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Leadership Tip: Inconsistancy Can Lead to Distrust

Leadership Consistency

If your coworkers are inconsistent in their delivery on goals, objectives, actions, or tasks, can you trust them?

This post is part of a series on understanding trust in the workplace. Often when you read leadership books, blogs, or journals, you will be inundated with views on how leaders build trust. The focus is generally on how leaders need to behave to engender the qualities of trust commensurate with their position. Leaders are encouraged to act boldly and consistently, so others will follow and learn to trust them. Rarely are they counseled to start by trusting others and Ask boldly. 

Exceptional leaders use questions 70 to 80 percent of the time to increase alignment, engagement, and accountability among their co-workers. If you don’t trust your coworkers, what’s the point of asking for their input? You won’t trust their answers and they will sense your distrust. And, not surprisingly, their trust in you will drop. 

In this series we will examine the 7 C’s of Trust: Capability, Commitment, Capacity, Connection, Commonality, Character, and Consistency.

Consistency in others is demonstrated by  a strong track record of success and acting in a predictable fashion. When you ask your co-worker when will they accomplish a particular event and they have demonstrate episodic deliverable in the past – how likely are you going to be to believe their answers. How will this inconsistency reflect on your leadership? How will those who report to you begin to believe about this situation? How is this persons inconsistent performance effecting their delivery? When you except inconsistency you are spreading a virus of mediocrity within your organization. You will begin to ask less because of low trust, begin to work around those you see as inconsistent, create an off balance work environment for those who deliver consistently from those who do not. And the eventual demise is that this will be seen to be more reflective of your poor leadership than of the team members inconsistency. In fact your not acting to change that outcome with training or removal becomes your inconsistency as a leader.

How are you effecting the culture of consistency within your organization? Are you driving for that expectation?  If not, how is that undermining your leadership? Can you actually have an employee be inconsistent and be a high performance work environment?

About the Author

As President and Co-founder of ACI Telecentrics, Inc., Gary Cohen grew the company from two people to 2,200 employees Currently, he is Managing Partner of CO2 Partners, LCC, operating as an executive coach and consultant. His book Just Ask Leadership - Why Great Managers Always Ask The Right Questions (McGraw Hill 2009). Gary B. Cohen Full Bio

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