NOW WHAT? Is a collection of stories, best practices, and tools collected over the years. It includes quotes from several successful franchisees interviewed for the project. It is available online at amazon.com and barnesandnoble.com.

Thank you for visiting our blog.

 

Jim Weber, Managing Partner – ITB Partners

Jim Weber – Managing Partner,  ITB Partners

I hope you enjoyed our point of view and would like to receive regular posts directly to your email inbox.  Toward this end, put your contact information on my mailing list.

Your feedback helps me continue to publish articles that you want to read.  Your input is very important to me, so please leave a comment.

The Psychology of Goal Setting

I’m not going to bore you with scientific and psychological mumbo jumbo, but I think you should understand the importance of creating SMART goals using the process I will outline in this chapter.  Understanding why something is important makes you more likely to follow the process diligently.  Remember, people don’t buy what you do or how you do it.  They buy why you do it.  The same principle follows here.

First, as logical human beings, we all understand that having something to aim for increases the chances of hitting it.  Jordan Peterson, a professor of psychology at the University of Toronto, says, “One of the things you can be virtually certain of in life is that you don’t hit something you don’t aim at.”[1] Seems pretty logical to me.  Robin Hood would never have split that arrow if he didn’t aim at it.

When you aim at a target and hit it, your brain releases a chemical called dopamine, which gives you a feeling of pleasure.  Dopamine is your body’s reward system.  Dopamine makes you feel good, and the fact that it is released immediately upon achieving a goal creates a solid behavioral association.  That makes you want to set and accomplish another goal to get that good feeling again.  It is also why setting short-term goals, as you will see later, is much more effective than only setting long-term goals.  The longer the wait between dopamine releases, the less effective it is as a reward.  Dopamine is the habit-forming chemical in your brain.   IT rewards you for completing tasks regularly at short intervals, motivating you to accomplish more.

Another vital tool for goal achievement is visualization, which has physiological and psychological elements.  By visualizing yourself succeeding, you fool your brain into thinking you’ve achieved your goal already, and it releases some dopamine.  Yes, it is tricky.

The psychological aspect works a bit differently.  Have you ever bought a new car and suddenly noticed the same make and model everywhere as you drive down the road?  Have you ever said to yourself after purchasing a Ford Taurus, for example, Wow, I never realized there were so many Taurus’ on the road?

Your reticular activating system or RAS is now focused on your new Taurus, and you notice every Taurus on the road.  Your RAS is a series of neurons in your brain that filter out unnecessary stuff, which allows you to focus only on what’s important.  When you buy a new car, you’re excited and think a lot about it as you drive down the road.  Your RAS filters out, unconsciously, of course, the cars around you and zeros in on the ones like yours.

Coaches teach athletes to visualize desired outcomes because it trains their RAS to filter out failure and focus on success.  Professional basketball players visualize their shot going in the basket.  Visualization increases the odds of making the point because it filters out all the noise and distractions created by the fans and other players designed to make them miss.  Golfers also visualize their shots going down the middle of the fairway or in the hole because it filters out everything else like water, sand, and the rough.

When I teach people how to set and achieve goals, one of the things I do is have them create goals boards.  As part of the preparation process, I have my boxes of old magazines and tell the attendees to bring as many magazines as they can find.  It doesn’t matter what it is.  Any magazine will do.  In this way, we always end up with an excellent assortment.  Everyone in the class gets a poster board, pair of scissors, and a glue stick.  As you’ll see later, this is a crucial step near the end of the goal-setting process.  Participants find pictures representing their goals in the magazines, cut them out, and paste them onto the poster board.  Each one, in turn, presents their board to the group to make a verbal commitment and increase their accountability.  The board then receives a prominent place in the office or home where it will often be seen, reinforcing that filter in the RAS.

Visualization is a powerful tool in the setting and achieving of goals. Click To Tweet Jack Niklaus, arguably the greatest golfer who ever lived, has been quoted as saying, “I never hit a shot, even in practice, without having a very sharp in-focus picture of it in my head.” Here is what I know:

    1. Writing down my goals and having visual reminders that I see often have helped me achieve goals
    2. I have worked with clients who previously never set goals and have used visualization and the process I teach to achieve things they had never thought possible.

Whether or not there are statistics to support these facts is irrelevant.  I have seen the process work over and over with individuals and teams.  If you and your team want to begin reaching new heights of achievement and have fun in the process, this is how you do it.

[1] J. Peterson.  2018.  “How to Set Goals the Smart Way  .”www.youtube.com/watch?v=5WX9UEYZsR8&t=3s

Thank you for visiting our blog.

 

Jim Weber, Managing Partner – ITB Partners

Jim Weber – Managing Partner,  ITB Partners

I hope you enjoyed our point of view and would like to receive regular posts directly to your email inbox.  Toward this end, put your contact information on my mailing list.

Your feedback helps me continue to publish articles that you want to read.  Your input is very important to me so; please leave a comment.

 

Want to Inspire People? Learn to be Great at Giving Feedback

Think back in your life to a moment when you felt so inspired that you were ready to run through a brick wall to get what you desired. What was it that inspired you? Was it a speech you heard? Was it a YouTube video? While speeches and videos can be motivating, my guess is that’s not what revved you up to the point of running through a brick wall.

For me, it has been those moments when I have received feedback from someone who was great at delivering it. I have been fortunate to know more than one of those people in my life and I am grateful not only for the feedback they freely gave, I am grateful for the way they gave that feedback because it inspired me to do better and be better. I am also grateful for the example they set which I have attempted to emulate.

Let me take a step back and talk a bit about what feedback is and is not. Simply put, feedback is information received in response to some action on our part. From the moment we are born, we begin giving and receiving feedback. When a baby cries in response to being born, that’s feedback. It tells everyone within earshot that the baby is breathing and alive. As we grow, we get a lot of feedback from our parents, siblings, and surroundings. That feedback teaches us valuable lessons and inspires us to do things that are productive. When we touch something hot, the pain we feel is feedback teaching us to not repeat that action. When we take our first steps, the hugs, kisses, and cheers inspire us to take more steps. As we grow older, feedback comes in more sophisticated forms. We begin discerning the relative value of it and accept or reject it based on our value judgment. It becomes not just about the feedback itself but the way in which it is delivered. If the information (feedback) is correct yet delivered in a way that offends our feelings, it is often rejected. We call that criticism.

That leads me on a slight tangent. If you are currently using or have ever used the term “constructive criticism”, please stop. There is nothing constructive about criticism because it is seldom or ever meant in a constructive way. It is called “constructive” criticism because it makes the person giving it feel better about knocking the other person with no real intention of helping them. Criticizing someone may cause someone to change to spite the criticizer but that in my opinion is not inspiring.

Now, while giving great feedback is critically important, it is not the same as being great at giving feedback. How you deliver feedback is possibly more important than the feedback itself. After all, the feedback we give is a representation of how we perceived the other person’s words or actions. While it is 100% accurate from our perspective, it may or may not be 100% factual in an objective sense. So here are some elements of giving great feedback.


How you deliver feedback is possibly more important than the feedback itself. Click To Tweet

Start with the good stuff. Be specific – Start by relating what the person is doing well or reviewing a recent positive result from their behavior. It must be something behavioral. It cannot be that they are a nice person or that they mean well. Everyone has things they do well. Pick at least two, tell them specifically what they are, how these actions benefit others, and be clear that you are encouraging him/her to keep doing those things.

Describe an opportunity for improvement – Rather than telling people what they are doing wrong, share opportunities for them to improve. It may sound like semantics but it is an important distinction. No one likes hearing what they are doing wrong. On the other hand, everyone has opportunities for improvement. Combining this with telling them what they do well first causes them to be more receptive to hearing their opportunities. Make it about their behavior. Keep personalities out of it. Also, keep it short. One opportunity at a time. More than that is overwhelming. The adage of one thing at a time applies.

Share feedback immediately – As Ken Blanchard always says don’t save it up for a holiday. Immediate feedback is more impactful because it is fresh in the person’s memory. Waiting makes them have to remember what happened and dilutes their focus on the opportunity.

Make time to discuss the how – Sharing opportunities to improve is less than 50% of inspiring improvement. Discussing how they can improve is where the inspiration takes root. Ask the person if they agree with the opportunity and then ask how they think they can realize the improvement. Human beings by nature are more committed to their own ideas. If all you offer is your own thoughts it will seem like you are telling them what to do and how to do it. Remember, feedback is not about you; it is about them. You want to show you are all about helping them. But a caution, be sincere about helping. They will see through insincerity in a heartbeat.

When you provide feedback in this way you will not only inspire improvement; you will inspire gratitude. Speaking from experience, I have had countless people not just thank me for the feedback they have asked me for more. When I have followed these four steps, I have always left people inspired to improve. I know that because when I see them next, they have greeted me with excitement, shared with me proof of their improvement, and asked for more feedback. As a mentor and coach, there is no better feeling. It shows me I am adding value to their life and after all, what’s better than that?

About Dave Roemer

David Roemer

Dave Roemer, Franchise Consultant with 30+ years in the industry will provide an overview of the franchise industry. Roemer will discuss a brief history of franchising along with the state of the industry today. He will give an honest assessment of the industry including the effort to increase regulation and why those efforts are growing. Finally, he will share why he believes franchising remains the best way for people to own a business and how interested parties can get help achieving their goal of business ownership

Today, Dave is an independent Franchise Consultant who helps people interested in purchasing a franchise determine which brands are the right fit and then helps them through the due diligence and discovery process. His services are free to the client as his fees are paid for by the various franchise brands with which he works.

Thank you for visiting our Blog!

Jim Weber, Managing Partner – ITB Partners

Jim Weber – Managing Partner,  ITB Partners

I hope you enjoyed our point of view and would like to receive regular posts directly to your email inbox.  Toward this end, put your contact information on my mailing list.

Your feedback helps me continue to publish articles that you want to read.  Your input is very important to me so; please leave a comment.