Change Management - Delegate to Empower the Team

“If you want it done right, you have to do it yourself!”  Have you heard anyone say that recently at work?  Perhaps
you said it yourself.  How motivated do you feel hearing your boss say that?  Does it build any trust between the
team and the boss?  How much confidence does it show on the boss’s part?  How confident does the team feel?  
Do they feel empowered to really go all out and do their best?  What’s likely to happen the first time they make
even a small mistake?

Producing the best result is clearly the goal and desire of every business leader.  An experienced leader may in
fact be better qualified to perform certain tasks than many of the people on the team.  The leader’s position was
presumably attained in part by the outstanding performance and experience in similar roles.  Does that really
make them the best person to do the job?

Balancing the desire to control the process and the outcome against the need to empower the organization to
perform at its peak can indeed be a challenge.  To be successful, a leader must learn to use their experience and
expertise to direct, to guide, to advise, to motivate, and to nudge the organization toward expected objectives.  
In sports, a good coach functions in the same way with the players on the team.  Playing the game is still the job
of the team, not the coach.   

A good coach learns to identify and
exploit the unique talents and skills of each individual player.  Then with the
expertise and guidance of the experienced coach, the team is molded and shaped into a high performing and
unique engine.  Team members performing at heir full potential, each knowing what is required of them and how
to work with the others, and all united to a common purpose will be empowered to make the best decisions and
create optimal solutions to move forward.  This powerful engine will drive the company toward its goals with
seemingly unstoppable momentum.  

Maintaining absolute control over every action and dictating how each process and milestone is to be achieved will
not achieve this kind of empowerment.  
Leaders must learn to trust the team.  They must accept that the team
will often choose different approaches to solving problems or managing projects.  They might even feel
uncomfortable with the approach chosen as they could have done it better.  This is where the leader needs to step
back and look at the bigger picture.  That is, how can they motivate and empower the entire organization to
believe in and accomplish the goals and mission of the company?

Brushing team members aside and rushing in with both feet to personally tackle the task directly will most likely
demoralize the entire team.  They will not feel respected for their abilities nor appreciated for anything they
accomplish.  The signal is that they are not good enough.   They will similarly not be highly motivated to put
forward creative ideas to solve problems and move the business ahead faster.  Most likely, they will crawl into
their defensive shells and avoid being noticed lest their heads roll for having the audacity to make a decision or
offer an out of the box idea.

The reward for empowering the team and accepting those new uneasy solutions that the team creates will be
astounding.  For every one of those uneasy solutions, new creative solutions and ideas will surface that never
would have seen the light of day.  
The true innovation power and problem solving energy of all of the minds on
the entire team will be unleashed.  In this way the unique talents and brainpower of each team member allowed to
develop and freely create without the constraints of fear, control, or humiliation.

Empowerment is what delegating is really all about.  The sports coach does not delegate the job of coaching to
the players.  Nor does the coach delegate the job of defining the mission and setting objectives.  The coach does
effectively delegate the job of each position on the team to the player who must execute that position.  

Business leaders likewise are not delegating the job of defining the mission and setting expectations – that is
their job.  The job that is being delegated to the team members is the actual work processes, projects, tasks,
methods, and day-to-day activities required to accomplish the mission.  
The mission becomes everyone’s
purpose
– leader and team member alike – but each plays their unique role.

Letting go of that control lever can be challenging, and it does require a leap of faith as accountability for specific
tasks and processes is shifted to someone else.  Start small.  This is a slow process of retraining both the leader
to learn to delegate and the team to accept the accountability and freedom that comes with this new style.  With
each small step, both will gain more trust and acceptance and over time more steps, and bigger steps, can be
taken with more confidence.  

Small detailed tasks that were previously dictated in great detail and monitored very frequently can easily be
managed by someone else.  Let them decide what to do next and review their progress next week.  Agree on the
objective or expected outcomes of the process, and let them get there.  Of course, as a good coach would do,
don’t forget to
provide frequent encouragement, direction, guidance, and advice.  Then enjoy the surprise as
the team shows just how much they can accomplish.

People need to be released to be empowered to really fly.   As C. S. Lewis said:  "It may be hard for an egg to turn
into a bird: it would be a jolly sight harder for it to learn to fly while remaining an egg. We are like eggs at
present. And you cannot go on indefinitely being just an ordinary, decent egg. We must be hatched or go bad."


Patrick Smyth is a trusted business advisor and mentor.  He improves business performance through effective
change management, leadership, and marketing.  His focus on business outcomes, growth, objective setting,
team building, and communications builds sustainable productivity and growth.
www.innovationhabitude.com
Your True North Business Navigator