Manage to Engage. Pamela Hackett

Manage to Engage - Pamela Hackett


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of our “boots on the ground” business model, our people shoulder to shoulder with clients, working through their improvement programs and major transformations to realize large-scale results, coaching new behaviors and implementing new processes and systems, not just advising from a distance. We told our clients, If you go underground we go underground, if your business has a night shift we work night shift. Well, that all stopped when the pandemic hit. Some assignments were paused as people zoomed their way home. We quickly switched to remote work. Where remote was not an option, our revenues paused. Suddenly, our competitive advantage nearly killed us. My goal was to save as many jobs as possible and maintain the business continuity where that was a possibility. We continued with projects that allowed it and were safe for our teams. We helped our clients navigate through with COVID-19 response planning, sometimes for free, because that was the right thing to do, and other times deferring their payments to the next year, to prevent them from deferring their improvement and transformation programs when they needed it most.

      Fast forward past the height of the global pandemic, and HeadsUp becomes a mindset dedicated to encouraging better leadership at every level, irrespective of where people work. It's about developing leaders who prioritize connecting with people and human interaction in order to achieve their aspirations and build extraordinary businesses and communities. Great leaders know how to leverage technology to do that. This is a global need in the workplace, at home, and in society in general. HeadsUp is one of many tools that enable you to manage to engage.

      Today, HeadsUp is both a business and a social movement. How effectively we do this now will determine how effectively our people, teams, and organizations not only come out of this period but how they show up in the future. Our wellness will depend on it. Our next-generation leaders will follow on from it. Our engagement will hinge on it.

      While the past decade has flattened the organization structure and reduced the need for some managers, the need to create leaders at every level, particularly frontline leaders, has never been more necessary. Whether teams work from home or not. You need leaders not to command and control, but to create a sense of community, convene collaboration, engage people in their work, enable them to achieve their results, and energize them to coach and guide their teams, so that everybody can get up the next day and do it all again, and with gusto. So they will connect and engage.

      There is a way. Leaders often see engagement as the outcome rather than the launchpad to build stronger ecosystems and achieve results. Manage to Engage addresses this with simple concepts you will learn about like HeadsUp and the HeadsUp High Five (Presence, Vision, Tech Savvy, Coaching, and Influence), behavior models like active management, and the unique performance improvement tool that engages as much as it brings about improvement and change: 1.5.30.

      These are the fundamental tools you'll find in this book, positioned in an engagement framework based on a new scorecard of 2 Fs and 7 Cs – the MI-9 triggers of engagement. Packed with tools and exercises to apply, the scorecard has you addressing performance improvement through the lens of engagement, and I hope energizes you to manage to engage.

      But let's stop for a moment and think about where organizations were long before the COVID-19 crisis hit. Before the global financial crash of 2007–2008, we already had a crisis: a people crisis. Surveys the world over reported high levels of underengagement. In fact, almost two-thirds of most workforces around the world were in neutral at work, neither engaged nor disengaged. Then when financial panic set in, they clung to their positions out of necessity, not interest. A decade on, little had improved. We were relying on those same emotionally disconnected people to execute our business strategies. We knew this epidemic of discontent was hardly going to drive innovation in disrupted, highly competitive markets but we still had no solution.

      Then a more literal epidemic hit: the COVID-19 pandemic. And the world changed again. This time on a massive global scale. Trust in leaders, business, and institutions was already at an all-time low as we entered the COVID-19 crisis. The virus gave trust an extra kick in the pants. And that neutral workforce either remained in neutral, disengaged, or if you were lucky, engaged to help save their organizations. Still others became essential workers – everyday bus and train drivers, delivery people, grocery store workers, and of course our health care workers. They all became heroes. The question we then needed to ask was, “How would we treat them postpandemic? Could we engage them for the long term to help build back better?”

      We won't recover this time with the same approaches we used coming out of previous crises. This time a radical transformation is needed. We all know people are the future. But this time we need to prove it. Not just unlocking their potential for the company's sake, but allowing people to bring their best selves to


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