Question:
I work with a colleague who doesnโt honor his commitments. Heโll agree to a deadline. It passes, and then I have to negotiate to get the work done. He doesnโt report to me so I canโt fire him. How do I negotiate a different outcome?
Response:
Itโs sad in this era of high performance that people retain their positions even when they are the cause of bottleneck. At the same time, itโs important to assess whether expectations have been clearly defined and understood.
We know that different people have different definitions of what โbeing on timeโ means. For some, being 15 minutes early for an appointment is โon time.โ For others, arriving right as the clock strikes the hour hand is โon time.โ Still others find it acceptable to be 5 minutes late.
To ensure that expectations and accountability are clearly defined and understood by all parties, try this 4-step process (WWWA for short). I use it for both my personal and professional relationships. Itโs simple to implement and doesnโt require additional facilitation training.
1. Who. Define who will be accountable for each task. Someone has to be in charge otherwise, you will end up with a lot of talk and little of the right action which may lead to a good game of finger pointing โ โhe said, she saidโ โ rather than results.
Itโs a good habit to end every conversation or meeting with a discussion about follow up: What action is required? What tasks need to be completed? Who has assumed, or been delegated, the responsibility for what? The deadlines must be met.
2. What. For accountability to work, people need to know what is expected of them and when they must deliver. This is particularly important when the task is complex and requires input from different team members. In this situation, it is best to assign a team leader, someone who owns the responsibility to oversee the teamโs progress and report results to the โexecutive team.โ This eliminates the risk of power play and competitive jockeying to distract team members from their responsibilities.
A clear definition of the โwhatโ is critical for performance results. It maps out both the expectations and desired outcomes. It provides the information necessary for team members to develop their roadmap, assign tasks, evaluate their progress and course correct when necessary.
When expectations are ambiguous, deliverables become subjective. This fosters an unhealthy environment in which finger pointing and blame supercede focused effort.
3. When. Deadlines become open to interpretation when not clearly defined. Iโve attended too many meetings where people said, โIโll get this to you next week.โ Everyone nodded their head and they ended the meeting. Well, what does next week really mean? Will the deliverable show up on Monday, Tuesday or possibly on Thursday?
This often happens when a task is critical. Youโll hear people say, โThis is urgent. Get this to me ASAP.โ Well, if you were to survey people about what ASAP means, you might hear comments like: โWithin an hour.โ โRight now!โ or โBy the end of the day!โ By any measure, this is poor communication.
Team members need to agree on what specifically needs to be done, why does it need to be done (helps them prioritize) and when exactly the deadline is.
Itโs best to define the deadline upfront. โJohn, youโll get that report to Jack by the end of the day on Tuesday, right?โ John replies, โAbsolutely.โ
4. Action Steps. When youโve defined who is responsible for what and when itโs due, the next step is to follow up on the committed Action Steps. Itโs best to conduct regular โstatus updatesโ so a large gap between meetings doesnโt incur. How you handle this step is important. Donโt be interrogative. Instead, be curious. Questions like, โHowโs the project coming?โ โHave you encountered any roadblocks?โ โAre you still planning on ____ being complete by ___ date?โ โIs there anything I can do to assist you?โ will encourage team members to be conversational with you, rather than protective or defensive.
If this process fails, my next move would be to talk with your immediate manager and explain the challenges that you have experienced. Donโt be emotional or critical. Present your story with facts and figures. Ask for his/her counsel. It might be necessary for him/her to meet with this personโs boss, and then, for the four of you to convene so you can work out and agree to the ground rules moving forward.
If your performance is contingent on this person getting you key information, and he is not delivering on a timely basis, you are justified in taking this situation to a higher level.