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The Culture+ Blog

Insights to help you create a compelling and connected culture

Doing versus achieving

Measuring productivity used to be easy. 

Years ago I had a job changing customer’s addresses in our system after they mailed us a change of address card. Eight hours a day I was doing data entry. My supervisor could see my production because I would start with a big stack of cards on my left side, type all day to process the cards, and then restack them on the right side. Was I productive? Hell, yeah! And I had proof. 

Now, it’s different.

How do you quantify thinking?

How do you measure collaboration?

What’s the metric for innovation?

Many have tried using the old tactics of assigning numbers to new work. That strategy is a recipe for heartburn. You can count widgets, you can’t count creativity.

New work requires new systems for leaders to evaluate that work. 

What to do? Stop evaluating what a team member is doing, and start evaluating what a team member is achieving. Two different things. 

“Doing” is short term. “Achieving” is long term. Doing is about being busy. Achieving is about being effective. Doing is about appearances. Achieving is about outcomes. Doing may appear efficient. Achieving may appear disjointed. 

What we are working on in the moment is less important than what we are achieving over time. 

by Jonathan

Jonathan Wilson is the CEO of Sandcastle, a leadership training and development consultancy. He frequently speaks and writes about building high performance teams. Jonathan regularly presents his latest findings and insights to business and government leaders at local, state, and national association events (both in-person and virtual). His first book, Future Leader: Rebooting Leadership to Win the Millennial and Tech Future is available now.

Tagged: Leadership

Published on: December 11, 2019

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