Have you ever seen a sign that says something like, “Lack of planning on your part doesn’t constitute an emergency on mine,” hanging in someone’s office or retail establishment?
If you think about it for a minute, it’s surprising how often an unplanned or unanticipated event for one person turns into an emergency for someone else. The other day—the day we were taking my youngest son to college for his freshman year—I damaged a rim on his truck. Suddenly, my accident became a desperate situation. We had to get his tire fixed before departing later in the day. My unplanned event became an emergency for the tire retailer. And they should have handed me that sign.
Now, you could argue that I didn’t intend to damage the rim. And you’d be right. You could argue that it was plain ol’ bad luck that it happened just hours before we were leaving for college move-in day. And you’d be right again. But that still doesn’t change the fact that my misfortune shouldn’t have caused an emergency for the tire retailer. I was lucky they were willing and able to go the extra mile for me. (I’ll write about Discount Tires and the incredible culture they’ve built another time.) They ordered the rim from a local supplier, sent someone to pick it up immediately, and had the truck back on the road three hours later!
How often does someone in your office fail to plan appropriately and suddenly everyone else down the line is asked to treat the situation as an emergency? We talk all the time about working in teams. Individual producers are a thing of the past. The ability to work as a team is critical to most work processes, yet all it takes is for one person to fail to plan, and the process begins to break down. The failure to plan causes a missed deadline for an early step in the process. The missed deadline causes the project to fall behind schedule. The late project causes other projects to be rescheduled. Now, with days before the final project is due, the last person in the process is asked to move heaven and earth to make sure it goes out on time.
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And when it’s impossible to make up for all the lost time caused by that lack of planning, someone is going to have the gall to blame it on the poor guy at the end of the line—the one killing himself trying to make up for someone else’s failure to plan. It happens all the time.
I talked with a manager recently who said he had the answer. It seemed incredibly simple, and he swore that it works every time. His teams are paid based on their results. If projects run late or over budget, the team gets paid less. If they hit their goals and get things out the door, they stand to make more money. He swears that the peer pressure to perform is so great that he rarely has people who are chronically late with their deadlines.
How teams work together and the impact one person’s lack of planning can have on the rest of the team are certainly things to keep an eye on as a leader. If you don’t monitor the entire process, you’ll likely be surprised at the end when a deadline is missed. And when that happens, it’s difficult to go back and reconstruct exactly what happened.
And when a team does have a member who isn’t pulling his own weight, the team takes matters into its own hands. The manager told me that the teammates start to set more frequent milestones for the underperformer so they aren’t surprised when he doesn’t finish his work on schedule. As the team cranks up the scrutiny on the tardy teammate, one of two things happens—either the person gets his act together or he chooses to leave because he can’t meet the team’s standards. Could it really be that easy? The manager said he had never fired underperformers. They always left before he had to step in.
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Often, teammates don’t want to point the finger at the guilty party. Instead, they think they’re being good teammates and showing loyalty by not singling out what (or who) is really the problem. This leaves you trying to figure out what went wrong and how to keep it from happening again, and you’ll fail miserably if no one on the team will speak up about what’s broken. You’ll find it’s often the nicest people on your team who absorb the most punishment because they aren’t willing to call someone out.
Setting frequent milestones and monitoring your team diligently are the best things you can do as a team leader. Make sure you know everyone’s role in the project and when their contribution is due. That way, when things go wrong, you can see where the problem started. If you determine the one person who habitually causes the team to miss its deadlines, then you can take the appropriate action. So often, we think the team isn’t performing well when really it’s just one person who isn’t holding up his or her end of the bargain. Replace that person, and suddenly your team is great.
One team member’s failure to plan doesn’t constitute an emergency for every other person on the team. If that’s happening on your team, you need to act now to save the team. Either the problem person gets with the program, or he or she needs to go—for the good of the team.