Kindness at Work: Building Trust Through Transparency
INTRODUCTION
We see kindness as a foundation for increasing change capacity in organizations. Let’s go a little deeper into what influences kindness and change capacity.
We see kindness as a foundation for increasing change capacity in organizations. Let’s go a little deeper into what influences kindness and change capacity.
It might seem odd to talk about kindness as a strategy to increase capacity for change, but we see it as a practical necessity. Kindness at work is often thought of as a friendly attitude, a considerate mindset or civility. However, those aren’t the definitions we have in mind. Those are great attributes, but we are thinking of even more.
Note: this is a five-part series. Read Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3| Part 4
By Patrick Farrell and Katherine Sanders
People need a sense of autonomy and agency in order to be healthy. We expect our actions to help shape our experiences. When we start to feel helpless, or that what we do doesn’t change our lived experience, we become depressed and anxious.
When leaders are dealing with change, there can be a tendency to try to limit uncertainties and control outcomes in order to feel “safer.” As human and understandable as that approach is, it is misplaced. Approaching change by trying to establish certainty about outcomes isn’t effective for two reasons: first, because it is not possible. We can’t know what’s next. Secondly, trying to control outcomes decreases our organization’s change capacity.
Most change incorporates external factors that come to us, and some internal factors we may control. We don’t get to determine what comes to us. We only determine how we respond to what comes, and through that process of responding, we start to affect how easy it will be to respond to whatever happens next. So the question becomes, “How can we be prepared to adapt and be flexible so that we can address issues that come to us?”
To make this work leaders need to lead differently. Leadership moves away from trying to control outcomes and instead focuses on the preparation of people to be able to engage effectively when the next situation arises.
This is why a Healthy Foundation is a critical first step. The process of building this healthy foundation will show us what our people are most concerned about. Responding to their concerns in a transparent and timely manner builds trust and mutual respect. In turn, leadership’s transparency helps people understand the constraints (e.g., budgets, market, challenges) the organization is working with.
With this healthy foundation, we can lead differently. We can charge local groups to resolve issues as they arise, before they lead to resistance to change.
When we lead differently, empowering local groups to address issues as they arise, the leader’s job changes from trying to control outcomes to focusing on preparing people to meet whatever challenges arise in the near term and further out on the horizon. Local autonomies can address everyday challenges as they arise, reducing people’s frustrations and increasing their capacity to engage in large-scale change initiatives.
Sanders Consulting and Farrell Consulting help teams implement humane and practical change initiatives.
Note: this is a five-part series. Read Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 5
by Katherine Sanders and Patrick Farrell
When we have a healthy foundation to build on, we can anticipate resistance before we encounter it. We call this skill proactive anticipation. Proactive anticipation makes it possible for us to move forward with more ambitious initiatives, more quickly. We build it in stages:
These four stages build upon each other, increasing change capacity along the way. We described Healthy Foundation in a previous installment. We’ll now focus on the other three stages.
Note: this is a five-part series. Read Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 4 | Part 5
by Katherine Sanders and Patrick Farrell
A common view of efficiency encourages leaders to focus on the initiative at hand and its immediate results. That approach to efficiency can prevent leaders from noticing the foundational work that would make results easier, more effective, or even possible. Resistance to change, when seen through that lens of efficiency, has leaders focused on it only in the context of a major change activity.
This part of our Resistance to Change series focuses on the seemingly “inefficient” work of building a healthy foundation for change in an organization. With a healthy foundation we are better prepared to take on emerging change initiatives because our entire community can anticipate resistance with less fear and defensiveness. The healthy foundation positions well-posed resistance as helping to make the change initiative better.
Note: this is a four-part series. Read Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 4
by Patrick Farrell and Katherine Sanders
Organizational capacity for change is the overall capability of an organization to either effectively prepare for or respond to an unpredictable environment (Saylor Academy, 2012). We’d add that change capacity is also accepting the challenge and responsibility of intentionally helping to shape our future environment.
Our previous posts explain why we need to take strategic action and how to get started. These first steps will eventually build capacity for your group to act on the “big ideas” of your plan. Read more
Note: this is a five-part series. Read Part 1 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5
by Katherine Sanders and Patrick Farrell
Organizational capacity for change is the overall capability of an organization to either effectively prepare for or respond to an unpredictable environment (Saylor Academy, 2012). We’d add that change capacity is also accepting the challenge and responsibility of intentionally helping to shape our future environment. Read more
Note: this is a four-part series. Read Part 1 | Part 3 | Part 4
by Patrick Farrell and Katherine Sanders
How often do organizations spend the time and resources to develop a strategic plan, only to fail to operationalize it?
Our hopes and dreams in our Strategic Plan are so big that many times we’re not sure where or how to start. That uncertainty tends to make us fall back on what we already know how to do, and that’s probably not going to make the big ideas happen. Read more
Note: this is a five-part series. Read Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5
by Katherine Sanders and Patrick Farrell
Change is inevitable in business, across society and within individuals. Under the best of circumstances, change is difficult. Recent challenges in the world have made change much more difficult for people to manage on top of other changes in their lives.
We can’t stop these changes or their pace, but we can evolve traditional change management approaches to meet our people where they are. We can build humane and sustainable approaches to change by understanding resistance and addressing it without stigmatizing people or lamenting a slower pace. Read more
Note: this is a four-part series. Read Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4
by Patrick Farrell and Katherine Sanders
Strategic planning helps an institution envision its future. Good strategic plans take a broad view of the internal and external landscapes, envision the organization’s future, and invite innovation to make that future real.
However, a plan is only helpful to the degree that it is actionable. Without action, the plan can’t help us reach our goals.
We put a strategic plan in play by identifying strategic actions. Read more