Our recent webinar on sustaining the culture change process (now available on You Tube, much to my chagrin) prompts me to consider the importance of nurturing the observer/coaching team that underpins the whole system.
OK so you’ve set up a state of the art culture change process. You’ve got trained and skilled observers/coaches carrying out conversations in the workplace and these individuals are capturing data from the conversations on a user friendly database. The database has a social networking front end that’s directly prompting interaction and is capable of producing behavioural trend graphs. Outputs from the database are regularly considered by a steering group who take corrective action to head off injuries before they occur.
All OK so far then.
However, a decent database will also allow you monitor the performance of the observers too by measuring:
There are two fundamental problems that commonly arise among the observer team.
Despite the high quality training at the outset of the programme which initially prompted the observers to carry out the discussions, after time their motivation has waned. Many observers are still active but others have evidently lost faith and stopped.
The solution may lie in how well the observers are nurtured in your organisation. Consider the following:
If the answer to the questions above is none, never, little or rarely then this could be the root of the problem.
Outside the process issues some people may need personal encouragement. What you do is select an individual who hasn’t hit their conversation target drag them in front of the entire site strength to be denounced then send them to ‘People’s Prison No14’ for some ‘political realignment’. Sadly the regressive labour laws in this country mean that this is not an option so you have to resort to the ‘arm around the shoulder’ and personal coaching to re-motivate these individuals.
In the worst instance this could be individuals making up the detail of the conversation at their desk to give the impression that they have hit their conversation target. More common problems include:
The only way to resolve these problems is via a process of mentoring the observers, this is linked to some extent to the ‘nurturing the observers’ points made earlier. Effectively the coaches (observers) need regular coaching by a coach.
For your culture change process to stand the test of time you have to look after your observers – they’re the people that make it work.