Five Moments When Saying No Is Your Best Strategy
Most successful leaders have little
difficulty saying no to a losing deal, to a project that’s wasting money, or to
a request that doesn’t align with their priorities. But these same leaders can
find it very uncomfortable to speak up when their concerns are less
cut-and-dried or when their organization is hell-bent on pursuing a plan. In
certain situations, it can feel politically risky to hesitate or ask too many
questions. Even with their direct reports, many leaders find themselves putting
off the difficult conversations needed to address issues such as drifting
standards, inappropriate behavior, or emerging bad habits.
But,
as difficult as it can be, saying no is often the key to effective leadership.
Without the ability to push back when needed, you run the risk of “commitment drift”: promises made to customers or employees, or to promote
safety, specific values, financial discipline, or social and environmental
responsibility are eroded incrementally, without anyone really stopping to
think about the consequences. As Joseph Fuller and Michael C. Jensen pointed
out in their 2002 paper “Just Say No to
Wall Street: Putting a Stop to the Earnings Game,” saying no to such dysfunctional
momentum can be your best strategy for helping
your company succeed as well as living your values.
The first step in building your capacity to
say no is to recognize some common situations that should raise a red flag. In
the following five moments, it is critical to pause and make a considered
choice, based on a thorough understanding of your options and what is at stake.
1. You
are being pushed to make a promise you can’t keep. Although people may be disappointed in the short
run, it is far better to retain others’ trust and your own credibility by being
realistic about what you can deliver. Rather than a blunt refusal, try using
William Ury’s “positive
no” method: Affirm your commitment to a larger
“yes,” and propose alternative ways they can get to their goal. For example: “I
really would like to say yes. But here’s the risk I see.... What if we were to
try x instead?”
2.
Something sticks in your craw. People
often experience nagging doubts or gut reactions when situations are slipping
into unhealthy compromise. If something doesn’t feel right, take a moment to
pause and reflect. What is bothering you about the situation? What are the
larger effects of the actions being taken? Moreover, if you feel fine but
someone you respect is hesitant, take a moment to find out what smells “off” to
them. Once you are clearer on the issue at hand, you can check the data to see
if there is cause for concern.
3. You
feel you have no choice.
“You
can’t say no,” leaders often tell me, feeling intense pressure to meet
expectations. But the fact is, we always have a choice — it just may have high
stakes. It is part of our responsibility as professionals to recognize when
there is something more important than a project or deadline. Recall just one
of the many people working on Deepwater Horizon who went
along with the decisionto cut corners, saying,
“Who cares, it’s done, [it] will probably be fine.”
4. The
“plan” has taken on a life of its own.
Once
people have committed to a direction, they naturally tend to persist, even in
the face of evidence that they will fail. To counteract such momentum, leaders
in healthcare, aviation, and other fields have developed protocols that prompt
decision makers to briefly pause and revisit the data. You might ask your team
to list the assumptions behind their plan, then propose a quick test to
double-check the facts. One leader I worked with lobbied for an additional
market study before a product launch, which helped her leadership team
recognize and avoid a failure in the making.
5. You
see a dangerous trend in the works.
Scandals
and catastrophes often begin as small trade-offs or compromises that add up
over time. If you notice a pattern of incremental decisions that could
undermine safety, quality, data security, customer focus, or ethics, take a
step back and check on the cumulative effects. Will the decision streamline a
process and eliminate waste or are you flirting with a tipping point? For
example, the head of customer service of a health-conscious food company
noticed that leaders were spending more time on marketing messages, and less on
production processes and quality. They began receiving more customer
complaints, but leaders brushed them aside. Eventually, the company suffered a
serious product recall that devastated their brand image, and from which it
took years to recover.
Being prepared to recognize and act on these
moments of truth makes it less likely that you will blow by critical decision
points without giving them the attention they deserve. The fact is, it only
gets harder to speak up if you wait. And, as you practice saying no or raising
questions constructively, you increase your ability to exert a positive
influence on your organization.
For
example, one highly respected manager I know had watched her team talk about
being collaborative while continuing with negative, antagonist behavior outside
of their meetings. About halfway through one meeting, she took off her employee
badge and laid it quietly in the center of the conference table. She said that
she didn’t want to continue if the team wasn’t ready to truly commit to the new
way of working. For a moment, people were startled and silent. But then they
began speaking more honestly about their own hesitations. Months later, in
another part of the company, I heard the story of how this leader’s no had
inspired her peers to step up to real change.
Elizabeth
Doty is a former lab fellow of Harvard University’s Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics and founder ofLeadership
Momentum, a consultancy that focuses on the practical
challenges of keeping organizational commitments.
http://www.strategy-business.com/blog/Five-Moments-When-Saying-No-is-Your-Best-Strategy?gko=24929&utm_source=itw&utm_medium=20160623&utm_campaign=resp
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