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cover of episode Fix Underperformance On Your Team With These 3 Tactics | Ep 246

Fix Underperformance On Your Team With These 3 Tactics | Ep 246

2025/2/28
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Build with Leila Hormozi

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我将分享如何系统地解决团队成员表现不佳的问题。这并非简单的责备,而是需要领导者从设定清晰的期望开始,建立有效的问责制体系。首先,设定清晰的期望至关重要。这包括在招聘阶段就明确职位描述、公司价值观、品牌承诺、部门目标以及个人的KPI。只有当团队成员明确知道成功的标准是什么,他们才能朝着目标努力。模糊的目标只会导致借口和低效。 其次,建立自我衡量工具能够有效追踪和改进绩效。与其由领导者衡量,不如让团队成员自己追踪他们的进度。这可以通过周报、每日记分卡、利用率指标、KPI报表或调查问卷等方式实现。自我衡量能够提高团队成员的责任感,并促使他们主动改进。研究表明,那些定期衡量自己绩效的人更有可能采取行动来提升表现。 最后,持续的反馈和强化是改进绩效的关键。问责制不是一次性的谈话,而是一个持续的过程。领导者需要定期给予反馈,指出团队成员表现的不足之处,并帮助他们找到改进的方法。同时,也要积极肯定他们的进步,奖励他们的努力,而不是只关注完美的结果。持续的反馈能够放大团队成员的努力,并确保他们朝着正确的方向前进。 总而言之,解决团队绩效问题,关键在于建立清晰的期望、有效的自我衡量机制和持续的反馈机制。这并非微观管理或苛刻批评,而是创造清晰度、衡量进度和持续给予反馈的过程。问责制的文化始于领导者自身,领导者需要以身作则,设定标准,才能带动整个团队的转变。

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Underperformance isn't just about them. It's actually about you. How you handle it determines whether you fix the problem or you let it spiral into something worse. Here's the thing. If someone on your team isn't meeting expectations, accountability is the solution. And it doesn't start with them. It actually starts with you. I used to hear people say, "You just need to hold them accountable." And I'm like,

What does that mean? Nobody ever explained to me how to do this thing. It's like, be honest, trust people, hold them accountable. Okay, but how? And so this video isn't theory, it is tactical. I'm gonna show you how to address underperformance step-by-step so you can fix the problem at its root and get your teammate back on track. The first thing in the formula for accountability is set clear expectations.

Most underperformance starts because there are no clear expectations. If your team doesn't know what success looks like, how can they hit the mark? Fuzzy goals and vague directions just create excuses for underperformance. While if you have crystal clear expectations, you eliminate all that ambiguity. And so the question becomes, how do I set clear expectations? Expectations start when you are hiring the person. Do you have a clear job description that

actually says what the person's doing? Do you have core values that tell someone what the culture is and what it isn't? Do you have a brand promise around what your delivery is for your customers? Are you fast? Are you good? Are you cheap? Are you what? Do you have expectations for the department that they're in? Does the sales team know how many sales to make? Does the finance team know what our revenue target is? Do you have role expectations?

Do they know what their KPIs are tied to their roles? And do you have a company mission? All of these things tie into expectations. And if you don't have any one of those things, this is a great opportunity to go ahead and say, great, I can set more clear expectations. The question to ask yourself, did I tell them what good looks like?

The vision you have in your head for what good is, they need to know that vision. You can't expect what you didn't explain. Here's the thing that I've learned. Most people want to do well.

Most people want to win and most people want to feel good about themselves. Almost every time that I've had a teammate that's underperforming, it has been because expectations were not crystal clear. Even as of recently, I had someone on a team who was underperforming and then I went to their boss. Their boss is saying, I'm not sure if this person is going to make it. And I went to them and said, did you clearly

"explain to them what your expectations were. "Have you told them as clearly as you've told me?" And that person said, "No." I said, "Great, let's have a conversation. "Let's tell them what those expectations are." They had the conversation. What happened? Within two weeks, their performance was on par with everybody else on the team. Why is that? Was it because suddenly they got the skills? No, it's because they didn't know what good looked like. They didn't know what they were expected to do and they didn't know what the standard was. The second thing you've gotta do is create a self-measurement tool. When underperformance is not tracked,

It gets ignored and only grows in the direction you don't want to. It's sort of like if you're trying to lose weight. If you want to keep weight on, don't weigh yourself. If you want to lose weight, measure yourself on the scale every day. Without metrics to measure progress, you're left relying on feelings and assumptions, which often lead to missed opportunity and course correction later. Measurement creates visibility.

It shows you where someone stands and gives them feedback. And so the question is, how do you create a self-measurement tool? Self-measurement means that you create some sort of tool where your teammate fills in their progress rather than you. So a lot of people think, oh gosh, holding people accountable is going to be so much work. Well, it's not because the most effective way to hold somebody accountable is to have them measure their own performance.

You can do this through having them fill out an end of week report, having them fill out a scorecard every day, having them fill out utilization metrics,

having them follow KPIs that they have to fill out on a daily basis, or having them submit surveys. The most important thing is that they do the measuring, not you. Because people who measure their own performance are three times more likely to take action to perform better. There's a study done and it had a group of people during the holiday season. And what they did is they had one group of people who didn't weigh themselves.

and they had another group of people who weighed themselves every day. Here's what happened. The group that didn't weigh themselves, they actually gained weight during the holidays. Now, what happened to the group that did weigh themselves? They lost weight during the holidays. These people did not go on a diet. They didn't go on a meal plan. They didn't work out. They didn't change nothing. They were just conscious of their weight. The same goes for performance. If you simply measure something, it almost always goes in the direction you want it to. The next step

is reinforce. Underperformance doesn't fix itself. Okay, it needs consistent feedback and follow up. Okay, and so many leaders address an issue once and assume it's going to stay solved forever. But without consistent follow through and reminding and reinforcement, underperformance continues to be the norm. Feedback

AKA reinforcement, is the only multiplier for accountability. If you give somebody more feedback, they will improve performance faster and better. If you give somebody less feedback, they will improve slower and not as well. It is the only thing that can multiply the efforts of your teammate. And without it, underperformance will absolutely continue to be the norm. So the question is, how do you provide that kind of feedback?

Here's the thing. Accountability is not a single conversation. It is an ongoing process. And so what you want to do is that you have the expectations. You've tied those expectations to a measurement. And then they are going to report that measurement to you. What you do next is called feedback. Telling them if they're at an 8 out of 10, how do you get to a 10? If they're at a 6 out of 10, how do you get to a 10? What are the tactical steps to get there? And calling out their wins when they've made progress.

Just because they're not a 10 doesn't mean that you say you suck. It means that you can still congratulate them for being a six because yesterday they were a five. Reward them for progress, not perfection. Reinforce the fact that they're going in the right direction and remind them of the steps

to get to attend if they're not there yet. You have expectations and then you have performance. Accountability is the glue that brings those two together. Underperformance is a symptom of low accountability. If you fix accountability, you fix the problem. And it's not about micromanaging. It's not about being harsh. It's about creating clarity, measuring progress, and consistently giving feedback.

That's it. And remember this, the culture of accountability starts with you. Be the example, set the standard, and watch how your team transforms. This is a part of a new series where I'm going to share tactical advice on leadership and business fundamentals. If you want more like this or you like this format, let me know in the comments and let me know if you've got specific topics or challenges that you want me to address.