The 3 Habits of Evidence-Based Leadership

nustarz Project Management

September 16, 2015 | Author: PM Hut | Filed under: Leadership

The 3 Habits of Evidence-Based Leadership

By Stacey Barr

Evidence-based leadership is not about how to lead. It’s about what to give your attention to as you lead, and what you’re leading your organization to. It’s not about how to communicate or inspire or direct or engage. It’s about how to use all these attributes to lead your organization to high-performance.

Organizational performance is one of the outcomes all leaders are responsible for. And how an organization performs is evidenced by the results it achieves, not by the work it does.

To truly know what results an organization is achieving, and how it’s getting better at this over time, those results must be measured.

Performance measures are evidence of the degree to which important results are occurring over time. Without good performance measures, we have no evidence. With no evidence, we can’t know. If we can’t know, we’re guessing. Evidence-based leaders don’t guess.

Evidence-based leaders give their attention to three habits of high-performance: Direction, Evidence, and Execution. Let’s explore…

  • EBL Habit 1: Direction is about articulating a measurable strategy.

    To be measurable in a meaningful way, a strategy must be results-oriented, understandable to everyone, and ruthlessly prioritized. And then it becomes the kind of strategy people feel compelled to make reality.

  • EBL Habit 2: Evidence is about setting meaningful performance measures for each strategic goal.

    Surprisingly, just about every strategic goal that matters can be made measurable, and measurable in a meaningful way. The most meaningful measures are quantitative, aligned to what matters, and focused on improvement.

  • EBL Habit 3: Execution is about getting the corporate strategy implemented and the strategic goals achieved.

    The best strategy execution, that produces the highest return on effort and investment, uses the leverage of continuous improvement of business processes. It’s not about ‘bolting on’ new capability, it’s about unleashing what’s there.

These three habits are the foundation of how to inspire an organization to perform better and better.

Leaders give attention to these three high-performance habits to set the direction for the organization, to monitor its progress, and to decide what change initiatives to invest in.

And giving attention to these habits is not just for leaders. It’s for everyone in the organization.

Everyone has to work in ways that help achieve the corporate direction. Everyone has to show up to work each day and know that they are contributing to something bigger and more important than their to-do list. Everyone has to get involved in tweaking and transforming the organization so it can better fulfil its mission and realize its vision.

These three habits of high-performance must become organizational habits. And that will only happen when they are habits of its leaders. So inspire your organization to practice those behaviors of evidence-based leadership and evidence-based management, by first making the habits of high-performance your habits, and then leading everyone else to adopt them too.

Discussion:

What does evidence-based leadership mean to you?

Stacey Barr is a specialist in organizational performance measurement and creator of PuMP, the refreshingly practical, step-by-step performance measurement methodology designed to overcome people’s biggest struggles with KPIs and measures. Learn about the bad habits that cause these struggles, and how to stop them, by taking Stacey’s free online course “The 10 Secrets to KPI Success” at http://var/web/site/public_html.staceybarr.com/the10secretstokpisuccess.

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