Black Friday Sale! 50% Off All Access

How to Keep a Leadership Team in Sync Some tips for how you can get everyone flying in the same direction.

By Rita J. King

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

LinkedIn Influencer, Rita J. King, published this post originally on LinkedIn.

Leadership teams are tasked with their organization's future. This requires a lot of time to think and focus, but leaders are often too busy to deliver on the most important thing they need to accomplish.

You need everybody to fly in the same direction, but instead you've got a dozen strong opinions and people digging in their heels. What can you do? After a decade of working with senior leaders around the world, I've seen the same problem manifest over and over again. Here are a few tips for successfully managing this challenge and reaching new levels of collaborative performance.

Listen, Listen and Listen

The most important thing for the team's leader to do is listen. A couple of days ago, The New York Times ran a piece about what makes some teams smarter than others. Teams with more women outperformed mostly male teams, largely because the women paid closer attention to the nuances of communication. I don't believe that this is a skill that only women can master, as I've met men who are equally good at it, but it is one that many women are trained to master from a young age, so there are more women who recognize the value of this critical skill.

In listening, the leader ensures sure each person on the team is heard and deeply understood. Each team member should be encouraged to contribute facts and opinions, even if (and especially if) those opinions fly in the face of prevailing opinion.

Related: Should You Fire a Bull in a China Shop? (LinkedIn)

This doesn't mean that the leader should have consensus from everyone. This is one of the single biggest errors in thinking that I see repeatedly. Forward motion can be held up indefinitely by the need for consensus. The leader's job is to weigh all the input and then make a decision, not wait until there's unanimous support. In a strong, healthy team, there's a lot of trust.

Hold Members Accountable

Once a course of action is determined, everyone needs to fully commit.

Period.

Accountability, like innovation, is such an overused word at this point that it's easy to forget what it means. What it means in this context is that everyone is committed to the same plan, and deviations from this commitment need to be pointed out by other members of the team and quickly corrected.

Lack of support for the plan doesn't give a team member the right to opt out. At this level, once significant time and resources have been committed to a plan, the only responsible way to opt out is to seek employment within another organization. Staying on the leadership team and passively or actively sabotaging a plan erodes its chances for success.

Eliminate Fiefdoms

I hear this a lot too: "Everybody has their own little fiefdom." What it means is that individuals are more focused on their own silos than they are on the overall success of the team and organization as a whole. The healthiest organizations switch the focus to collaboration, and accomplish this in a number of key ways.

One way to accomplish this is to carefully design meetings. It sounds like a mind-numbing starting place, but the results from a thoughtful redesign of meetings are extremely powerful. There are basic ways to do this, such as separating the contribution of facts and opinions, structuring the speaking time to limit tirades, tangents and ego, and making sure that tactical and strategic discussions do not take place simultaneously. Science House often facilitates strategic off-sites with senior leadership teams. In healthy teams, the focus stays on strategy. In weaker teams, tactics threaten to encroach.

Related: 2015 Theme: Radical Prioritization (LinkedIn)

Understanding Priorities

Another frequent comment is that "everything is a number one priority." By definition, that cannot be true. If everything is a top priority, then your team lacks priorities. This happens a lot when the strategy is not clearly established or communicated.

Senior leadership teams with lack of clarity around strategy often underestimate the impact this will have on the entire organization. A laundry list of competing priorities serves to entrench the fiefdom mentality, with each leader looking out for their own function rather than putting the needs of the organization first. It's hard, and perhaps impossible, to ask people to make sacrifices or behavior changes when these shifts aren't being modeled at the top.

Rita J. King

EVP of Business Development, Science House

A self-proclaimed futurist, Rita J. King is EVP for business development at New York City-based think tank Science House. She specializes in the development of collaborative culture, business strategy and leadership at the intersection of human nature and technology.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Living

These Are the 'Wealthiest and Safest' Places to Retire in the U.S. None of Them Are in Florida — and 2 States Swept the List.

More than 338,000 U.S. residents retired to a new home in 2023 — a 44% increase year over year.

Business News

DOGE Leaders Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy Say Mandating In-Person Work Would Make 'a Wave' of Federal Employees Quit

The two published an op-ed outlining their goals for their new department, including workforce reductions.

Starting a Business

This Sommelier's 'Laughable' Idea Is Disrupting the $385 Billion Wine Industry

Kristin Olszewski, founder of Nomadica, is bringing premium wine to aluminum cans, and major retailers are taking note.

Business News

These Are the Highest Paying Jobs Available Without a College Degree, According to a New Report

The median salaries for these positions go up to $102,420 per year.

Business Ideas

63 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2024

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2024.

Starting a Business

He Started a Business That Surpassed $100 Million in Under 3 Years: 'Consistent Revenue Right Out of the Gate'

Ryan Close, founder and CEO of Bartesian, had run a few small businesses on the side — but none of them excited him as much as the idea for a home cocktail machine.