When a high-profile project fails, news articles are quick to
publicize what went wrong, but few care to explain why these projects
failed.
Over the past 20 years, organizations such as the Standish Group have catalogued a wealth of information about the causes of project failure as
well as identifying success factors. In the last few years, a new
success factor has emerged: emotional maturity or or emotional
intelligence (EQ).
According to Daniel Goleman, the author of Emotional Intelligence,
emotional intelligence is made up of five key components:
self-awareness, self-regulation, motivation, empathy and social skills.
When
EQ components are evident, a project team will act with a high
emotional bank account, the buffer or shield that can protect a team and
support project success on a high-risk, high-engagement project. An
emotional bank account is a Stephen Covey metaphor for the amount of trust perceived in a relationship.
With
a well-funded account balance, project team members feel secure in
imagining and executing creative paths to success and issues that arise
are remedied efficiently and maturely. Research shows that a more
cohesive, high-performing team produces better results.
But an
EQ-deficient environment leaves employees feeling overworked,
underappreciated and unwilling to help each other. Quite simply, unhappy
team members can hinder the success of a project.
When the
emotional bank account is low, problems arise more easily and can cause
project failures, potentially even requiring a complete project
turnaround. Unhappy and unproductive teams with little change to spare
in their emotional piggy banks can feel like their problems are
insurmountable and will disengage from the project.
Here are a few warning signs that your team may be lacking in emotional intelligence:
Team members constantly blame others for issues.
You hear victim statements (“I can’t because…”).
Team members are arrogant and not open to the opinions of others.
Members of the team become overambitious and overextended, trying to solve problems they cannot or should not.
Your team is consistently unavailable.
To
effectively build a team’s emotional bank account, start by gauging its
emotional state. A team with a healthy, robust emotional bank account
knows how to have fun, continuously learn and give and receive quality
feedback. If your team needs an emotional intelligence boost, consider
taking the following actions:
1. Enable team members.
The
most effective way to ensure a healthy team is to empower its members
with resources, ensuring that they understand their roles,
responsibilities and expectations. Thriving teams let their members play
to their strengths, focusing on the tasks they are uniquely qualified
for, as this will bring them satisfaction in their everyday work and
help the team achieve its overall goals.
Here’s how:
Assess the emotional intelligence and health of your team. Check in
regularly with team members to ensure that they feel supported. Targeted
surveys can help, provided that there is a clear feedback mechanism.
Once the results are compiled, share them, along with an action plan to
rectify the areas of concern, with the entire team.
2. Gain leadership support.
Obtaining
a buy-in and engagement from the company's leadership is a critical
success factor for any type of project. Through their advocacy, leaders
can make consistent small deposits to the team bank account. And when
issues and risks arise, the leaders' hands-on support can sustain the
emotional bank account when it's needed most.
Here’s how:
For leaders to fully support the emotional intelligence of the team,
they must visibly demonstrate their commitment to the project's success
by acting as sounding boards, encouraging creativity and calculated risk
taking in the work's execution and garnering overall support from the
organization to clear the path to success.
3. Create transparency and clear communication.
When
transparent relationships between team members exist, communication and
overall clarity of the engagement are much easier. This should include
transparency about upcoming activities and decision making for the group
as a whole.
Here’s how: This is where solid
project managers are worth their weight in platinum. Set up
communication channels to inform team members about their
responsibilities for activities or events that are in the project
timeline. And team members with a strong, well-communicated and
consistent decision-making process can function with less ambiguity and
time-wasting, political maneuvering.
Working on a team with a
well-funded emotional bank account is an enviable experience, one that
anyone would be eager to replicate. It allows for a high-functioning
team that is both effective and happy -- with a built-in buffer that
helps mitigate any speed bumps.
While intelligent and competent
teams are always in demand, those that carry a solid emotional bank
account will be the ones that consistently achieve success.
No comments:
Post a Comment