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Solving the Problem or Finding the Guilty
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| Guest post by: Dr Shailesh Thaker |
Article Overview: We have developed into a blaming society. Mom blames the older siblings when problems arise in the household. Teacher finds someone to blame when things go out of control in the class room. Management and unions blame each other. Political parties use blame in the extreme, and it is disruptive, subordinating national goals under political aims. Which describes your leadership: Do you actively search for solutions to problems or do you spend your energy searching for the parties to blame?
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Solving the Problem or Finding the Guilty
Which is More Effective Leadership?
Which describes your leadership: Do you actively search for solutions to problems or do you spend your energy searching for the parties to blame?
We have developed into a blaming society. Mom blames the older siblings when problems arise in the household. Teacher finds someone to blame when things go out of control in the class room. Management and unions blame each other. Political parties use blame in the extreme, and it is disruptive, subordinating national goals under political aims. Spouses unfortunately play the blame game to the destruction of marriages and families. Experts in many realms teach that making things better should be the focus of our energies. The barrier to this is blame.
Blame is the process of assigning responsibility for an event on another. Various emotions drive the blame, and it results in loss of face, embarrassment, fear and anger. It is unpleasant for all parties concerned. The language of blame and problem solving is distinctively different, and a study of real life situations could be constructive for managers hoping to rise above the cauldron of anger and blame. A manager may assign responsibility for a task without assigning blame. And you can hold someone accountable for results without blaming. The distinction is in the language and tone of the message. Robert Bacal, consultant from Casselman, Ontario gives some helpful scenarios:
Blame - 'If you had done your work on time, we wouldn't be in this mess.'
Factual statement - 'Your responsibility is to fulfill your work commitments on time. When your work wasn't available, I had to speak to the boss without the information I needed.'
The factual statement is the prelude to problem solving. The blame statement is bound to cause sparks to fly. Problem solving is focused on the present and the future. The goal is fixing a present problem and seeking to prevent it in the future.
Problem solving lacks the emotions of blaming, and it is less personal and more systems oriented. The problem solving process needs an understanding of the past and an understanding of the root causes of issues. It may include:
Clarifying the problem, goal or purpose
Collecting data, gain understanding
Diagnose, identify sources of problem
Formulate hypotheses for cause
Formulate a strategy for solution
Evaluate, collect more data
Note that assigning of blame is not part of the process. Neither is there room for emotional upheavals. Solving problems requires the use of a process, much of which was created by Deming. TQM, the quality system of modern companies, provides the structure and knowledge on how to solve problems the efficient way. Whether you are pursuing continuous improvement, organizational reinforcement, or improving performance on various levels, the issue of blame vs. problem solving is critical.
When problems occur, such as lack of performance, failure to meet commitments, etc, and you need to intervene, use problem solving. Begin by trying to understand the problem and underlying issues with the employee. Poor performance can be the result of boredom, stress, limited skills or knowledge, or other systems issues such as equipment or authority. Working with the employee to attack the root problem will help avoid it in the future. The focus is on the future. Additional scenarios by Robert Bacal:
Blame
Mgr: John, you should have let me know this work would not be ready for the meeting. We looked like idiots and it's going to be hard to be difficult to recover.
John: I tried to tell you, but you were on vacation. And I forgot. You are very hard to get a hold of, you know.
Mgr: You could have called me at home.
John: I didn't want to bother you. You said not to call unless it was urgent.
The manager attacks, and the employee defends. This could end up with attacks flying back and forth. The situation is not pleasant. Now look at how it could have gone:
Problem Solving
Mgr: John, I was expecting to have the brief from you before my meeting. We need to figure out what happened and how to make sure it doesn't happen again. Was I not clear on the date, or was there some other thing that caused us to miss the deadline?
John: Well, I might have misunderstood about the urgency, and when you went on vacation, I didn't want to bother you at home.
Mgr: OK, well, how does this sound. If I need something on an urgent basis, I'll make sure that I tell you in the future. I can also let people know when it is OK to call me at home, so it will be easier. I am also going to ask you to please keep me informed, though on projects like this we won't be embarrassed again. Does this make sense?
John: Yes, and I have more input that may be useful....
You can feel the difference in the dialogues. The problem solving dialogue is neutral aimed at finding where the problem lies and works to prevent reoccurrence. Of course, it may not go this smoothly, and it is oversimplified.
Modeling problem solving in everything you do, staff meetings and other gatherings, is an excellent habit to form. When in a conference, and blame raises its ugly head, redirect with 'what can we do, then, in the future?' Seek a problem solving attitude when blame is assigned during a meeting. When you start doing this you begin to create a blameless culture, a responsible culture that discourages empty complaints that will put you in the middle of other people's disputes.
It can be a difficult road from blame to problem solving becasue some will not see the difference. For some, being responsible also means to be at fault. When blame raises its head, return to the problem, ask diagnostic questions, begin to find root causes, and avoid being drawn into the blame game. In time, some people will begin to see the difference and trust that you are not blaming but attempting to fix the problem.
Related ArticlesWhich describes your leadership: Do you actively search for solutions to problems or do you spend your energy searching for the parties to blame?
We have developed into a blaming society. Mom blames the older siblings when problems arise in the household. Teacher finds someone to blame when things go out of control in the class room. Management and unions blame each other. Political parties use blame in the extreme, and it is disruptive, subordinating national goals under political aims. Spouses unfortunately play the blame game to the destruction of marriages and families. Experts in many realms teach that making things better should be the focus of our energies. The barrier to this is blame.
Blame is the process of assigning responsibility for an event on another. Various emotions drive the blame, and it results in loss of face, embarrassment, fear and anger. It is unpleasant for all parties concerned. The language of blame and problem solving is distinctively different, and a study of real life situations could be constructive for managers hoping to rise above the cauldron of anger and blame. A manager may assign responsibility for a task without assigning blame. And you can hold someone accountable for results without blaming. The distinction is in the language and tone of the message. Robert Bacal, consultant from Casselman, Ontario gives some helpful scenarios:
Blame - 'If you had done your work on time, we wouldn't be in this mess.'
Factual statement - 'Your responsibility is to fulfill your work commitments on time. When your work wasn't available, I had to speak to the boss without the information I needed.'
The factual statement is the prelude to problem solving. The blame statement is bound to cause sparks to fly. Problem solving is focused on the present and the future. The goal is fixing a present problem and seeking to prevent it in the future.
Problem solving lacks the emotions of blaming, and it is less personal and more systems oriented. The problem solving process needs an understanding of the past and an understanding of the root causes of issues. It may include:
Clarifying the problem, goal or purpose
Collecting data, gain understanding
Diagnose, identify sources of problem
Formulate hypotheses for cause
Formulate a strategy for solution
Evaluate, collect more data
Note that assigning of blame is not part of the process. Neither is there room for emotional upheavals. Solving problems requires the use of a process, much of which was created by Deming. TQM, the quality system of modern companies, provides the structure and knowledge on how to solve problems the efficient way. Whether you are pursuing continuous improvement, organizational reinforcement, or improving performance on various levels, the issue of blame vs. problem solving is critical.
When problems occur, such as lack of performance, failure to meet commitments, etc, and you need to intervene, use problem solving. Begin by trying to understand the problem and underlying issues with the employee. Poor performance can be the result of boredom, stress, limited skills or knowledge, or other systems issues such as equipment or authority. Working with the employee to attack the root problem will help avoid it in the future. The focus is on the future. Additional scenarios by Robert Bacal:
Blame
Mgr: John, you should have let me know this work would not be ready for the meeting. We looked like idiots and it's going to be hard to be difficult to recover.
John: I tried to tell you, but you were on vacation. And I forgot. You are very hard to get a hold of, you know.
Mgr: You could have called me at home.
John: I didn't want to bother you. You said not to call unless it was urgent.
The manager attacks, and the employee defends. This could end up with attacks flying back and forth. The situation is not pleasant. Now look at how it could have gone:
Problem Solving
Mgr: John, I was expecting to have the brief from you before my meeting. We need to figure out what happened and how to make sure it doesn't happen again. Was I not clear on the date, or was there some other thing that caused us to miss the deadline?
John: Well, I might have misunderstood about the urgency, and when you went on vacation, I didn't want to bother you at home.
Mgr: OK, well, how does this sound. If I need something on an urgent basis, I'll make sure that I tell you in the future. I can also let people know when it is OK to call me at home, so it will be easier. I am also going to ask you to please keep me informed, though on projects like this we won't be embarrassed again. Does this make sense?
John: Yes, and I have more input that may be useful....
You can feel the difference in the dialogues. The problem solving dialogue is neutral aimed at finding where the problem lies and works to prevent reoccurrence. Of course, it may not go this smoothly, and it is oversimplified.
Modeling problem solving in everything you do, staff meetings and other gatherings, is an excellent habit to form. When in a conference, and blame raises its ugly head, redirect with 'what can we do, then, in the future?' Seek a problem solving attitude when blame is assigned during a meeting. When you start doing this you begin to create a blameless culture, a responsible culture that discourages empty complaints that will put you in the middle of other people's disputes.
It can be a difficult road from blame to problem solving becasue some will not see the difference. For some, being responsible also means to be at fault. When blame raises its head, return to the problem, ask diagnostic questions, begin to find root causes, and avoid being drawn into the blame game. In time, some people will begin to see the difference and trust that you are not blaming but attempting to fix the problem.
Article Tags: blame, dr shailesh, effective leadership, guilty, leader, leadership
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About the Author: Dr Shailesh Thaker RSS for Dr Shailesh's articles - Visit Dr Shailesh's website Dr. Shailesh Thaker is the world renowned management thinker and motivational speaker on organisational behavior and development. He is the CLO of Knowledge Inc., a highly reputed training firm, which always helps organisations to achieve international benchmark. Dr. Thaker as a management guru is always in demand as a keynote speaker, business coach, HR Trainer and training guru for the management and training conferences. Dr. Thaker has benefited 17 countries through 1,344 workshops and has motivated millions of professionals. He has contributed 20 years in this field and has conducted nearly 11,264 hours of training sessions across the globe. He is PhD in Cognitive Thinking (India) and International Training Fellow (USA). His presentations and training sessions across the globe has benefited professionals in their personal and professional career.. Dr. Thaker has helped business houses to achieve business goals through his CEO training and Top management leadership training. As a leadership guru and management thinker, he has initiated innovative ideas in the management world. Click here to visit Dr Shailesh's website RIGHT THINGS BUILD YOU FOR LIFE TIME A Recipe for Building Leaders Follow Rule of Connectivity Not Competition DOING NOTHING HAS SIGNIFICANT VALUE IN THE LIFE LEADERS TRY TO GET BETTER EACH DAY |
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