Cultivating Accountability
Cultivating Accountability
Cultivating Accountability
Alignment of a companys performance management system to the principles of accountability is therefore a key enabler in translating Care and Growth into day to day leadership practices.
PRINCIPLES OF ACCOUNTABILITY
1. People should be held accountable for what they give (their contribution) not for what they get (the results).
When people are being held accountable one of four things is happening to them they are being punished, censured, praised or rewarded. At a very fundamental level therefore the question arises as to what people should be paid for what they give (contribute) or what they get (results)? To pay people for the results, not only sabotages the cultivation of accountability in an organisation, it is fundamentally wrong for the following reasons:
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Firstly, paying for results is ultimately like playing a game in a casino. Results are always, at least in part, due to factors outside of peoples control. When people are paid for results they are paid for what they have no control over. A retail manager in a small town in the Karoo earned an obscene bonus for one reason only he got lucky. Without him doing anything, his only competitor moved out of town, store revenue almost doubled instantaneously and he was rewarded for the result achieved. Luck was also a decisive factor in determining which CEOs in South Africa earned the most in 2005. According to A. Crotty and R. Bonorchis in their book Executive Pay in South Africa: Who gets what and why? (2006) the highest earners were those in the right sector (retail/banking) compared with their less well placed counterparts in media, technology and construction. Secondly, there is a time lag between contribution and the result which eventuates which can lead to a person riding on the back of a predecessors past excellent contribution or, conversely, paying the price for the previous incumbents poor performance. A talented manager in a South African insurance company, known for his ability to turn around under performing regions, learnt this the hard way. Just as his Herculean efforts were paying off and beginning to come through on the scoreboard, the company moved him on to the next trouble spot. Eventually after three years of mediocre remuneration he refused to move, preferring to stay and reap the rewards of his turnaround efforts. Thirdly, since most organisational results are collectively produced, it is not easy to ensure that the right people are rewarded or punished. The passengers in the group share in the fruits when the results are positive. Conversely, when the overall result is bad, the individual high contributors have to suffer along with the rest. A good overall CSI (Customer Service Index) can put money in the pockets of individuals who couldnt care less for the customers, while a poor CSI ensures that those dedicated to their clients are punished for being so. Finally, paying for results leads to short term thinking and expedient action, sometimes with disastrous medium to long term consequences. The business press abounds with stories of executives who have stripped out costs and been paid handsomely for the subsequent knee jerk improvement in the bottom line, only to leave behind a disabled organisation, sometimes beyond recovery.
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To be consistent with the first principle of accountability, the base building block of the performance management system must be individual contribution. Reward should follow on from and be a direct consequence of contribution made. Not only is this fair; it is truly empowering because it enables people to focus on that which they can do something about.
2. People can only ever be accountable for their own actions. There should only ever be one person accountable.
Responsibility and Accountability are different. People in organisations are assigned areas of responsibility from the top down. Plant Manager X, for example, may be assigned responsibility for one of four Plants on a manufacturing Site. The Plant Manager, along with everyone else in the Plant, is then collectively responsible for the Plants performance i.e. the results achieved in terms of safety, quality and output.
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Accountability, however, is different. Accountability is unique to the person it relates to what an individual personally does. The Human Resources Manager may have overall responsibility for the HR function but can hardly be accountable for an error made by the pay clerk at month end. In Schuitemas Care and Growth workshops we often, tongue in cheek, use the following example. A Trainer is standing innocently next to the flipchart when a Stranger enters the room, whips a rolled up newspaper out from behind their back, whacks the Trainer around the ear and departs. The Trainer then proceeds to smack the smallest Trainee in the room with the newspaper left behind by the Stranger. Workshop participants are unanimously in agreement that the Trainer is accountable, and should be punished, for laying into the poor trainee. Who is accountable for what befell the Trainer however generates more debate. Maybe the Trainer deserved to be smacked? Maybe the person who is accountable is the guard at the gate for letting the Stranger in with the rolled up newspaper? This is absurd! People, at least adults who are mentally sane, should be accountable for their own actions. There is no such thing as they made me do it (Adam is not off the hook for eating the forbidden fruit, just because Eve told him to.) or they should have stopped me. (I cheated but its not my fault you didnt put a monitor in the room to watch me). Accountability, unlike responsibility, is also not something which should be shared. Once more than one person is accountable no one is accountable. When accountability is shared, everyone takes the credit for what is well done, but no one owns up for what was done badly. Most organisations, nowadays, are very good at specifying the results that need to be achieved. The use of balanced scoreboards with their lead and lag measures adhering to the needs of all stakeholders and sophisticated goal alignment processes have meant that most Page 4
3. Those performing a task should be accountable for doing so. Leaders should be held primarily accountable for the Care and Growth of their subordinates. be one person accountable.
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4. People can only be held accountable once they have been given the means and ability to contribute. If they have the means and ability, they should be appropriately punished or rewarded for their performance. held primarily accountable for the Care and Growth of their subordinates. be one person accountable. To make the unique contribution required of them, people need to be provided with the means and ability to do so. Without adequate means (tools, resources, standards, and authority) people are not allowed to contribute. When they lack ability (in terms of how and or why) they cant do so. However this is not enough. People must want to make the contribution required of them. What engages peoples will to contribute is accountability. A persons contribution can either be above standard or below standard. When a persons Page 6
The sum effect of these leadership practices, over time, is mediocrity. To be consistent with the fourth principle of accountability the consequences (rewards / sanctions) for people in an organisation must match the intent behind their contribution. People who are careless must be cautioned, whilst those who are deliberately malevolent have to be disciplined. Equally deliberate benevolence / going the extra mile must be rewarded, whilst those who show good concern for their jobs should be recognized. In summary then, when a performance management system is aligned to the Care and Growth principles of accountability the following applies:
Total alignment of an organisations performance management system with all four principles of accountability is clearly not a trivial exercise and should not be under estimated. Alignment does not happen overnight it takes time to effect.
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Critical to the success of Element One: Clarifying Contribution is the following. Both responsibility (Results) and Accountability (Contribution) need to be clarified. There is a misconception that the 90 Day Accountability process is something divorced from the results. On the contrary, the very fact that there is complexity in the relationship between contribution and results dictates that both are clarified and seen in relation to each other. By Responsibility is meant the demarcation of result areas and the specification of the critical results to be achieved by the workgroup / function / team to which the results have been assigned. By contribution is meant the definition of the unique value added contribution of each role in the organisation as well as the key deliverables within a reporting cycle for the individual incumbents of each role. The clarification of Responsibility must precede the definition of Accountability because contribution takes place in the context of a set of results. In the absence of a clear set of results, contribution takes place in a vacuum people could feasibly do anything. The clarification of Responsibility and Accountability must be an ongoing process although the frequency at which they are revised should be different. Responsibility is reassigned whenever structural changes are made, while the results to be achieved are set annually. Contribution is more dynamic and should be clarified more frequently ideally every 90 days. Agreed Accountabilities need to meet a number of criteria. They absolutely must be of added value and unique. Further to this they should be appropriate to the role or level in the organisation; forward focused and manageable but stretching. Finally they must Page 10
When the first element of the Performance Management System (Clarifying Contribution) is done well, it is enabling both for employees and for those in leadership roles in the organisation. For employees it is truly liberating to be released from the tyranny of results to actually attend to what they should be doing. Clarity of contribution typically also impacts positively on performance. As Marcus Buckingham says in his book - The One Thing You Need to Know (2005). I have never met a confused productive employee. Courage, a rare quality in most organisations, is also cultivated. Specifying upfront the unique value add for the next reporting period shifts employees from reactive to proactive mode, forces a deliberate choosing of what to focus on and puts a stop to what they call in Australia the sticky beak syndrome. With a clear and challenging listing of Accountabilities, an employee cannot spend too much time looking over the neighbours fence; she needs to get on with what needs to be done in her own back yard! Most importantly employees grow because what they are accountable for comes up for review every 90 days and it is accountability, not training programs, which drive development. While training may increase ability and hence the capability to contribute, people only really grow when what they are accountable for changes. Leaders are also enabled primarily because at last they have a decent yardstick against which to hold people accountable. Since accountability is defined bottom up, they get clarity on what they should be giving. Now, in the most positive sense, no one has anywhere to hide.
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As with the first two elements, the third element (Reviewing Contribution) is an enabler in the process of cultivating accountability and unleashing peoples generosity and courage. When the review discussion is done well, the outcome for the employee is a clear set of actions which should lead to enhanced contribution in the next cycle. For the manager, the focus on the why ensures that both the hard and soft mistake are avoided in holding subordinates accountable. As the example below shows, sanctions/rewards are only given after the preconditions for accountability have been met. Conversely, where either positive (praise/reward) or negative (censure/discipline) accountability is due, it is put into effect. Accountability does not have to wait for the end of year rating/increment/bonus process, but is ongoing throughout the year. The review discussion enables this to happen.
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For the manager, also, the revision of accountabilities at the end of the conversation ensures that the growth of the subordinate happens as it should do. That is, incrementally and commensurate with the growth of accountability in the subordinate.
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When the fourth element of the Performance Management System (Discipline and Reward) is done well employees will to contribute is engaged. The very best in people is realised. Because people are motivated to give their all, they become truly powerful. Teamwork is also enhanced because the resentment which exists when passengers are tolerated, is eliminated. The endless round of restructuring and retrenchment is dramatically reduced because these mechanisms are no longer used as an alternative to dealing with poor performance. Ultimately those in leadership roles are trusted and held in high regard. Effective implementation of a Performance Management System aligned to the Care and Growth framework obviously requires that the success criteria for each element of the system, dealt with above, are met.
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Each shift therefore needs to be made with full cognizance of the change management issues which need to be addressed in making the shift. Re-inventing the organisations performance management system is in effect a strategic change and needs to be managed accordingly. More specifically successful implementation requires the following: All four elements of the system should be implemented over time. To do the reflection part of the process (clarifying and reviewing contribution) without the action part (watching the game and holding people accountable) or vice versa is sub optimal. Doing only the reflection part leads in practice to one-on-one discussions which are experienced as boring and meaningless. No wonder in many organisations they stop happening even when they are commanded to take place. Action only, on the other hand, develops, over time, a sticks and carrots culture. The four elements must be introduced in the right order. One client organisation kicked off with a dramatic change to their reward system. From a situation where everyone was rewarded solely on results, the annual increment decision was instantly changed to being anything from 40% - 80% contribution based. The rationale behind the percentages was sound; the higher up the hierarchy and therefore the further removed from the results the higher the contribution percentage. The sum effect however was to throw the company into turmoil. Increment time was around the corner and contribution had not been clarified. Quite correctly the HR Manager was at a loss as to how he was going to explain this to the employee representative body.
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Each companys how or implementation process will and should be different but must be inclusive / include all four elements, be measured / take one step at a time in the right order and incremental. When this is the case the generosity and courage which is unleashed in the organisation is amazing.
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