Leading by example
How do you teach your work force that mistakes are OK as long as they learn and don’t repeat them? By being a visible example. A friend and fellow CEO states that he publishes each of his mistakes in his company internal blog along with the lesson he learned. “If the CEO can do this, he gives permission for anyone to confess as well,” he states.
Think of aviation lessons for safety’s sake
You may not know it but the National Transportation Safety Board has for years offered a reporting program for pilots, air controllers and others involved in aviation safety. Anyone reporting an accidental safety error (such as flying into restricted airspace) within ten days is granted immunity from FAA prosecution, as long as the mistake was not an intentional breaking of the law. Even NTSB understands that mistakes are learning experiences as it insulates accidental infractions from prosecution in order to learn and solve problems communally.
What is your culture?
Do you respond to an employee mistake with a warning or even punishment? If so, it is a sure thing that fear will cause your employees to hide them, cover them up with quick fixes if possible and worry over the consequence of creativity efforts or of pushing the envelope a bit.
So, here’s your question of the week:
[Email readers, continue here…] Doesn’t the whole enterprise fail a bit each time a learning opportunity is lost or someone hides actions from management? And what does it say about your corporate culture and your individual management style? Even if you condone the overreaction of others in management, aren’t you then guilty of reinforcing such a culture of punishment over learning?
Celebrate your mistakes. Others will follow.
All will learn to share for the sake of safety, growth and open culture.
Excellent insights.