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7 of 8 ways to get into the zone and find the fun in your work

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hand throwing a grenade isolated on white

We are pretty well programmed to look for the blame in any situation.  And of course, things go wrong and people are at fault.  However, no one is infallible.  Even when things have gone wrong.  Even when the rug is pulled from under our feet.  We have a choice:  7. Avoid blaming others

Read on to find all 8 tips and for the ‘how to’ and ‘why to’ for tip number 7.  It is all coming together now, just as it should be.  As you incorporate these tips into your daily routine, you will be well on your way to regaining your joie de vivre and finding the fun in your work.

Daily checklist:

  • Be at peace and in silence for 15 minutes
  • Clarify your purpose
  • Find something or someone to inspire you
  • Do something today better than you did yesterday
  • Any time you feel tense – breathe deeply and be still – it will pass
  • Take responsibility for your wellbeing
  • Avoid blaming others (for information on ‘how to’ and ‘why to’, read on)
  • Write down one thing you’ve learnt about yourself today

Avoid blaming others

It is easy to blame someone else for how we feel, or for the failing of a task, often there is  justification for doing so. If someone else had done things differently the situation might never have happened.  However, there is a huge downside to blaming.  In doing so, we render ourselves powerless.  It wasn’t our fault. We weren’t responsible.  We had no option.  Our hands were tied.  When we dwell on blame, we are focused in the past.  What should have, could have happened and the injustice of it.

No one enjoys being powerless.

Regain your power.

The situation is what it is.  The events leading up to the situation have already happened.  The clock can’t be turned back.  You regain your power when you focus on what you can do next that will lead towards the best outcome instead of focusing on what is or was outside your control and blaming others.

This is a small shift.  It absolutely does not mean allowing yourself to be a soft touch or a doormat.  It just means to accept the reality as it stands and put all your energy and attention on where to go from this point forwards.

 

To talk with us, call +44 (0)1932 888 885 or click here.

6 of 8 ways to get in the zone and find the fun in your work

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Golden egg among common eggs

Golden egg among common eggs

Is that a smile creeping across your face now as you get into the zone and find the fun in your work?  The next step towards regaining your joie de vivre : 6. Take responsibility for your wellbeing.

Read on to find all 8 tips and for the ‘how to’ and ‘why to’ for tip number 6.  It is all coming together now, just as it should be.  As you incorporate these tips into your daily routine, you will be well on your way to regaining your joie de vivre and finding the fun in your work.

Daily checklist:

  • Be at peace and in silence for 15 minutes
  • Clarify your purpose
  • Find something or someone to inspire you
  • Do something today better than you did yesterday
  • Any time you feel tense – breathe deeply and be still – it will pass
  • Take responsibility for your wellbeing (for information on ‘how to’ and ‘why to’, read on)
  • Avoid blaming others
  • Write down one thing you’ve learnt about yourself today

Take responsibility for your wellbeing

One of the biggest stress factors is the feeling that we don’t have control of a situation.  Perhaps someone has upset or offended us.  We, or someone we know, has been treated unfairly in some way.  There is nothing worse than to think that the behaviour of others has made us feel bad.

It is time to let others off the hook.  They can’t ever be responsible for how I feel.  It is the same for you.

Practise this in situations that are trivial, safe and have little impact first (for instance, a minor confrontation in a shop).  Someone does something that causes you distress or upset, make a note of it and when you are on you own, analyse it.  Ask yourself this question:  What could I have done differently that would have created a different, better outcome?  Take Tina’s example:

Situation: I was cross because they didn’t give me a refund for my goods even though they were in perfect, unused condition.  They were really ‘jobs worth’ about it.  I refuse to be talked to like that by anyone.

Analysis: I knew that I only had 30 days to return the goods and it was day 33.  I  came up to the counter ready for an argument about missing the returns window.  I was visibly irritated when they didn’t accept it.

OK, so now she knows.  This particular scuffle would definitely have been prevented if Tina had returned the goods within the timeframe allowed.  Or, if she had apologised for missing the deadline and asked if it was at all possible to accept the return, despite being outside the 30 days, they just might have the goodwill and the authority to accept the return.  If not, Tina would have learnt a good lesson – there is a consequence to missing deadlines.

If you have a minor confrontation, wait till you have calmed down and analyse it.  If there is an opportunity to apologise and make amends for the way you have behaved, do so.  If the other party’s behaviour was also inappropriate, it is likely they too will apologise.  But they might not and you will notice that acceptance of your own behaviour is actually all you need. What others do is for them to reconcile with themselves.

Either way, make a note of how you would approach the situation another time.  Perhaps chuckle at yourself for getting uptight over something you could have avoided, and look forward to the next opportunity so you can practice.

To get in touch with us, call +44 (0)1932 888 885, or click here.

5 of 8 ways to get into the zone and find the fun in your work

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Perfect Wave

If you have already been incorporating steps 1-4 into your daily routine, the load you have been carrying should be feeling much lighter already.  The next step towards regaining your joie de vivre and find the fun in your work is: 5. Any time you feel tense, breathe deeply and be still – it will pass.

Read on to find all 8 tips and for the ‘how to’ and ‘why to’ for tip number 5.  We will give you more information on each tip over the coming weeks and as you incorporate these tips into your life, you will be well on your way to regaining your joie de vivre and finding the fun in your work.

Daily checklist:

  • Be at peace and in silence for 15 minutes
  • Clarify your purpose
  • Find something or someone to inspire you
  • Do something today better than you did yesterday
  • Any time you feel tense – breathe deeply and be still – it will pass (for information on ‘how to’ and ‘why to’, read on)
  • Take responsibility for your wellbeing
  • Avoid blaming others
  • Write down one thing you’ve learnt about yourself today

Any time you feel tense – breathe deeply and be still.  It will pass

Over the course of a day, it is possible that something or someone will bother you. Or several things or several people.  It is a natural desire to want to defend or justify your position.

However, when you are in the middle of experiencing a physical response to a situation (a feeling of tension somewhere inside your body) it is often best to say nothing at all.  This is because when we have a physical reaction to a situation, this means we are in fight or flight mode.  At this place, we only have access to a small area of our brain, the reactive area.  Its purpose is survival and protection.

In this state,  when you feel tense, you will be quick to arrive at short term solutions (for instance, get angry and shout; blame others; get upset, cry; leave; give in etc…)  but you will not have considered the broader consequences and you are likely to end up feeling, at the least, misunderstood.

Stop, walk away, sleep on it, breathe deeply.  Put your attention onto something you are in full control of, like cooking a meal, or if you are at work, use this as an opportunity to tidy your papers or do something else that distracts you and gives you an immediate positive reward.  As you focus elsewhere, let the thoughts that are troubling you come and go like the waves of the sea washing over you, and away without trying to resolve them.

Be peaceful.  The answers you are searching for will come when you are ready.

To speak to us call +44 (0)1932 888 885 or click here.

 

 

4 of 8 ways to get into the zone and find the fun in your work

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Sprinter leaving on the running track. Explosive start.

By now you are finding 15 minutes in your day to be at peace.  Stopping the world just for that moment to recharge.  You have also clarified your purpose and are finding inspiration in the most unlikely of places and you are beginning to enjoy yourself.  The next step towards regaining your joie de vivre and find the fun in your work is: 4. Do something today better than you did yesterday.

Read on to find all 8 tips and for the ‘how to’ and ‘why to’ for tip number 4.  We will give you more information on each tip over the coming weeks and as you incorporate these tips into your life, you will be well on your way to regaining your joie de vivre and finding the fun in your work.

Daily checklist:

  • Be at peace and in silence for 15 minutes
  • Clarify your purpose
  • Find something or someone to inspire you
  • Do something today better than you did yesterday (for information on ‘how to’ and ‘why to’, read on)
  • Any time you feel tense, breathe deeply and be still – it will pass
  • Take responsibility for your wellbeing
  • Avoid blaming others
  • Write down one thing you’ve learnt about yourself today

Do something today better than you did yesterday

Have you ever resolved to make changes in the way you do things?  Launching yourself confidently with good intent into a new way of operating.  We probably all have at one time or another.  Yet, within a few days, maybe a month, we are back to old habits without even realising it.

Changes take a bit of bedding down.  We have to get used to the idea of behaving differently.  We need to have a reason to make changes, or they just won’t stick.

One way to create positive changes that stick is to remind yourself everyday that you will do something better than you did yesterday.  No grand goal, just something better every day.

Upping your standards, just a little bit every day, coupled with knowing your purpose (see step 2) means you have the beginnings of new habits.  It is quite fun to record your progress.  Over the period of several months, you can look back and see the enormous strides you have made and how easy it was.

 

 

3 of 8 ways to get into the zone and find the fun in your work

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The girl in the train

Next step towards regaining your joie de vivre and find the fun in your work is this:  Find something or someone to inspire you.

Read on to find all 8 tips and for the ‘how to’ and ‘why to’ for tip number 3. Find something or someone to inspire you.  We will give you more information on each tip over the coming weeks and as you incorporate these tips into your life, you will be well on your way to regaining your joie de vivre and finding the fun in your work.

Daily checklist:

  • Be at peace and in silence for 15 minutes
  • Clarify your purpose
  • Find something or someone to inspire you (for information on ‘how to’ and ‘why to’, read on)
  • Do something today better than you did yesterday
  • Any time you feel tense, breathe deeply and be still – it will pass
  • Take responsibility for your wellbeing
  • Avoid blaming others
  • Write down one thing you’ve learnt about yourself today

Find Something or Someone to Inspire You

Have you noticed on your way to work, someone takes the last seat on the train, or they cut in front of you when you are driving.  Perhaps you find yourself dealing with Jobs Worth who seems to enjoy the game of blocking everything you are trying to achieve.

We are very good at spotting the things that wind us up.  For some it has become a bit of a sport – something to keep them occupied on the journey in.  A way of letting off steam.  Yet, as addicted as we are to being negative about others, it doesn’t actually do us many favours, apart from a brief injection of energy and excitement.

If you really want to get into the zone and find the fun in your work, take up a different sport.  Look instead for inspiration.  On your train journey, see if you can spot something or someone who inspires you.  Anyone or anything at all.  It could be completely unrelated to your life and situation.  But make it your quest to find inspiration.  If the last seat is taken, you will barely notice, so focused are you on looking for what might inspire you.  If someone drives in front of you, then pull back a little and let them through, because you have just seen an apple tree that you haven’t noticed before, growing bravely and rather incongruently by the side of the road and you are inspired.

Find something or someone to inspire you daily and before long, it will become such a source of fun and excitement, that you’ll be hooked.

To talk to us, call +44 (0)1932 888 885 or click here

 

2 of 8 ways to get in the zone and find the fun in your work

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Happy young business woman enjoying success at work

So far so good… You are finding 15 minutes a day to be at peace and in silence.  You are now ready to incorporate the next step towards regaining your joie de vivre and find the fun in your work!

Read on to find all 8 tips and for the ‘how to’ and ‘why to’ for tip number 2.  We will give you more information on each tip over the coming weeks and if you follow the advice, you will be well on your way to regaining your joie de vivre and finding the fun in your work.

Life just got more interesting – Here we go!

Daily checklist:

  • Be at peace and in silence for 15 minutes
  • Clarify your purpose (for information on ‘how to’ and ‘why to’, read on)
  • Find something or someone to inspire you
  • Do something today better than you did yesterday
  • Any time you feel tense, breathe deeply and be still – it will pass
  • Take responsibility for your wellbeing
  • Avoid blaming others
  • Write down one thing you’ve learnt about yourself today

Clarify Your Purpose 

This is worth taking a little time to think about at first.  So it might be a good idea to take yourself off to a quiet corner with a cup of tea and a notebook.  It might take you 30 minutes.  Once you have clarified your purpose though, it will be easy to create a daily reminder.

Why do you come to work?  What are you there for?  Have a think and write down what comes to mind.  Then, read it back and ask yourself is this my purpose, or is it what I do?  For example:

“Credit Control” – Is this my purpose, or what I do?

Credit Control is more of a job title than a purpose.  It describes the function, or what one does, but it is not the purpose.  Let’s take this example as a starting point, and find out how to find this person’s purpose (their why).

Q: Why?

A: So that customers pay on time

Q: If they paid on time, what would that mean to you?

A: We’d have a healthy cash flow

Q: If you had a healthy cash flow, what would that mean to you?

A: I would be doing a good job and would have a good review with my manager

Q:If you were doing a good job and this was reflected in your performance review, what would that mean to you?

A: I wouldn’t resent working as hard as I do

Q:  If you didn’t resent working as hard as you do, what would that mean to you?

A: I would enjoy coming to work more.

Q: If you enjoyed coming to work more, what would that mean to you?

A: I would have more energy.

Q: If you had more energy, what would that mean to you?

A: I would enjoy speaking with my customers!

Q: If you enjoyed speaking with your customers, what would that mean to you?

A: I would want to help them.

Q: If you wanted to help them, what would that mean to you?

A: I’d feel really happy that I’d made a difference to their day!

So, in this example the Credit Controller’s true purpose for coming to work, might be better described as:

I help my customers pay on time, because it makes them feel good and that makes me feel happy!

There’s a big difference, isn’t there, between coming to work to control credit, and helping my customers pay on time, because it makes them feel good and me feel happy?   Can you imagine the different conversations that you would have with your customer with that as your purpose and how much more enjoyable it would be to do your job?

Now, using the example to guide you, take yourself through these steps to help you find your purpose at work and feel the difference.

We all have lapses at times and forget our purpose.  We get bogged down into the daily grind, we become task focused.  That is why a daily reminder to focus on our purpose is so important.  It lifts us up and we can ride on its coat tails for the day.

Lucy Windsor is the Author of People Aren’t Widgets, Communication Specialist and Executive Coach.  Call us on 01932 888 885  or email lucy@theperformance.biz to discuss how we can help you and your organisation.

 

 

1 of 8 ways to get in the zone and find the fun in your work

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Rainbow over spring field

Are you are ready to regain your joie de vivre and find the fun in your work?

We’re spilling the beans on 8 smart things you can do that will change how you feel about getting up and going out to work for the better. Read on to find all 8 tips and for the ‘how to’ and ‘why to’ for tip number 1. We will give you more information on each tip over the coming weeks and if you follow the advice, you will be well on your way to regaining your joie de vivre and finding the fun in your work.

Life just got more interesting – Here we go!

Daily checklist:

  • Be at peace and in silence for 15 minutes (for information on ‘how to’ and ‘why to’, read on)
  • Clarify your purpose
  • Find something or someone to inspire you
  • Do something today better than you did yesterday
  • Any time you feel tense, breathe deeply and be still – it will pass
  • Take responsibility for your wellbeing
  • Avoid blaming others
  • Write down one thing you’ve learnt about yourself today

Be at peace and in silence for 10 minutes – give yourself some Me Time right now by watching and listening to this mind-calming meditation from Tom Evans, author of The Zone & host of The Zone Show



– and get Tom’s free ebook on why It’s Madness Not to Meditate here

Our minds work in overdrive.Constantly fixing, organising, remembering, sorting, valuating, validating, judging, analysing, preparing, timing, nurturing, providing, loving, caring, driving, delivering, placating, worrying, hoping, wanting, helping, sharing.The list really is endless.We ‘do’, day in day out. Our day is so filled with ‘doing’ that we can go whole days or weeks without coming up for air.We hear people say don’t we, “I wish the World would stop turning just for a moment.I want to get off”.

To be at peace and in silence is one way to stop the World and hop off for a moment.

You can choose how to do this.Meditation, prayer, walking in the woods, or just sitting quietly somewhere comfortable.The key is to relax and quieten the chatter of your mind.Let your thoughts come and go like waves washing over you and back to peace. Isn’t it the simple pleasures, like a cool glass of water on a hot day, that are the precious gems reminding us how intrinsically connected to nature we are? These thoughts of what’s really precious take us away from the busy-ness of our life. Make sure you let all thoughts go as easily as they come and avoid temptation to follow a thought or resolve a dilemma.You will still have plenty of hours left in your day to do that.

This quiet time buys you real time in your day.It sparks creativity and inspiration and once you get used to doing this, you will find the best ideas and solutions pop into your thoughts when you least expect them.In the shower, whilst driving or cooking a meal. It is a bit like mislaying an item, a watch for instance; you search and search for that darned watch and eventually you give up looking, believing it is lost. Yet, the very next day, you open the drawer to take out your gloves and there it is. Your lost watch.

If you are not used to spending time in this state of peace, or think it’s a bit woo-woo for you, or perhaps you are just too busy, we do understand.We at The Performance Business have been there too. In fact, I distinctly remember thinking that meditation was just new age baloney. Oh, and I proved that to be true when I tried it and it didn’t work. My mind was so used to doing the doing, I didn’t know how to stop it!

However, I can assure you that if you give it just one month, starting with 5 minutes on the first day and adding a minute every other day until you reach 15 minutes, you will begin to notice a difference. You can even play a little game with yourself. Choose just one of the many things that you have on your mind to resolve and decide that you are going to let that one thing be resolved by letting it go. Be sure to notice when the answer springs at you when you least expect it.

When you see it works for that one thing and how good it felt, you will find yourself on the look out for many more inspired thoughts and creative solutions. You will discover the value of peace and silence for yourself.

For those really active brains that are so difficult to switch off, and try as you might, you find it impossible to let go of your thoughts, you might like to try listening to a guided meditation.There are plenty of free meditations on You Tube. I personally recommend the work of Tom Evans. Tom has been meditating for 40 years, after being introduced to the practice during a time in his life when he was ultra stressed working for a large corporation. He is now on a mission to get the World meditating. Tom is a personal friend of mine and a real master of how to bend time so that it works for you rather than against you. To find out more about Tom Evans go to www.tomevans.co but to hear a little bit of his magic for free, and to start you on your road to getting into the zone and finding the fun at work, click here to access a relaxation visualisation, that he has gifted here for you.

Lucy Windsor is the Author of People Aren’t Widgets, Communication Specialist and Executive Coach. Call us on 01932 888 885 or email lucy@theperformance.biz to discuss how we can help you and your organisation.

 

 

 

8 Ways to get in the zone and find the fun in your work

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zipper for the sky

Widget [noun & verb]

  • A small mechanical device with limited functionality whose name is unknown or can’t be recalled – unnecessarily applying too much attention to detail.

Sound familiar?

Have you ever felt like a widget at work?

Does it spill into your personal life too?

That feeling of working hard, doing your best, but somehow your best is just not good enough and stress fractures are beginning to show; just like a mechanical widget that has been going at it so long that wear and tear is setting in.

Everyone wants something more from you, something different, so you bounce from professional at work; to personal relationships; to family responsibilities; to maintaining hobbies and it seems you just can’t please everyone all of the time.

This chronic struggle slowly drains your joie de vivre.

So, we’re here to give that back. Help you to get in the zone and find the fun in your work, in your life!

We started by creating a checklist of 8 things you can do daily that will create changes, we call these quick wins.They take no time, just the determination to win back your joie de vivre and, like cleaning your teeth, they need to be done daily to build a new momentum.

In a moment, you will see the daily checklist.This is followed by some ‘how to’s’.We want you to really have clarity so you can make these small changes and enjoy the results.We have also included a chart for you to print out and plot your progress over the next month.

So, if you are ready to regain your joie de vivre and find the fun in your work, here is a good place to start.

Daily checklist:

  • Be at peace and in silence for 10 minutes
  • Clarify your purpose
  • Find something or someone to inspire you
  • Do something today better than you did yesterday
  • Any time you feel tense, breathe deeply and be still – it will pass
  • Take responsibility for your wellbeing
  • Avoid blaming others
  • Write down one thing you’ve learnt about yourself today

So now you have your checklist of 8 things to do daily. Over the next 8 days, we’ll post a short blog explaining how to’s for each of the eight and why they matter, so stay tuned for more…

Lucy Windsor is the Author of People Aren’t Widgets, Communication Specialist and Executive Coach. Call us on 01932 888 885 to discuss how we can help you and your organisation.

 

Step 1 – Save Time and Money By Focusing on Trust Rather than Blame

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Values – Putting words into action

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So much is spoken about Values in schools, in the workplace.  However, when it comes to asking people about their own values, often they haven’t given it much thought.  Yet, whether we have thought about it or not, we are driven by our own personal values and the rules we apply to them.

When it comes to values in business, most organisations these days have a list of values that they share with colleagues and customers. These values represent the core principles that the organisation wish to adhere to and they are designed to form a vision, or a framework for the way their customers can expect to be treated by them.

Defining the values and letting everyone know about them is just the beginning of the process.

The next phase is to ensure those words are put into action. Otherwise known as ‘walking the talk’ and this can prove to be more challenging, yet not impossible.

Let’s take a typical example of a company’s core values…

  • We are passionate about what we do
  • We have integrity
  • We are accountable for our actions
  • We respect our customers
  • We ensure quality in all that we do
  • We love to work here

When a potential customer sees these values, they get a feeling for, or a picture of the organisation.  They may feel comforted and inclined to trust the company.  Yet, over time, it is not the value statements that build and maintain the trust, but how the organisation relates to that customer face to face.

Ensuring the values are aligned with the mission statement

It is absolutely vital that the mission statement is supported by the values.  If not, the risk is that either the mission statement is pursued at the expense of the values, or the values are pursued, which puts the business imperatives in jeopardy.

Live them

Before we can expect our followers (employees) to live our company values, we have to embody them ourselves.  This means putting them at the forefront of all that we do.

So let’s explore an imaginary scenario, using the example values I have detailed above.

Let’s assume you are the MD of Conglomerate Biz.  As a leader of this organisation, in stating your company values, you have also made a personal commitment in the following ways:

We are passionate about what we do – this means that as a leader, you must demonstrate your passion every day.   Passion for the products and services you offer, passion for how you operate, passion for the people you employ, including those who are not yet high performers, passion for the challenges you face, passion for the successes you have, passion for the things you could be doing better.  To have passion is to have enthusiasm, love and desire for a subject and as a leader, the best way to demonstrate living this value is to feel passionate about the good, the bad and the ugly too.   It is this passion that has the ability to embrace the bad and the ugly, and to convert them into something great with positive and well planned action.

We have integrity – as a leader of this imaginary organisation, you must demonstrate that you act honestly, honourably and sincerely as far as is possible.  You need to show that you have a good moral compass – treating your employees fairly and supporting them through periods of personal growth and challenge.  You have to show that you personally value integrity.  In other words, to do your best to operate openly without cause for others to be suspicious of your intent.  Any contrast to this raises doubt and confusion, so it is important to always speak respectfully at work and with good regard towards spouses, children, friends, clients, colleagues etc… and to be fully congruent with who you are.  Performance management is much more effective when the person being managed feels accepted, respected and understood at a personal level, which then opens the door to discuss and resolve performance matters.  This approach, together with a strong vision for a positive outcome or objective, paves the way for mountains to be moved.

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We are accountable for our actions – this starts with you as a leader first. Even if someone has done something really stupid at work, it is your response that you will be measured by. In being responsible for your actions, you need to recognise when something has triggered an emotional response in you, and when you have behaved in a reactive way.  If you can spot when you have reacted emotionally (eg: shouted, blamed, bemoaned, criticised, ostracised, ignored, humiliated etc…) and recognise that in yourself, it allows you to apologise where appropriate, and move your focus as quickly as possible towards a positive and constructive resolution. Before pointing the finger at an employee for not taking accountability, you must consistently demonstrate it yourself. A blame culture and lack of trust starts with the leaders, so if it exists in your business, you have the power to change it.

We respect our customers – in order to expect your employees to respect their customers, it is important to demonstrate your own respect and high regard for your staff, stakeholders, suppliers and customers, because that sets up a model that they can emulate out to their customers.  Respect doesn’t mean yield or be weak.  It is important to offer clear guidance and to be open about what is and isn’t acceptable and desirable, yet so much more can be effectively achieved through a framework of respect and understanding.

We ensure quality in all that we do – how can you give the best quality work environment to your employees?  What do they need to perform their jobs to the best of their ability?  What will make the difference to them?  How can you best support them so that they can be even more successful?

We love to work here – what reasons do your staff have, above and beyond the obvious pay cheque at the end of the month, for ‘loving’ to work here?  What can you do to give them good reason to love working here?  Why does anybody ‘love’ to do anything?  Most people love to be in a place where they are learning and contributing in a way that makes a difference, but what that looks like depends on the person, so it is important to know them as individuals and to give them what they need in order for them to ‘love to work here’.

As MD at Conglomerate Biz, you now have a really deep understanding of the personal commitment behind the values that allows them to be really embodied across the organisation.  Values are so much more than words on a wall.

Help your employees to align your corporate values with their personal values

Values run pretty deep inside us, even when we haven’t consciously decided on what our values are.  They drive our behaviour, and when we feel our values have been violated in some way, we can have a pretty dramatic reaction.

If you are struggling with an employee who isn’t living up to your company values, who is behaving in a negative fashion, or just not very enthusiastic, then there is something adrift, which is more than likely to be due to a misalignment.  Either they are picking up on incongruences, or they are finding it difficult to align them with their personal values in some way.

When this happens, it is important to act quickly, before it festers and grows.  Get talking.  Find out where the misalignment might be without being judgemental and then work with them, not against them to break through it.

Lucy Windsor is a Dramatic Breakthrough Coach and Head of Roleplay at The Performance Business.

Is your organisation built on Trust?  Call us on 01932 888885 for a free consultation.

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From Brand Values To Increased Profit

By | Blog, Culture, Values | No Comments

Most businesses of any size take time to carefully create their mission and their values, and to promote these to employees and clients.

Employees are expected to live the company values and more and more, key performance indicators tend to incorporate these goals.  Customer Satisfaction Questionnaires and Employee Engagement Surveys also reflect the mission and values in order to develop and enhance the corporate identity.

Values are often found up on the walls as a reminder – in Reception areas, the cafeteria and meeting rooms.  They serve as a quick prompt for clients and staff alike that this is what the organisation is about.

Even with all this activity and investment, only a very few companies actually deliver on their mission and the values they promise at every level of the organisation.

What is it that makes the difference?

  1. Congruence – walking the talk

No matter what our company mission or values are; how we behave towards our clients and our staff day in day out is what really matters.  Corporate values are vital.  They give everyone clarity – what to aim for, what we stand for.   But, they are just words and words alone count for very little unless we embody those words in everything we do.

When we create our mission and our company values, we have to be congruent with them and live them ourselves at a personal level day in day out.

We must also ensure that our values are congruent with our commercial aspirations.

  1. Alignment – what’s in their hearts

It is not always easy for employees to take company values to their hearts, despite all efforts from the business.  Employees often find it difficult to adopt them, not because they are negative people, or wrong or disloyal even.

Often the reason people don’t or can’t live the company values with the conviction we would like, is because they feel that at some level they would be going against or setting aside their own values or needs in some way in order to do so.

When an employee can feel directly and personally aligned to the corporate values, there is trust, understanding, motivation and a real energy to live and breathe them.

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The most successful organisations understand these two factors and you will see their mission and their values running through everything and everyone like a word running through a stick of seaside rock.

The litmus test: get someone independent to your organisation to ask a random sample of employees from different functions what your company values are without looking them up!   Enthusiastic responses, encompassing the essence of your values, even if they use different words, confirms that you are indeed building the culture you wish to promote.

For help on converting Values into Profit call us on: 0044 1932 888885 – The Performance Business – building reputations, cultivating loyalty, creating wealth.

Lucy Windsor is a Partner in The Performance Business, a Dramatic Breakthrough Coach and has headed up our Roleplay team since 2001 after a successful career in IT Services Industry. 

 

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