10 Dumb Rules That
Make Your Best People Want to Quit
Sometimes the dumbest rules can drive away the best employees.
It's hard enough to attract and hold on to good employees--but to attract and hold onto the best employees is even
harder.
Occasionally
they leave because of an opportunity they can't pass up, but most of the
time the cause lies with the company they're leaving.
Too many workplaces create rule-driven
cultures that may keep management feeling like things are under control, but
they squelch creativity and reinforce the ordinary.
The more rules, the less passion--which means
less motivation.
The more rules, the less excitement--which
means less powerful performance.
The more rules, the less enthusiasm--which
means lower profits.
Faced with a rule-driven culture, the best
employees--the most talented and hard working--are usually the first to go,
because they're in high demand and have more opportunity than most.
What's left is a pool of people who are
mediocre at what they do, willing to compromise their standards, and in it
mostly for the paycheck.
And if you have mediocre people doing
mediocre work, you are going to have a mediocre company.
Here's a simple principle for hiring and
keeping the best and most talented people:
Stop creating
dumb rules.
How do you know if a rule is dumb?
Ask yourself who needs it. If it's directed
primarily at the people you wish you hadn't hired, it's probably a dumb rule.
Here are some prime examples:
1. Dumb rules for hiring.
Imagine you're
a potentially great employee applying for a job with your organization. You
polish your résumé and write a compelling cover letter. And then you enter the
black hole--the space between applying for a job and being hired (or getting an
impersonal notification that the job's been filled). It's not just dumb--it's
inhumane. Isn't there a way to create hiring processes with a human touch?
Isn't it possible to find the right person on the basis of their words and
presentation and a sense of who they are instead of relying on keyword search?
Humanize the process and you'll get better and more talented people.
2. Dumb rules for performance reviews and
rankings.
Let's be
honest: Performance reviews are a waste of time. Brilliant and talented people
deserve better than being slotted into some bureaucratic five-point scale once
a year. It doesn't provide valuable feedback--it's just a ritual that's dreaded
by everyone involved. Forced ranking, sometimes called stack ranking, is even
worse. Lining up your employees and comparing them with one another, best to
worst, is one of the stupidest ideas I have ever encountered as a coach and
business consultant. Why would anyone want to stay at a company that treats
people this way? How hard it must be to trust your colleagues when you're
essentially in an organizational version of the Hunger Games. Does any
meaningful information come out of such a process? Gifted and talented people
should be supported in their strength and uniqueness, not compared with others
or measured against arbitrary standards.
If you don't trust the people you hired, why
did you hire them? (And if you don't trust your managers to hire good people,
why did you make them managers?) Get rid of annual reviews and rankings, and
allow people to be brilliant and motivated and creative. Encourage them to set
goals and maintain high standards, and support them in doing so. Trust them to
produce, and if they are not producing let them go.
3. Dumb rules for onsite attendance.
In many
positions, smart people don't need policies to force them into showing up at
the office. People know what work they have to do that day and where best to do
it. One week, they may know they have something truly valuable to contribute or
learn in a group setting at the office, but the next week, they may see that
their time is better spent meeting a deadline from home with availability by
message or phone. Those who consistently fail to show up and contribute are
likely not meeting other standards as well.
4. Dumb rules for approvals.
Ask yourself
how productive you'd be in your personal life if you had to get someone else to
approve all your purchases and decisions. You'd never get anything done! Do you
really want your best workers to spend their time chasing people for
rubber-stamp approvals? If you're talking about a big project or new procedure,
approvals are appropriate, but to require them on everything is ludicrous. It
slows down work, wastes money, and tells people you don't trust their judgment.
5. Dumb rules for time off.
If a dedicated
employee doesn't feel good enough to come to work, what's the point in making
them drag themselves out of bed to get a doctor's slip? Just let people know
that when they're sick, they're expected to stay home and rest until they're
well enough (and noncontagious enough) to return to work. For a serious
illness, maybe a transition time of half days is appropriate. Similarly, if
people want to take a personal day, don't make them lie about it. Treat the
great people you hired with respect. Trust that they know how to honor their
time and work hard delivering on their promises, and encourage them to take a
down day if they need it for whatever reason, no questions asked. Requiring
documentation is another case of sending a message that you don't trust the
people you've hired.
6. Dumb rules for frequent flyer miles.
Work travel
isn't easy--leaving your life behind and living out of a hotel room in a place
where you may not know even a soul can be true drudgery. And with airport
check-in lines that stretch out for hours, TSA impositions, and constantly
canceled flights, it can seriously feel like years are being shaved off your
life. That's why frequent flyer miles should belong to the person who earned
them, not the company. It's a no-cost way for you to reward the person's
sacrifice. Rules stating otherwise are not only stupid but grossly unfair.
·
7. Dumb feedback methods.
I have worked
with companies that put complete faith in employee engagement surveys, but
frankly I believe they're a sham. If you want to know how things are, just walk
around and ask people face-to-face. Speak to them, hold a conversation, engage.
A quick online survey will give you shallow responses. The best way to learn
what's happening is to have honest, candid conversations about what is working
and what is not. If that's impossible, you have a big problem with connection
and communication--the two most important things that drive engagement. Look to
the source and speak to the heart of your people. They don't need to speak
through fancy surveys; they can get to the heart of the matter on their own if
you give them a chance.
8. Dumb rules for cell phones.
Making people
check their phones on the way in so they can't be used for confidential
documents or information shows only--again--a lack of trust. The main reason
for having a phone is so you can be easily contacted. Why not trust your smart
people to make smart choices?
9. Dumb rules for internet use.
These are
among the stupidest rules of all. In offices that have such policies, the rule
is broken by everyone, including the person who created it. It's one thing to
ask people to limit their time or to put reasonable restrictions on what kind
of sites they can visit, but to forbid access to information is just plain
dumb.
10. Dumb probationary rules.
Many
organizations still have the throwback rule that employees have to be in a
position for six months before they can transfer or be promoted. This might
have worked in the past--even Baby Boomers who weren't happy with their jobs
went along with the rules--but these days the work force is different. If
someone wants to get around the six-month rule, they will simply defy it--or
quit.
If you came up in an organizational culture
governed by rules, especially dumb rules, you have to ask yourself if you
belong there.
BY LOLLY DASKAL
http://www.inc.com/lolly-daskal/10-dumb-rules-that-make-your-best-people-want-to-quit.html?cid=em01014week37a
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