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The Eroded Trust of Toyota

February 17, 2010 By: HR Whisperer Category: Employee Relations, Ethics, Leadership, OD, uncategorized

 Toyota’s recent woes with automobile manufacturing defects and the dragging of their feet in responding to the resulting safety and customer issues has left a lot of people feeling cold right now.  This, combined with the record brisk temps we’ve been having anyway  is wreaking havoc on the car buying public and our collective psyche. 

Well, maybe I’m the only one who’s collective psyche is cold.  

 John Rosevear of the The Motley Fool points out that the problem really isn’t so much the safety issues, which are bad and need fixing, but more with the “company’s longtime pattern of responding to problems with a mix of denial and foot shuffling.”

 And apparently it is going to get worse. 

John goes on to say that,

 “Officials in high places in the U.S. are getting cranky…on Tuesday [February 16th], the Department of Transportation ordered Toyota to turn over documents related to various safety issues.  That may not sound like a big deal, but it is — the DOT is aggressively looking for evidence that Toyota knew of safety defects but didn’t take appropriate action. And if they find that evidence? Oh boy.”

Suddenly, it’s getting hot in here.

Many companies have faced recalls – I distinctly remember Johnson & Johnson’s recall of its Tylenol product  as I worked for The Southland Corporation (parent company of  7-ELEVEN food stores) at the time and in the absence of our area manager had to tell our franchise owners to remove the analgesic from the shelves.  Bad situation.  Good decision.

But the product recall itself is not the entire issue; the more important issue is how the company deals with the recall. 

Which really is trust, isn’t it  – customer trust in whether or not it is safe to purchase the company’s products, and employee trust in whether or not leadership is upfront in walking the talk.

J&J’s doing a great job.  Toyota’s not.

The president of Toyota’s Georgetown, KY plant says company workers are taking the series of recalls personally.

Of course they are.

It seems that Toyota built its reputation on excellence, reliability, customer service and value.  But the company values listed on its website say:  “We believe…in hard work…that good neighbors make good company and vice versa…that the world is getting bigger, but resources aren’t…in the value of diversity – it’s what makes life interesting.”

I don’t about you, but I don’t take away anything about integrity and trust from those values.  Maybe they are implied, but if company leadership refuses to accept responsibility for its mistakes and doesn’t even acknowledge that trust and integrity are important components of doing business, then what can employees believe in?

Now, I’m not saying that if it’s not written down, it doesn’t exist.  But we do know that mutual trust is a critical factor in the employer-employee relationship.  If trust exists, employees have a pretty good idea of what company life they can expect and how the company will behave.  When that trust has been breached, as it has been with Toyota, that relationship changes dramatically.

Or maybe the relationship really wasn’t there to begin with.

The best way to maintain trust is to keep from breaking it in the first place.  Leadership integrity, as demonstrated by behavior, is crucial.  That’s Leadership 101.

So, it really is not just Toyota’s products that need to be recalled; I think it’s also time to recall its leadership.

64 Ways to Show Employee Love

January 28, 2010 By: HR Whisperer Category: Employee Relations, Leadership, Motivation, OD, Teams and Teaming, uncategorized

I was listening to the radio the other day on my way home from the ever-present swim team car pool drive (an hour and a half round trip, ugh) and heard the radio jockeys talking about Valentine’s Day and an article on they found on the Internet related to “64  Ways to Say I Love You.” 

Of course, I went to check it out and thought it was great fun – and something that would be worth translating into showing the love for employees or volunteers.

You see, we don’t do that enough.  And its been worse lately as folks are stressing over the lack of jobs and the lack of a decent economy.  Recognizing employees (and each other’s) contributions takes work – strengthening the relationship takes work – and retaining employees takes work.

So, in honor of Valentine’s day, here’s my list of 64 ways to let employees know you care. 

64 Ways to Show Employee Love

  1. Be courteous.
  2. Encourage physical and mental health.
  3. Have fun. 
  4. Don’t compare employees to each other.
  5. Give your full attention. 
  6. Trust. 
  7. Truly listen to what the employee is saying (no multi-tasking!).
  8. Be respectful.
  9. Share some humor.
  10. Be interested in the employee’s interests.
  11. Be a cheerleader. 
  12. Highlight the employee’s accomplishments.
  13. Bring in pizza.
  14. Ask for input.
  15. Let bygones be bygones; embrace the present – and the future. 
  16. Accept the fact that nobody’s perfect. 
  17. Play hooky together. 
  18. Show interest in the whole person, not  just the at-work person.
  19. Catch more flies with honey than vinegar – be nice.
  20. Apologize. 
  21. Live by the Golden Rule.
  22. Better yet, the Platinum Rule-do unto others as they like…unto them.
  23. Tell the employee you appreciate him or her. 
  24. Take a group picture and post it in your office.
  25. Encourage risk-taking and from that, learning.
  26. Talk about the day.
  27. Laugh.  Best de-stressor outside of prescription drugs.
  28. Pick your battles.
  29. Have a vision and share it with inspiration.
  30. Don’t be competitive; it’s a team effort.
  31. Forget about labels – everyone is unique and special.
  32. Don’t forget about the commonalities, though.
  33. Have an ice cream sundae contest.
  34. Watch a great teambuilding movie together like Remember the Titans.
  35. Write a “you did an outstanding job” note once a week and mean it.
  36. Share company war stories or historical (hysterical) tales.
  37. Keep your word.
  38. Have them plan the work and then work the plan.
  39. Go to a seminar together.
  40. Encourage them to join a professional association.
  41. Bake cookies in the microwave and share.
  42. Be a good idea-bouncer-offer.
  43. Show your gratitude; you really can’t do the job without them.
  44. Consider employees’ perspectives.
  45. Respect personal lives and personal time.
  46. Praise publically.
  47. Correct privately.
  48. Be a person that others want to be around.
  49. Take pride in the employee’s large accomplishments.
  50. Take pride in the employee’s small accomplishments, too.
  51. Share a sincere compliment about the employee in front of other people.
  52. Make time for the employee.
  53. Recognize that everyone makes mistakes.
  54. Give $1 lottery ticket, because they are a winner no matter what.
  55. Give space when they need it.
  56. Communicate a lot.
  57. Be honest.
  58. Ask for feedback on your leadership style.
  59. Do something constructive with that feedback once you get it.
  60. Teach tolerance.
  61. Reconnect – do a fun team building exercise.
  62. Give the benefit of the doubt.
  63. Tell them how important they are to the success of the team and of the business.
  64. Be a servant leader.

 True leadership does not dominate – it cultivates.
– HR Whisperer

Happy Holidays

December 23, 2009 By: HR Whisperer Category: uncategorized

holiday dog 2Hi, just a quick note to wish everyone happy holidays with good thoughts for all.  May your New Year be healthy, prosperous, and bright.  And may your pack leaders be full of calm, assertive energy and good cheer!