Inspired by a talk by Adam Bryant at the NY Times New Work Summit in 2016, our CEO, Glenn, produced his own "user manual" explaining what he values and believes in. He's exploring whether openness and communications between leadership and a company an help to bridge the employee trust gap. According to the 2016 Edelman Trust Barometer, half of employees think it is important that their CEO exhibits highly ethical behavior but only 25% believe that they see it.
It's another experiment in Glenn's ongoing project of being an accountable, honest, transparent and open leader. He'd love your thoughts and feedback and there are links in the slides.
4. I produced this “user manual for me” after hearing
a talk by Adam Bryant at The New York Times New
Work Summit in 2016.
The goal is to share what I value, what I think is
important and share some things I’m good at and some
things I’m still working on.
I think it all started with this interview Adam did back
in 2013 with Ivar Kroghrud. I explain my interest and
how I developed this over here on my blog about
culture, leadership and employee engagement.
I’d love to hear your feedback. Let me know what you
think.
@glennelliott or LinkedIn
5. Simplicity and Clarity
I really value simplicity and clarity. Complexity drives me nuts.
I also know that simplicity and clarity is expensive - it takes
time and iteration but I think it’s essential to make
communications effective and for ideas to spread.
Remember the old line “I’m sorry for writing you a long letter but I
didn’t have time to write you a short one”?
6. Bad News
I like this early, straight and factual.
Don’t ever worry about what I’ll think.
Together we can fix anything.
I don’t care what the method is - voice call, video, face to face,
instant message - whatever is fastest.
Just don’t wait and save it up - bad news only seems to get
worse with age.
7. I value people who own their sh*t
I really value people who can critically evaluate themselves,
their products, their teams and their business. If someone
knows and shares it warts and all then I know they’re in
control.
I worry when someone tells me it’s all great - it never is and
then I worry they have blindspots.
Being able to see and state what is not how you want it shows
you own it.
8. Say Sorry
I’m often surprised how few people understand the power of
this simple word.
When I make a mistake (which I do often) I always say I’m
sorry - it costs little and often takes all of the heat out of the
situation. Over the years I’ve developed this and now I can
deliver a really great genuine apology - it’s really handy.
Being able to say sorry to colleagues and clients is a skill I
really value in my team.
9. I’m Sorry
My brain works too quickly sometimes and I can fail to take
people with me, especially on the “why” we’re doing
something and sometimes even on the “what”.
It’s partly due to excitement and passion but it can be really
unhelpful.
I’m conscious of it and trying to be better. If you see it
happening please tell me.
10. Trust
I trust people who tell me it like it is and don’t sugar it up,
cover it up or wrap it up in wool.
I lose trust in people who gossip, tell tales on others,
undermine others or cover things up.
The easiest way to get fired is to lose my trust.
11. Care
You’ll never get fired for making a mistake or for running a
project that fails, that’s just innovation.
You will get fired if you stop caring.
12. Asking for feedback
I believe that adding people to a problem should improve the
outcome because of diversity of perspective. So if you ask me
for feedback I’ll give you it and I’ll give any suggestion I can on
making something better.
Sometimes people interpret that as me being disappointed in
them or their work and that’s not what I intend.
13. Quality is both valuable &
expensive
Quality comes from time and iteration and is therefore
expensive. We only have so much bandwidth in the team and
the business and sometimes “good” is “good enough”.
Sometimes I don’t spot that and my natural urge is to make
something better at all costs. If you think I’m polishing
something that doesn’t need it at the expense of something
that does then speak up.
14. Responsibility
I value people who take responsibility and lead with things.
But I also value people who ask for support and check in
regularly. I know that 10 minutes spent discussing something
can save hours of re-work later.
I’m a big believer in two heads are better than one.
15. Diversity of opinion
We’ve built a great business at Reward Gateway by
constantly innovating and iterating what we do.
Diversity of opinion and constant challenging of our status
quo is key. There are no sacred cows that should not be
challenged.
One of the worst things I hear is “We didn’t do that because
someone said you wouldn’t like it” - which may hark back to
something I said casually five years ago that may no longer be
relevant.
16. Doing the right thing
We sometimes have to take tough decisions on products and
teams that negatively affect some people for the benefit of
the company, the wider team or our clients.
I can do that and sleep at night if I think we’ve behaved
correctly, treated people with respect and dignity and made
things no-worse than they need to be.
I trust and promote managers who also believe that doing the
right thing is important.
17. Ambition
I have huge ambition for what we can achieve and often I am
over-ambitious with my own time and commitments.
When this happens I tend to focus really hard and can become
quite intense on a single project. Sometimes this come across
as me being abrupt or looking like I’m in a bad mood and it’s
not intended.
18. My go-to “safe place” is to be
open and honest.
I think openness with your people builds huge trust. I believe
that people can take all types of “hard news” but they can’t
take lies and cover-ups - they destroy trust.
Not everyone is used to that, it can be uncomfortable for
people with different experience. But I do expect this of all of
our managers and leaders and it’s not optional.
19. My Calendar
My calendar is open and I rarely make events private.
But generally only meetings, calls and appointments get into
my calendar - like you I have lots of other work to do too. Just
because my calendar is empty doesn’t mean I’m free or have
spare time.
So don’t assume I’m ignoring you if you think my diary looks
free but I’m being unresponsive.
20. I prioritise visible and transparent
leadership
I lead a decent sized business and there are lots of calls on my
time. But the order I work in is People, Product then Profits.
I will prioritise catching people doing good things, trying to be
a good leader, listening to people via feedback channels and
Glassdoor, sharing thoughts through my blog and
communicating and talking to RG people.
Some people will think my prioritisation sucks but I’m
comfortable with it.
Thanks to Ben Horowitz for
making me feel I could say
this. His book “The Hard
Thing about Hard Things” is
a permission slip for
entrepreneurs to be
themselves in the face of a
corporate world asking them to
do the opposite and fit in with
average.
21. And finally... “Hi, I’m Glenn Elliott
and I’m an Ambivert”
Almost everyone thinks I’m an extrovert but actually I’m an
ambivert (dead in the middle of the introvert-extrovert scale).
This means I can be really public and outspoken, I can present
on stage to 1,000 people but once it’s done I’m desperate to
go home and recharge by being quiet and alone for 3 days.
That’s why I often vanish quickly after events and rarely turn
up at the party for long. It’s just me needing some introvert
time.
Thanks to Susan Cain for
helping me to find this out and
making me feel much happier
by “coming out” about it. Her
book “Quiet” has been an
amazing read and has
influenced us at Reward
Gateway on everything from
diversity to workplace design.
22. Thanks. This was my V1. My SFD*
Please tell me what you really think. Do you love it? Hate it?
Is it useful or confusing?
Does it show promise? How could it be better?
You can comment through my blog, Tweet me, send a
LinkedIn message, ask me a question on Quora or if you work
for Reward Gateway, talk to me through Glassdoor.
*SFD? That’s thanks to Brené Brown. Read this article