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Leveraging Senior-Level Conflict to Drive Growth and Innovation
“When we avoid difficult conversations, we trade short-term discomfort for long-term dysfunction.” — Peter Bromberg, organizational development consultant Dysfunction in the executive suite can doom an organization. Many senior leaders, fearful of conflict among those closest to them, strive for artificial harmony — inadvertently squelching debate on issues critical to the company’s strategic growth and […]
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“When we avoid difficult conversations, we trade short-term discomfort for long-term dysfunction.”
— Peter Bromberg, organizational development consultant
Dysfunction in the executive suite can doom an organization. Many senior leaders, fearful of conflict among those closest to them, strive for artificial harmony — inadvertently squelching debate on issues critical to the company’s strategic growth and its capacity for innovation.
Experts in workplace dynamics advise leaders to reframe conflict — not as a negative to be avoided, but as an opportunity to stimulate innovation.
“Conflict is productive,” says Patrick Lencioni, author of “The Five Dysfunctions of a Team.”
Research links higher workplace engagement to the ability to speak one’s mind at work. In their study, “The State of Miscommunication,” sponsored by Fierce Conversations and Quantum Workplace, the authors found that, in surveying 1,300 people, those who said they always or almost always speak their minds report being more engaged at work than those who said they never or almost never did so.
Building skills
So, let’s say a leader knows that he/she should be embracing conflict and leveraging it productively. But the leader may lack the skills and the necessary emotional control.
Gerry Pierce, VP of innovation at Smart Recipe Consulting LLC in Rochester and former senior VP of human resources at Wegmans Food Markets Inc., emphasizes the value of facilitation skills for leaders whose role requires them to productively manage conflict and unlock the door to innovation.
Executive coaching and well-chosen training programs, Pierce says, can strengthen a leader’s facilitation skills. At the highest levels of an organization, he notes, where the stakes are high and the egos are large, respectful listening is particularly crucial.
He describes a scenario where conflict erupts in a meeting: An energized team member dominates the discussion with strong opinions, threatening to derail the meeting. To redirect the outspoken person’s energy, Pierce advises his clients to adapt the skill of mirroring, popularized by Stephen R. Covey and others. He suggests respectfully interrupting the dominant person and reflecting his words back to him: “If I understand you correctly, you believe we’re wasting time by pursuing X.” He may then ask others in the room to comment on the outspoken person’s points.
Once the outspoken person is heard, Pierce says, both he and the group tend to relax. By deftly managing the dominant speaker, the facilitator not only brings the conversation back onto a constructive track, but he/she also creates an opening for the quieter people around the table to offer opinions.
In workplace cultures where consensus is valued, the meeting leader may hear out everyone at the table and announce a decision on the spot, explaining her rationale and insisting that the decision be supported wholeheartedly. Such approaches can work well in organizations where trust, respect and patience are valued.
But not all leaders aim for a consensus model.
Alternatives to consensus building
“Consensus is good, but it’s too slow,” says Christophe Weber, CEO of Takeda Pharmaceutical, “and sometimes you end up with the lowest common denominator.” Weber is quoted in a Harvard Business Review article titled, “What Sets Successful CEOs Apart,” summarizing research on CEO effectiveness.
“When tackling contentious issues, leaders who are good at engagement give everyone a voice but not a vote,” report researchers Elena Lytkina Botelho, Kim Rosenkotter Powell, Stephen Kincaid, and Dina Wang.
They contend that “engaging for impact” — anticipating conflict and harnessing its transformative value — is crucial to CEO success.
The researchers cite other models of CEO success, such as Madeline Bell, CEO of Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia.
“With any big decision,” they quote Bell as saying, “I create a stakeholder map of the key people who need to be on board. I identify the detractors and their concerns, and then I think about how I can take the energy they might put into resistance and channel it into something positive.”
While Bell says she assures stakeholders that their input is important to the process, “(the leader has) to be clear that you’re making the call and you expect them on board.”
Beware ulterior motives
A note of caution: Not all conflict is a rich resource just waiting to be tapped. Particularly in cultures where trust is low, certain conflict can be dangerous.
Patrick Lencioni writes: “(In some teams,) arguments are often destructive because they are laced with politics, pride and competition, rather than humble pursuit of truth. When people who don’t trust one another engage in passionate debate, they aren’t usually listening to the other person’s ideas and then reconsidering their point of view; they’re figuring out how to manipulate the conversation to get what they want.”
Apple founder Steve Jobs, too, understood the value of rooting out ulterior motives and potential sabotage. “It’s OK to spend a lot of time arguing about which route to take to San Francisco when everyone wants to end up there. But a lot of time gets wasted in such arguments if one person wants to go to San Francisco and another secretly wants to go to San Diego,” he said.
Building a ‘voice-empowered culture’
In reporting on the Fierce/Quantum research on workplace engagement, Dana Wilkie of the Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM) provides leaders with some guidance for creating a “voice-empowered culture”:
• Build a foundation of trust where leaders communicate transparently, remain accessible, and exercise consistency in dealing with employees and other leaders.
• Create an environment of safety that requires leaders monitor the ways they react to feedback and ideas, guarding against retaliation or shutting down.
• Welcome and support ideas, particularly those that are not yet well developed.
• Show vulnerability by inviting others to critique the leader’s early ideas, and admitting to being unsure or wrong.
• Explain how the team’s input is being used.
Conclusion
The best leaders are good listeners, according to Pierce, and know how to manage conflict with a process that builds trust and respect. It is important for everyone on the team to have an opportunity to be heard he says, because healthy conflict stimulates innovation.
Candace Walters is president of HR Works, Inc., a human-resource management outsourcing and consulting firm with offices in Rochester and Syracuse, serving clients throughout the U.S.
Proven Ways to Lose your Next Sale — And How to Avoid it
Behind their assertions of self-confidence and annoying arrogance is an undeniable fact: It takes guts to get the endless unknowns and oddities of customers. But that’s what salespeople do. At the end of the day, it isn’t how many calls you make, appointments you go on, or proposals you prepare. It’s how much revenue you
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Behind their assertions of self-confidence and annoying arrogance is an undeniable fact: It takes guts to get the endless unknowns and oddities of customers. But that’s what salespeople do.
At the end of the day, it isn’t how many calls you make, appointments you go on, or proposals you prepare. It’s how much revenue you chalk-up. Some sales are better than others, but every sale counts. After losing a sale, how many times have you said, “I can’t believe it; I was sure I had that one.”
No one sets out to lose a sale. But it happens. That’s why recognizing the danger signals can help avoid unnecessary losses. Here they are:
Deciding who will buy and who won’t
No matter what they may say, no one dislikes disappointment more than salespeople. So, they come up with the clever little trick to avoid it by claiming they can tell if a customer is going to buy or not. Having been through it so many times, they have a sense of what’s going to happen.
This thought process helps avoid the downer of disappointment. You knew the outcome, so just pick yourself up, dust yourself off, and move on. It also erases the need to analyze what you could have done differently to get the sale.
Assuming the sale is a sure thing
Because selling is a tough game, salespeople are prone to believe that having “the right attitude” they can influence the outcome of a sale. If they think the sale will go their way, it will.
Unfortunately, this approach keeps the focus on the salesperson and takes it away from the customer. To try to do both at the same time doesn’t work, as Stanford University has shown with multi-tasking research. In fact, they found that the human brain is built to do one thing at a time.
This suggests that salespeople are at a disadvantage if they try to keep the focus on both themselves and the customer at the same time. It’s counterproductive if they try, and it may send a signal to the prospect that the salesperson “isn’t all there,” which is exactly the case.
Playing the “friend game”
The salesperson’s mission is to present a compelling case for winning the order, not to make a friend or to feign friendship just to get the sale. Customers can see through such thinly veiled tricks. They’ve seen it and they don’t like being used.
More than anything, the goal is to be viewed as competent. Impress the customer by being laser-focused on the customer so that you thoroughly understand the business and the issues and can differentiate yourself from the competition.
If a friendship should occur, it will be after you get the account, not because of it.
Quitting too soon
For serious salespeople, the “Urgent” sign is lit up all the time. Get in, get the order, and get out. And it’s understandable and even commendable because that’s what gets the job done. But not always.
There are times when you can be too sure of yourself and overly confident. After giving it your best effort, you decide the prospect can’t make a decision or isn’t serious. Then, three months later you find out that the person bought from a competitor.
Some prospects put salespeople to the test, checking them out to see if they want the business.
Failing to ask discovery questions
Some salespeople can’t wait to get to the good stuff — their sales pitch. They’ve been through the drill so many times they find it distracting and a waste of time getting bogged down in asking a lot of discovery questions.
The purpose of discovery questions is not just to qualify prospects, but to engage them so they are talking about what’s important to them — their business. There are many possibilities, but here are four examples of discovery questions:
• Why did you agree to meet with me?
• What sets you apart from your competitors?
• Are there changes going on that affect your business?
• What problem are you trying to solve?
All of which is to get the right person (the customer) talking and the right person (the salesperson) listening, instead of the other way around. If you’re listening, you’re learning. When you do that well, you will know what to do to make a winning presentation.
Dispensing solutions
When customers have a problem, they are primed to look for quick, easy, low-cost solutions. You might call them “low-hanging fruit” or, more appropriately, “easy prey.” They’re in hot water and they want to get out. This is why salespeople armed with appetizing and tasty solutions get their attention.
Unfortunately, instant-fix solutions are like pills we pop to take away the pain. Customers want to believe they work, but, as we so quickly discover, they only disguise it and it doesn’t take long before it’s back. Yet, this is the sales tactic far too many salespeople utilize throughout their careers and why they have so few repeat customers and referrals.
If there’s a single objective in sales, it’s to empower customers to make decisions that are in their best interest, decisions that result in satisfaction.
Giving customers what they say they want
“What’s wrong with that? That’s why we’re in business, isn’t it,” you say. In the age of the smartphone, there is no need for salespeople who are merely “transactors,” who literally give customers what they ask for, and whose function is to scan barcodes and say, “thank you.” Robots can perform that function 24-hours a day more efficiently and at lower cost.
The smartphone age brings the essential role of the salesperson into sharp focus and, surprisingly, it’s not new — it’s the same as ever. Believe it or not, the picture hasn’t changed over time. The sales task is that of the specialist, the one who serves as an authentic resource customers can trust.
John Graham of GrahamComm is a marketing and sales strategy consultant and business writer. He is the creator of “Magnet Marketing,” and publishes a free monthly eBulletin, “No Nonsense Marketing & Sales Ideas.” Contact him at jgraham@grahamcomm.com, (617) 774-9759, or johnrgraham.com

City of Syracuse to use $20K grant to develop a financial-empowerment center
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Digital Hyve to move to larger downtown Syracuse office
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People news: Community Bank promotes Friot to chief technology officer
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Winds of Change Require a Calm Manager With Coping Skills
In today’s business world, the days of being set in your ways — as an employee and a manager — are long over. Change is a near-constant. Takeovers, downsizing, and reorganizing can turn a company upside-down overnight, and those who remain have to embrace change in order to survive. More than ever, managers have to
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In today’s business world, the days of being set in your ways — as an employee and a manager — are long over. Change is a near-constant.
Takeovers, downsizing, and reorganizing can turn a company upside-down overnight, and those who remain have to embrace change in order to survive. More than ever, managers have to be the steady hand when those beneath them are shaking with uncertainty.
Change is difficult, and organizations have to go through a change process in order to evolve. Every manager and leader should understand that they need to have a change-management process included in their strategy.
Here are three tips for helping employees cope with change.
Clear communication
Don’t let employees twist in the wind. Gaps in communication from management to employees can add anxiety and disrupt production. As much as possible, give them the “Why.” Every manager should inform their team of the change process and mentally prepare them for it. Give them the positives of the change. They need to understand that the change isn’t going to affect them adversely. Let them know they’re secure and that the change is not only good for the company, but also can be good for them. A manager will be appreciated for being upfront and upbeat, which in turn can lead to more trust and a smoother transition.
Tools for the transition
After giving them the big picture, break down the transition particulars further for employees. Providing the details of what will lead to successful change individually and collectively is important. This can include implementing training and one-on-one or group-discussion sessions. In times of change, the most important thing for managers is how they help their employees through it. Change brings insecurity and anxiety. They want to know what’s next.
Personalize it — positively
Even more relevant to each employee, create a personalized plan for them, setting expectations, goals, and putting new motivation in motion. This plan can act as a blueprint, where the manager can watch the progress step by step, and it’s a plan that can help employees grow into leaders. This kind of personalizing the transition can show employees they are valued and that they can continue to evolve with the company. They’re coming out of their comfort zone, and now they’re in this unknown area where they don’t know how to navigate. It’s important to make them aware they can move ahead with the company and be successful through certain steps.
Change cannot be implemented without a certain level of influence. A leader’s influence involves mapping out the change agents and defining how they can lead to successful outcomes.
Mayur Ramgir (www.mayurramgir.com), author of “Evolve Like a Butterfly: A Metamorphic Approach to Leadership,” is a speaker, innovator, and entrepreneur. He currently serves as president and CEO of Boston–based Zonopact Inc.
If You Want More Economic Growth, Cut Tax Rates
Here is an example showing why we should cut our tax rates. Imagine an island. It has one source of income: guests at its big hotel. They bring in all the money that circulates in the island economy. They rent rooms, eat at restaurants, rent cars, drink, and buy souvenirs. The money they spend at
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Here is an example showing why we should cut our tax rates.
Imagine an island. It has one source of income: guests at its big hotel. They bring in all the money that circulates in the island economy. They rent rooms, eat at restaurants, rent cars, drink, and buy souvenirs.
The money they spend at the hotel and elsewhere goes mostly to employees and business owners. Those folks use it to buy cars and gas, food and clothing, housing, insurance, and eat at restaurants.
The money the guests spend circulates throughout the economy — first through the employees and then through the employees’ spending.
The only way to expand the island’s economy is to bring in more guests, because they provide the only new money.
Island officials want the economy to grow — so government can collect more money in taxes. Citizens want the economy to grow — to provide more jobs, since some people have none.
So the governor urges the hotel to add on. More rooms would mean more guests, and more hotel workers, which would mean more money for the various parts of the economy.
The construction would also bring new money onto the island. That would land in construction workers’ pockets. And then circulate in the economy.
Great idea. But the owner says: No, the possible reward for my risk is too small. I have to borrow money to add more rooms. I have to spend money to promote the hotel to fill the rooms. Then if I do make profits, I have to pay a big tax on them.
If you lower the tax rate on the profits, you will increase the possible reward for me. I’ll weigh the possible reward against the risk. If my reward might be greater, I may go ahead and add more rooms. But to make it greater, you do have to lower the tax rate.
The governor says, “But you’ve got money overseas. You made it on your hotel in another country. Instead of borrowing to add on here, why not use the money you have stashed overseas?”
”Because you will tax it big time when I bring it here,” the owner says. “And then you’ll tax it big time again, when I make a profit on it. That is, if I add on. And if I manage to make profits on the add-on. So if you want me to use my offshore money, you should lower the tax rate on it.”
Some islanders see the wisdom of lowering the tax rates. But others grow envious. The hotel owner is already rich, they say. If we lower tax rates, he will only get richer.
Expand this example by millions. There are millions of businesses in America that would expand — if only taxes were lower. We’re talking big companies and small.
There are countless entrepreneurs who would take the dive off the high board. They would convert their ideas and concepts into startups. Again, if only the possible rewards were a bit higher, and if only tax rates were lower.
There are hundreds of big companies that hold mountains of cash overseas. They would bring their money back to the U.S. And invest it in expansion. If only our tax rates were lower.
We have a big push in Congress now for lower tax rates — on individuals and on businesses. We also have a push underway to lower tax rates on profits stashed legally overseas.
The problem is we also have a fierce resistance to this. We have people who want to tax companies more. They want to tax big earners more. They say they want to cut taxes only for the middle class and the poor.
That is impossible, because well over 50 percent of Americans pay no income tax. So you can’t cut taxes for them. And many of the poor do better than that. They get money back from the IRS that they never paid in. That added up to about $17 billion last year. Those are tax credits, or handouts.
Our choice is the same as the choice the islanders face in the example. We can tax our businesses — the equivalent of their hotel — more. Or we can tax them at the high current rates — and still expect them to expand vigorously.
Or, we can improve the investment environment for them — by lowering their tax rates.
We can make the pool more enticing. For the entrepreneurs who venture onto the high dive. By lowering tax rates on what profits they may or may not make.
Or we can leave rates where they are, and hope they will still create businesses and jobs galore. But hope is not a strategy.
We are like the islanders in this singular respect: If we want to expand our economy we would be smart to cut our tax rates. We would be smart to stop worrying about some company or somebody making more money.
From Tom…as in Morgan.
Tom Morgan writes about political, financial, and other subjects from his home near Oneonta. Contact Morgan at tomasinmorgan@yahoo.com. You can also read more of his writings at tomasinmorgan.com
New York’s Economic Fact vs. Fiction Saga Continues
State government has a responsibility to foster job creation and spur economic prosperity. Efforts must be made to enable businesses to put people in jobs, allowing families to put food on tables. But government also has a responsibility to be honest about its performance in that critical role. Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s narrative about New York’s
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State government has a responsibility to foster job creation and spur economic prosperity. Efforts must be made to enable businesses to put people in jobs, allowing families to put food on tables. But government also has a responsibility to be honest about its performance in that critical role.
Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s narrative about New York’s economic-development efforts has moved from bravado to hyperbole to downright fantasy. Speech after speech, press conference after press conference, the governor insists the state’s economy, especially Upstate, is on the right track. The facts tell a vastly different story.
Upstate job growth still stagnant
The governor has spent a great deal of time and energy lately traveling Upstate and touting his investment of public money and the great economic turnaround that those efforts have generated. But two recent reports indicate that New York’s economic climate and success pale in comparison to what’s happening across the rest of the nation.
The Federal Reserve Bank of New York released statistics showing upstate job growth has been an embarrassing 0.3 percent since the beginning of 2016, a rate that shows a bad situation getting even worse. Between 2010 and 2016, Upstate’s annual job growth was only 0.6 percent while the rest of the country added jobs at a rate of 1.6 percent. According to the report, job growth in Buffalo has “slowed to a crawl,” and the Rochester region has actually lost jobs in the past two years.
The statistics are bad enough. But what makes the situation worse is that New York is pouring billions of taxpayer dollars into economic-development programs that clearly aren’t working. New Yorkers are experiencing a return on investment that would get a private-sector CEO fired.
On top of stagnant job growth Upstate, New York once again has one of the two worst business climates in the nation, according to the Tax Foundation. The punishing climate in which New York business owners are forced to operate stands in stark contrast to the incessant “Open for Business” claims this state government has made for several years.
An unsustainable and expensive approach
The Assembly Minority (Republican) Conference has rallied year after year for broad, wholesale tax cuts and regulatory relief. New York needs permanent policy solutions to fix our ailing business climate, rather than gimmick programs that pick winners and losers. We will continue to fight for permanent policies that make doing business more affordable.
The state’s economic-development programs lack accountability and transparency, and are not living up to lofty promises. Job-creation statistics show a miserable return on investment for the billions of taxpayer dollars pouring into these programs. This failing approach has become a colossal waste of your hard-earned money. Ribbon cuttings and rhetoric make for great sound bites, but they don’t help New Yorkers put food on the table.
Brian M. Kolb (R,I,C–Canandaigua), a former small-business owner, is the New York Assembly Minority Leader and represents the 131st Assembly District, which encompasses all of Ontario County and parts of Seneca County. Contact him at kolbb@nyassembly.gov
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