Joan is new on the job. She's leading an entire organization and wants to make some changes. But before she does anything, she decides to go on a listening tour. Learn more about why you should too - from leadership and learning expert, Kevin Eikenberry.
Joan received an opportunity to lead a large organization in a new industry. Her background prepared her for many of the expectations of the new role, but she didn`t have industry specific knowledge and she didn`t know the company or the people.
While she is hardly the first person to be in this situation, she wasn`t completely sure what do to first.
She had some changes in mind and the Board had given her full authority to make them. She immediately saw some potential weaknesses, and she certainly wanted to get off on the right foot in the organization. She was wise enough to realize that whatever she did early in her tenure would be looked at under a microscope, and she wanted her actions to be the actions she would want repeated within the organization far into the future.
In the days before she arrived on her new job she thought about these challenges, and she read everything she could about the organization. The day before she arrived on the job she decided what to do. . .
She would go on a listening tour.
What, you may ask, is a listening tour?
A listening tour is a time set aside not to make new decisions, but to gather information and input - to collect the insights, ideas and context from others before making decisions.
New in her role and in the organization, Joan felt this was her best first step so she:
After completing this tour, she had done several things that would serve both her and the organization well, including:
The stories are legendary - leaders join an organization or group and want to leave their mark by bringing in "their" people, making immediate decisions on new plans and projects, and more. While these stories are sometimes not much more than just stories, there is truth in myth. People expect new leaders take these actions, and they aren`t often seen as positive by others, and sometimes they don`t work well because of the lack of commitment or understanding of the change.
Joan`s approach also allowed her to "leave a mark" and build a reputation - by creating and taking her listening tour she made her first decision one that had a lasting impression on the organization, and that first decision allowed those that followed to be better informed and more likely to be supported.
This story is fictional, but the concerns and suggestions are real. Even if you are not moving to a new company or role, the lessons of the listening tour apply. Perhaps there is a part of the business, a niche of the business or a set of Customers you don`t know well. Consider a listening tour.
Perhaps you feel your team isn`t as engaged as you would like them to be. Consider a listening tour.
Remember that a listening leader is a Remarkable Leader.
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