The Accountability Formula
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Title: The Accountability Formula
Word Count: 547
Author: Bea Fields
Email: bea@beafields.com
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The Accountability Formula
Copyright 2005 Bea Fields
“When is John going to get me that report?”
“What is going on in marketing? When are they going to
finish that project?”
“I can’t believe Mary is so late in making those phone
calls.”
“Okay…who dropped the ball this time?”
“Hey…that’s not MY job.”
Does this sound familiar? If so, your team and company may
be faced with a very big challenge with accountability,
which results in finger pointing, frustration and broken
trust. Personal responsibility and accountability can put
an end to the blame game, saving your company thousands if
not millions of dollars by increasing productivity,
customer service and job satisfaction. These five basic but
effective approaches to increasing accountability are quiet
simple yet they require actually building a culture of
accountability or even going so far to adopting
accountability as one of the core values of your company.
1) Communicate the big picture- Accountability stands a
better chance of succeeding if everyone in your company
embraces a larger responsibility for the success of the
entire organization. Spend time talking individually with
team members about how his or her project affects the
vision and mission of the company. With this communication,
people can make wiser decisions from the context of the
“big picture” rather than from the perspective of what may
seem to be a detailed and boring task.
2) State clear expectations- If one person on the team does
not meet your expectations, the entire team can fail. It is
important from the very beginning of any new project to
state the expectations clearly and repeat them over and
over again until your team really “gets it.” These
expectations need to be crystal clear, including dates, who
is responsible for what, the details of the task and how
you want the finished product delivered. If your
expectations are fuzzy or confusing in any way, your team
can break down, and the fine and very important details can
fall through the cracks.
3) Form accountability work groups- One of the best ways to
achieve accountability is to develop shared accountability
among team members. Accountability within the team can be
accomplished by what Morris R. Shechtman calls
“accountability groups,” groups which give team members the
permission to speak and listen in a way which is frank and
open. This accountability group can then serve as a small
unit of people working together to confide in with
struggles, weaknesses and insecurities and they relate to
the goals and growth the team intends to achieve.
4) Move to action- In order for accountability to work,
people have to know that failure of completion will come
with certain consequences, including written warnings, loss
of a bonus or extra hours served on a week-end to complete
the project on the table. Without consequences, your
employees won’t take you seriously. They will think that
5) Build a solid reward and recognition program- Employees
need to know in a tangible way their efforts are indeed
driving the company forward, and it is important for them
to share in the fruits of their hard work. The offer of
increased pay and benefits (vacations, time off and other
perks) can keep accountability and morale high and can
motivate employees to continue to strive for high levels of
performance.
About the Author:
Bea Fields is an Executive Coach and the President of
www.FiveStarLeader.com . She is the author of the
12 Foundations of Leadership Training Program and the Chief
City Director for www.CoachVille.com .
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