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Navigating the Now: Mastering Leadership Flexibility

Proactive Leadership: Embedding Flexibility into Your Organization

In today’s fast-paced world, leaders need more than just a solid strategy—they need flexibility. Building this adaptability within your organization is essential for navigating disruptions and staying ahead of the curve.

Why Flexibility Matters

The future is filled with challenges, from economic shifts to unexpected global events. Even the most successful organizations can struggle if they don’t have flexible structures in place for budgeting, resource allocation, and decision-making. 

Identifying Key Areas for Flexibility

Start by pinpointing three to five critical areas in your organization or team that could hinder your ability to adapt. Common areas to consider include:

  • Performance Targets: Traditional KPIs and reviews can quickly become outdated if external conditions change. Sticking to unrealistic targets can demoralize teams or lead to poor decisions. 
  • Decision-Making Processes: Simplifying and speeding up complex decision-making can give your organization a competitive edge when agility is crucial. Flexibility in decision-making empowers you to steer your organization in the right direction, even in the face of uncertainty.
  • Critical Roles: If key individuals struggle with change and adapting procedures, it can cause delays in implementing necessary changes in people, resources, or strategy.

Action Steps for Building Flexibility

To ensure your organization stays adaptable, implement regular check-ins on key areas. Here’s how:

  1. Anticipate the Unexpected: Schedule a quarterly check-in with your team to discuss potential disruptions that could impact your operations. Use this time to identify necessary adjustments, such as talent shifts or process changes. Regular discussions will sharpen your team’s ability to recognize and respond to change quickly.
  2. Integrate Flexibility into Budgeting: Treat your budget as a living document. Conduct monthly reviews to identify areas where quick adjustments might be needed, like responding to a sudden supply chain disruption. This proactive approach ensures that your team is prepared to make necessary changes immediately.
  3. Create Adaptive Performance Metrics: Regularly reviewing and updating performance targets and KPIs ensures they remain relevant and achievable. This practice not only keeps your team focused but also reassures them that their efforts are aligned with the current realities, fostering a proactive mindset and keeping your organization moving forward.
  4. Navigate Long-Term Contracts with Agility: Review your B2B contracts to ensure they include clauses for automatic adjustments, such as currency fluctuations or material costs. This foresight protects your cash flow and profitability, allowing you to respond to market changes.
  5. Adapt Your Workforce Quickly: Regularly assessing your team’s structure and readiness to adapt ensures you can quickly reassign or restructure roles in response to changing circumstances. This readiness not only enhances organizational agility but also makes your team feel prepared and ready to face any challenge, keeping you competitive.

 

Flexibility isn’t just about reacting to change; it’s about proactively preparing your organization to thrive in any environment. By regularly checking in on these key areas, you’ll build a culture of adaptability that empowers your team to navigate uncertainty confidently.

Book your complimentary 30-minute consultation now or email us at askme@jennyreilly.com to schedule a convenient time.

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YOUR FOCUS IN QUARTER 3

As we enter Quarter 3 of 2022, it is time to reflect on how far you have gotten on your goals over the last six months, what has worked well, what has not, and what you will keep, start and stop doing. Make the next quarter matter. Continuous execution of small daily changes leads to tremendous results.

NARROW YOUR FOCUS IN Q3

As a business consultant, strategist, and executive coach, I work with successful companies and leaders who share a common practice of conducting quarterly reviews and previews.

By starting each quarter with an initial review, you are taking the time to set a benchmark and do a post-mortem on the past three months’ activity and results.

Analyze wins, identify ongoing challenges, and reflect on lessons learned. Evaluate what you will continue to focus on, what you will stop doing and new initiatives and priorities that need to be implemented.

After the review, you then move on to a preview of what is upcoming in the following 90-day period and identify priorities. These 90-day/quarter priorities ensure alignment and provide a transparent and clear focus.

 

‘You will either look back in life and say I wish I had, or I’m glad I did.’
– Zig Ziglar

 

QUARTERLY REVIEW PROCESS

  1. REVIEW your cash flow and identify your top five activities that provide you profit.
  2. ANALYSE your Key Performance Indicator (KPI) results, shortfalls and gaps. This activity will assist in the identification of areas that require your attention. Your KPIs drive your triple-bottom-line results and can often simply be viewed in terms of profit margin per:
    a.   employee
    b.   customer or client, and
    c.   production or delivery.
  3. IDENTIFY your core areas that can be improved upon to increase operational efficiencies. Quarterly process optimization goals are an excellent way to look at this with your team. Creating core processes saves time and provides standard operating procedures, combined with checklists that can reduce errors and increase efficiencies.
  4. REVIEW your long-term strategic initiatives and identify at least one that you can focus on in Q3 that aligns with your vision, will bring value to your team and stakeholders, and will add value to your customers and clients.

WHAT IS ONE THING YOU CAN DELEGATE THIS QUARTER?

Have you recently thought/said,

‘I don’t have enough time,’
‘There is too much to do,’
‘I never have enough time to focus on what is essential?’

If so, it’s time to evaluate how you spend your time and on what.

STEP 1.   List at least 20 things you do in your job or on a day-to-day basis, the more detail you have in your list, the better.

STEP 2.   Draw up a quadrant and in each box, write the topics you see on the image below.

Jenny Reilly Consulting | How To Delegate

STEP 3.   Of all the items you listed in Step 1, please put each one into the most relevant quadrant. Tally how many you have in each quadrant.

STEP 4.   Your objective should be to have most items in the top left quadrant. Everyone is more effective and productive when they work to their strengths and are engaged. If your quadrants are bottom-heavy, work towards making some changes and, when possible, delegate a minimum of one task per quarter to others where they may be a better fit.

 

‘The difference between successful people and really successful people is that really successful people say no to almost everything.’
– Warren Buffett

 

QUARTERLY THINKING

ONE:   What do you want to accomplish by the end of Q3?

TWO:   How will you unwind, unplug and recharge to ensure you bring the best version of yourself to the job weekly?

THREE:   Identify three core professional areas of strength and three core areas of weakness. In Q3, aim to work more in your areas of strengths and do some professional development work in at least one area of challenge to help you improve in the job.

FOUR:   Identify at least five areas you can say ‘no’ to this quarter. One of my TEC members, Joseph Fry, Founding Principle of Hapa Collaborative, operates under a ‘hell yes’ or ‘hell no’ system when defining where he will spend his time. I love his energy and focus on working in areas that matter to the business.

 

If you have any questions about your quarter 3 review and planning or want to learn more about the powerful benefits of executive coaching to elevate your professional success, please reach out to +1 604-616-1967 or jenny@jennyreilly.com and book a complimentary 30-minute strategy session. If you want monthly leadership and professional development tips, sign up for my JRC newsletter or check out my social media on Instagram for top leadership advice throughout the year.