Getting Your Team to Speak the Same Language
Most issues in business can be traced to a team communication failure, and when we look into why the communication failed, it often comes down to people speaking different languages.
Everyone works in their silos, which is fine, to a point, but not when it comes to collaboration. Sales and production can sit in the same room and have different experiences.
How do we get everyone to speak the same language? The answer is to put processes in place for safety nets along the way.
The Expectation of the Four Cs
Each year, my leadership team and I set a theme. When deciding on it, we look at what went well the prior year, what needs improvement, and the company’s long-term goals. This year, it’s the four Cs of communication.
I needed to find a way for everyone to self-assess if they communicate properly. Our four Cs make sure we speak the same language. They represent the four groups we interact with as a company: We communicate internally, with clients, trade partners, and vendors. Doing all those correctly leads to success.
When something doesn’t go well, we present it in a learning moment meeting. We gather the entire company for a learning moment so we don’t make the mistake again.
Learning Moment Meetings
When something doesn’t go well, we present it in a learning moment meeting. We handle the negativity right away, then gather the entire company so we don’t repeat the mistake.
Gathering everybody means that no matter the position, we all know what to look out for. Each department becomes a safety net. We also set a culture where speaking up doesn’t mean getting someone in trouble. Instead, we celebrate it.
Learning moment meetings are important because they create interactions across departments. And when we need a solution, teams come up with ideas together.
In-person handoff meetings are also critical. Those have the project salesperson, technical designer, and field personnel. Looking at the plans together gives you a set of fresh eyes. Then the team goes to the client’s home together one last time—a safety net—before the project begins.
The Leader's Role
From a leadership perspective, you need a positive attitude, even when things go wrong. It sets the tone and helps people be more open and empathize. And we instill that in our management team.
I feel the most successful as a leader when someone can come to me and ask for help instead of banging their heads against the wall.
My job as coach and cheerleader is to cultivate open communication and nurture a learning environment, and a lot of that comes down to ensuring we all speak the same language.