$schemamarkup = get_post_meta(get_the_ID(), 'Schema', true); if(!empty($Schema)) { echo $ Schema ; } How to Improve Your Results: The Score Isn't the Game

Karin’s Leadership Articles

How to improve results

How to Improve Your Results: The Score Isn’t the Game

by | Mar 9, 2015 | By Karin Hurt, Results & Execution |

Your Customer Doesn’t Care About Your Internal Scorecard: A Practical Way to Improve Results

Your customer doesn’t care about your internal scorecard. If you want to improve your results stop talking about the score.

One Thing That Won’t Work to Improve Your Results

Sarah’s face winced as the hourly stack rankings beeped through her smartphone. She didn’t have to say a word, I knew that look from the inside out. I’ve been on the frantic receiving end of such beeps. Hourly results coming in 15 times a day–quality, efficiency, sales–all neatly stack ranked as a constant reminder I wasn’t doing enough. And just in case the beeps didn’t get my attention, at least one or two of the hourly blasts were typically followed up by a call from my boss, “Have you seen the numbers?”

Sarah interrupted my painful flashback. “I’m sorry, but I’ve got to huddle the team. We’ve got to get to 94 by the end of the day.” “What are you planning as your key message?” I asked. She looked at me as if I was crazy, “94.”

When I met with her team later in the day and asked what success looked like, I got more of the same.

“94, 540, and 56.” Well, at least they were consistent.

Sarah’s message to her team was loud and clear– they had to move the needle on metrics. But talking about a number does nothing to empower or teach employees the behaviors they need to be successful.

To improve your results, see also: 6 Habits of  Highly Successful Virtual and Hybrid Teams

5 Ways Focusing on the Score Lowers Performance

Metrics matter. A balanced scorecard, with well-selected KPIs, will reinforce your strategy and align actions with goals. But when the metrics are the message, the business suffers. If you’re experiencing any of these symptoms, check your messaging. Don’t let the urgent need to improve your results distract your team from a long-term win.

1. False Sense of Competition

Your competition isn’t the team down the hall, your competition is mediocrity.  If, “We’ve got to beat Joe” is a louder rally cry than “Make a genuine connection with every customer,” or ______(insert your most important business behavior here), your smack talk is backfiring and it’s time to regroup. Improve your results by focusing on key behaviors.

2. Gaming

I’m always astounded by the creativity and lengths some employees will go to game the system. If they would spend as much time improving the quality of their work as working the workaround, they’d be knocking results out of the park. Talking only to metrics encourages such gaming, which wastes time and often gets people fired.

3. Volatile Performance

You can’t truly respond to metrics on an hourly (or even daily) basis. And your reaction is likely more annoying than helpful. If metrics go up when you rant, scream, or dress like a superhero, and then come right back down, take a step back and plan a consistent approach to reinforce key behaviors, again and again– five times, five different ways.

4. Unintended Consequences

If “I fixed this, but broke that” sounds like the sad country music soundtrack of your team’s performance, you’re likely focused on one or two KPIs, rather than the key game-changing behaviors that will lead to lasting performance. In every business, there are one or two vital behaviors that will improve your overall scorecard. Be sure you’re focusing on those early and often, and use them as foundation from which to build.

5. Stupid Decisions

This happens at all levels, but can be particularly disastrous when an executive becomes focused on a short-term adrenaline shot to force up results. “Oh, sure we can bring on 500 people in 10 weeks to get the contract” is not rational thinking. Focus decisions on what will lead to consistent upward trends and sustained performance.

The secret to sustained results over time is identifying the behaviors that matter and executing on them every day. Respond to consistent improvement and celebrate upward trends, not flash in the pan reactions to an urgent call to action.

You May Also Enjoy These Related Articles to Improve Your Results

And download the first few chapters of our book Winning Well: A Manager’s Guide to Getting Results– Without Losing Your Soul for free here.

How to Encourage Your Team When Results Are Disappointing

How to Hold a Remarkably Effective Team Huddle

Pushover No More: It’s Never Too Late to Practice Team Accountability

 

Want more human-centered leaders in the workplace? Share this today!

Want more human-centered leaders in the workplace? Share this today?

94 Comments
  1. Annemarie Viljoen

    Great article, and spot-on. it is easy to focus on the short-term wins, even if this may be rewarding behaviours that will be bad for the business in the long run. It takes vision and discipline to resist this and focus on the behaviours that will make the business consistently successful

    Reply
  2. Steve Borek

    Wow, I can’t imagine the pressure of getting real time sales stats. I thought monthly was exhausting.

    I agree, consistent action driven by behaviors and motivators. Many lose site of the consistency part.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Thanks, Steve. Indeed it is, and those messages can be scarily addictive at the same time.

      Reply
  3. Dan Rockwell

    Hi Karin,

    During the game glance at the scoreboard but focus on the way you play your game. I’m with you, over-reaction to short-term numbers is a disaster.

    We need leaders with enough courage to develop a game plan and let the players play. Of course we need to adapt as we go. But, constantly reacting is not the same as learning and adapting.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Dan, Great to see you here (and Greetings from the Great Ideas conference in Orlando). You raise such an important point… we do need more such courage. Game on!

      Reply
  4. Terri Klass

    Focusing on the numbers doesn’t usually work unless the people involved with those numbers have a say. That is why leaders who have direct contact with customers need to be part of any scorecard setting.

    I love your idea of not making our decisions strictly based on what our competition is doing but rather on what is meaningful for each of us and our organizations.

    Thanks Karin!

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Terri, Thanks so much. Great add. I agree, helping teams come up with the best process measures to gauge their progress as they work toward bigger goals can be very impactful.

      Reply
  5. LaRae Quy

    Love this comment: “But when the metrics are the message, the business suffers.”

    Short term fixes are not the answer…identifying a trend and then showing people how to catch its tail is being a leader. Not reacting to metrics…

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      LaRae, yes! Trends are where the real meaning is. Thank you!

      Reply
  6. Chery Gegelman

    Karin -The title of this post pulled me in. Your points are so simple and so powerful and so often missed! You can’t cure an illness with a Band-Aid and you can’t win games if you don’t play well.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Chery, Great to see you here. Thanks so much. Yup, you gotta play well to win 😉

      Reply
  7. Tim

    Karin – I am preparing to deliver a message to a group of about 300 employees next week. My first slide says “Financial Update” based on my title. I stared at that for several minutes last night thinking how it didn’t fit. Although I am in the finance department, my intent is on delivering a leadership message, not a finance update. I started thinking about the scoreboard, and wanted to come back to this post from last week as many of my thoughts were about the behaviors to drive results, not the results we actually wanted. I Love Dan’s response of focusing on playing the game, not on the scoreboard. I always appreciate the thoughts, and comments I get from your posts.
    Thanks – Tim

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Tim, Awesome! Thanks so much. I wish more “finance guys” would think like that 😉 Have fun with your message, I know you will nail it.

      Reply
  8. Patricia Bradford

    From a college graduate perspective, exploring this topic in the company you want to start a career with is vital. It is important to know how they focus on performance and measure it. Also knowing whether the company prides itself on short term or long-term performance goals is essential. We all want longevity and I believe assessing the company from this perspective will help you determine if it can be achieved where you are.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Patricia, I REALLY AGREE with you. Knowing how you’re measured is so important when starting a new job or a new role within the company. When interviewing for a new role at Verizon I would always ask what “leading” would look like in that job (that was our highest performance appraisal rating) and then I would go for that.

      Reply
  9. xinyue yan

    Numbers just tell one side of the story, it does not recognize the effort people put into the process to get the result. I understand this world is result-oriented, a lot of things such as salary, bonus, scholarship depends on what kind of result is getting. However, if we only focus the numbers, we could fall shorted sighted and lose our vision in the long term.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Xinyue, I so agree… behaviors will impact long-term results and trust.

      Reply
  10. Stephen (Se Hoon) Kim

    As a graduate student, reading through the article, I was able to put myself into the virtual situation where I have to deal with being evaluated at my future work. Nowadays, exchanging feedback each other and sharing evaluations are almost inevitable in the business world, or even life time. But I think, as mentioned above, it is important to look for the consistency and the long-term performance indicators, rather than short-term. Short-term solution can be a bandage, but it can’t fix the whole wound. Thank you!

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Stephen, Excellent thoughts! I’m so with you. It’s so important to look for consistency and long term indicators.

      Reply
  11. Sakib Tauhidul

    I believe employees can have the balance score card in their mind and have an open communication with management and provide suggestions on areas employees feel can contribute to the company’s well being:

    1. Employees can ask themselves about how customers see the company and how can company improve the image? (customer perspective)
    2. Employees can ask themselves on what areas the company can work more efficiently? (internal business perspective)
    3. Employees can ask themselves how the company improve and create value? (innovation and learning perspective)
    4. Employees can think of ways to reduce cost? (financial perspective)

    Open communication is needed and management should be willing to listen to employees.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Sakib, Beautiful. Your questions are almost a blog post in themselves. Thank you.

      Reply
  12. Jingting Li

    Short-term focused strategy usually leads to quick win since it frequently sets up goals, and once achieved, a new set of goals will come up quickly. However, on the long run, it could leads to massive problems such as lack of consistent ability and the company will easily lost the view of “the big picture.” A good example is “Agile development” in the Engineer world. Usually a project needs detailed documentation, which serves as a blueprint before implementation. However, Agile development focuses on create pieces small parts one after another, without knowing weather they can combine to the final project. What’s worse, senior employees may easily lost motivation and just let younger employees finish seemingly “small tasks.” The quality of the whole project will almost certainly be questionable.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Jingting thanks so much for expanding the conversation with your excellent example.

      Reply
  13. Olivia Cortese

    Sarah’s organization is a perfect example of a company that is lacking organizational health. Her team may be able to achieve some short-term sale goals but this strategy comes with its costs. Measuring success by meeting short-term metric goals will not lead to sustainable or long-term success. Part of achieving sustainable performance is management changing their focus from short-term performance metrics to looking at the big picture. I think the balance score is a perfect method for setting the right goals and focusing beyond the numbers to achieve better quality and success.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Olivia, yes, thank you. A more balanced scorecard is a useful approach.

      Reply
  14. Jing Xiao

    I agree with No.5 “Stupid Decision”. In this competitive society, people need to complete very months’ goal. (i.e. Sales number). People will just focus on their short-term numbers instead of long-term plan. Some company will get a large amount sales number by every end’s month .This way people can complete their work, however, they just focusing on numbers instead of their performance. People should build a long-term plan in order to promote their product and complete their target for work.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Jing, Indeed. It’s important for companies to consider that when creating incentive programs and compensation plans.

      Reply
  15. Jingan Lou

    Such a great article! We often get unintended consequences and focus on only one or two KPIs afterwards. However, business is much more about the overall situation and there are some other KPIs that influence the scorecard more. In my case, I often forget to focus on vital behaviors at first and spend much more time to get expected results. Pay attention to key game-changing behaviors would not only save time and money but also strengthen your sense of accomplishment.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Jingan. Thank you.

      Reply
  16. Sulun Yao

    As a good leader, he or she should have a long-term view. Do not waste time on some meaningless behaviors or only focus on metrics. This article provides a good checklist for leaders to consider whether their teams are distracted from a long-term win. Although metrics seems important, I believe that any scores only represent past results. Good leaders should focus on the future opportunities and try to build long-term value for their firms.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Sulun,
      Beautiful addition. Yes leadership is about the future.

      Reply
  17. Dandan Xu

    I always believe score is a relatively fair method to evaluate performance but not everything. We should try to get a high score but if we care too much about the score, the results may be just the opposite to what we wished. I especially have resonance for the point “false sense of competition”. In middle school, teacher always asked us to set a goal before each exam and some good students in class always wanted to beat each other in the exams. However the results showed that overcoming ourselves can bring better scores than trying to beating some else. In real work, score is always related to many other results, which makes the score more important than in school. In this case, We should try to get high score through improving our performance, not through some improper ways.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Dandan, Yes! Upward trends and striving for a “”personal best” can be very motivating.

      Reply
  18. Bingyi Xiang

    Internal competition really is a double-edged sword. It encourages innovation and cost saving but companies should think twice before going down that road. Because internal competition will also case dysfunction in company, like avoidance of accountability and inconsistencies in short-term goal and long-term goal. Companies should focus on big picture and sustainability and prevent distraction from short-term goals.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Bingyi, I agree. I think internal competition can be very useful if it’s kept in check… but when it goes too far it can be destructive.

      Reply
  19. Hanxia Zhang

    From this article, it is obvious that wrong ways focusing on the scores will decrease the efficiency and have a side effect on the team relationship. There is an old Chinese saying “Friendship first, competition second.” A false sense of competition would probably raise personal conflicts and ruin a team. Teammates are more than just competition, but need to pay more attention on collaboration and common goals. The whole is greater than the sums of the parts. Scores can be also used by this theory.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Hanxia, I love that saying! Thanks for sharing.

      Reply
  20. TONG XU

    I completely agree with this article. The score isn’t the game, Winning in a task in not only the thing that forces us to do that task. Instead we learn something new and it gives us a proper feedback. We need to encourage persistence and focus on the consistent upward trends, so that we will have sustained performance.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Thanks for raising the important subject of persistence. I so agree.

      Reply
  21. Johana Ducatman

    Nowadays, the business world is evaluating performance and results based on metrics or numbers. However, good leaders should encourage their teams to be consistent with behaviors that would lead to those results and understand the reasons behind those behaviors in order to be successful and have a sustained performance. Thank you!

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Johana, I agree. If you focus consistently on the right behaviors, results will follow.

      Reply
  22. LU CHEN

    As a graduate who will go to work soon, I learn something important from this article: Focus on the long-term win! In real world, we might focus on what can make our score looks great in the short term during working time. However, focus on the short-term might be weakness for the company from long-term perspective. What we need to do is as the article says: Respond to consistent improvement and celebrate upward trends.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Lu, excellent. Thanks.

      Reply
  23. LU CHEN

    As a graduate who will go to work soon, I learn something important from this article: Focus on the long-term win! In real world, we might focus on what can make our score looks great in the short term during working time. However, focus on the short-term might be weakness for the company from long-term perspective. What we need to do is set up a long term goal and try our best to achieve it step by step.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Yes, wining involves reaching for a long-term goal and working to win at every step.

      Reply
  24. Yichun Suo

    This article conclusively states that a leader should focus on consistency approach and long-term performance, rather than short-term. As the article says, if people spend time improving the quality of work than just working around, they will knock results out of the park. Short-term plan can only get the temporary success, But the success that gets from long-term approach is unbelievable.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Yichun , thanks for reinforcing the issue of consistency.

      Reply
  25. Yuan Yuan

    We need build a goal-oriented team in order to obtain long-term win. The very first step is set up the goal according to the desired result what we want to achieve. It is not a competition with others but a challenge for ourselves. We need often examine what we have done to see if go against the achievement of the origin goal then adjust and continue.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Yuan, Great add…. clarity around a unified goal is an important start.

      Reply
  26. Xinyue Tao

    Unintended Consequences happen a lot during the pursuit of both short term and long term goals. But if the leaders remained vigilant for intentions, and learn to anticipate and identify these unintended consequences, he will be in a better position to make effective decisions and address problems.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Xinyue, Great add. Anticipating and planning for potential unintended consequences can make a real difference.

      Reply
  27. Qiqi Lu

    “Score” is one of the most important facts to evaluate a business, as well as an employee. However, the measure of sales performance itself is far from being sufficient in evaluating the “score”. Businesses should focus on promoting productivity and efficiency among all employees, instead of blindly creating internal competitions between employees. As for employees, they should concentrate on constantly improving themselves in a sustainable and effective way. Although being on top of the stack rank will bring the employee additional benefits, the cut-throat competition between employees will result in reduced efficiency. If employees could work coherently and effectively, the performance of the business will be improved, and thus benefits are granted for everyone as well.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Qiqi, excellent. your point could be a blog post in and of itself.

      Reply
  28. Wooram Joo

    I have seen many situations that people often focus on short-term performance. In my experience working in the insurance company as financial accountants, sales employees focus on daily, weekly, and monthly performance. They even made a chart to pay attention sales figures “who is in the 1st place and bottom place. As result of this, some sales are imperfection which resulted in legal litigation with customers. I definitely agree with your opinion. Establishing a long-term performance measure such as “Golden Circle” we learned last class will be changing an organization healthy.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Wooram, Thanks for sharing your experience and excellent example.

      Reply
  29. Xueli Zhao

    The purpose of keeping a scorecard in an organization is to give a measuring tape by which someone can determine whether the prescribed has been met or exceeded. It is definitely important to use scorecard to gauge the metrics of a company, however, if your organization gets too entranced on the numbers, you will likely be disappointed. Scorecard gives you a overall view of the development needs and business objectives, it is does not paint the whole picture. People should focus on the bigger picture which could lead to sustainability and consistency .

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Xueli,
      Good analogy, it’s only part of the picture. Sustainability is key.

      Reply
  30. Emma(Xuyang) Hao

    I cannot deny the importance of stack ranking, but too much of it will do harm to the companies. The relationship among staff will be impaired, they don’t trust others any more, what they consider is only beating someone to get a higher rank. So at this time, they are not able to focus on what they should do to improve the quality of their work, which is bad for companies in a long run.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Emma, Thanks so much. I’m curious what you like about the stack ranked approach?

      Reply
  31. meilin xu

    Great Article! False sense of competition can largely decrease the efficiency of work. Negative internal competition can cause seriously bad results. Imagine everyone try to hide what they know to keep others down. Only the helpful and cooperative working environment can benefit an organization in a whole.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Meilin, Thank you. My experience has been that greater collaboration leads to greater results.

      Reply
  32. Emma(Xuyang) Hao

    Often it is easy to get distracted from the processing work because of a low rank in a stack ranking. When seeing the bad result, I think most of us will be depressed and try to figure out why. Therefore, the process of a work is being stopped, which will impair the effectiveness and efficiency.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Emma, That’s a great point. Getting ranked low can sometimes reduce confidence and morale.

      Reply
  33. Bei Li

    I remember there was someone told me “in the workplace a good outcome is more important than how to achieve it”. In some sense, it is true because bosses only want to see the outcomes such as this month’s sales performance. And focusing on the score is an easy way to measure employee’s performance. This article is great because it lectures our managers and employees how to achieve goals healthily. In fact, sometimes quick success on short-term would hurt long-term goal or performance. Managers need to focus on the big picture of the company and train employees to have overall concept and consistent working behavior to achieve consistent improvement.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Bei, Wow… yeah ends justify the means can lead to a lot of scary behaviors, including corruption. Great add.

      Reply
  34. Ruoying Wang

    It seems like the team in the example just focus on the short-term goals. They pay more attention on the number . Like the article said, team member should pay their attention on one or two KPI and keep work on them to achieve a long-term goals. Sometimes, focus on each month’ goal will that people forget their long-term plan. A good leader should improve their score by improve their performance and focus on longterm goals.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Ruoying, Excellent summary. Thank yoiu.

      Reply
  35. Yang (Michelle) Zhou

    I can totally relate to #3. Sometimes key behaviors are not quantifiable by a simple BSC or a KPI. It is a consistent behavior which, as a leader, set an example for your fellow team members. Metrics might work in short-term but indeed, never let the metrics always be the message-abuse/obsession to the message will hurt the business in the long run.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Yang, love that “never let metrics be the message.”

      Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Yang, love that “never let metrics be the message.” Excellent

      Reply
  36. Yayi Wang

    The messages gave me insights into my graduate student life. I realized that I have focused too much on short term goals, such as good news from job recruiter, but forget I am here to receive precious education that can enrich me to live a long and meaningful life. I also realized, in addition to just focusing on tests, there are many ways to gain education. One way to learn is to communicate and exchange knowledge with others.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Yayi, Ahh excellent! I’m so glad it helped you with keeping this important perspective.

      Reply
  37. Zhuyue Li

    The situation in the article reminds me of the leadership style of Elon Musk, the CEO of Tesla Motors. He manages the company by pushing employee to solve every challenge in abnormally short time unstoppably. This leadership makes Tesla a wonderful company, but at the same time, lots of employees struggle and suffer in the enterprise culture where demanded requirements are worshiped. I believe requirements and metrics are important in leading the employees to finish their task but how these requirements and metrics are instilled should be considered meticulously by the leaders. Leaders should not focus on the results merely; what they need pay more attention to is to cultivate a healthy enterprise culture.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Zhuyue, Thanks for sharing your excelletn example.

      Reply
  38. Xinhua Mai

    Score is made up with different perspectives in a company but sometimes it is hard to find out the the exact problem. The five symptoms above give a detailed metrics on judging the company. They are easy to detected and corrected. From a graduate’s perspective, I think these help me to have a better understanding of my future employer quickly.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Xinhua, Great. Glad you will be on the lookout.

      Reply
  39. Zishen Wang

    I definitely agree with the article on the importance of consistence. The performance of a team should not be only based on the shot-term outcomes. Instead, any members on the team should focus on planning a long-term gain for the entire team. It is truly significant to focus on the vital part and work on it on a consistent basis without. The plan should be flexible but not volatile.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Zishen, Thanks! Consistency is key.

      Reply
  40. Sixuan Wu

    Performance measure will reinforce organization’s strategy when it is done properly. However, any sort of “score” could be easily manipulated. If a sales representative is awarded by customers’ rating, he/she might goes like “I will not be able to help you unless you agree to rate VERY SATISFIED.” Does the scorecards show high satisfaction rate? MAYBE. Are the costumers really satisfied? No! If that is the case, employees may sacrifice the long term goal to achieve the short-term incentive. That’s why creating the connection between the performance measure to the organization goal is really crucial. What is truly valued should be clearly communicated to the team to avoid confusion.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Sixiuan, Such an excellent example of gaming. I see this all the time.

      Reply
  41. jing cheng

    I can’t agree with more with the no.2 rule, i believe every one will enjoy more about game than work. But actually, i think game is some similar to the work, what you can contribute in a game is still work in a work. If you really enjoy in a game, you can still have fun in a work.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Jing, What I was talking about here is when employees “game” the system and work to get the metrics up in a false way. With that said, I do agree with you that making work fun and incorporating true gaming into the environment to enhance learning or productivity can go a long way.

      Reply
  42. Lingyi Zhang

    Nowadays, I think people are more focusing on building long term relationship instead of short term relationship. It is important to exchange information with each other in the career. I think that seeking the consistency is good for a person’s career in the long term.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Linyi, I agree with you, and I think that phenomena can be very destructive to cultures.

      Reply
  43. JILEI GU

    I think it is always better to think twice before you leep. Although a good leader can make desicions on the urgent issues in the emergency situations, he has to think more thoroughly in most time. And the consistent behaviors of an executive sends a clear signal to his emplyees that the organization is in the track. The balance scorecard focuses more on the long-term objectives of the organization rather than the short-term ones which makes it a good tool for executive to control or manage the business.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Jilieu, Beautiful addition. Yes, I agree, go slow to go fast.

      Reply
  44. Hanxue Zhang

    Great article! People need to focusing on the long term business objectives rather than the short term benefits. I had a boss, who always say “that’s doesn’t matter” when facing customer’s complain. After several months, the business went through a very hard time because of accumulated customers’ complain. She was fired in the end.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Hanxue,Yikes, talk about an imperfect boss!

      Reply
  45. Sunhe Wang

    I used to be a person focusing on the numbers a lot, maybe just because it is an easy way to evaluate performance. However, a single score will not give person insight on how people reach this result, what impact your behavior will on other further events. Sometimes focusing too much on numbers could be dangerous. It is one reason why some business frauds incurred.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Sunhe, Excellent. Glad to hear your are expanding your view as you grow as a leader.

      Reply
  46. Shuchen Wu

    I really agree that the false sense of competition is a really bad decision people made to broke the company’s long term win. When some colleague works really hard and so that they make a big achievement under their effort, some other one in company may become jealous. When some one are jealous, they will make a wrong decision to compete with the guys who made a honor and achievement. It is fine to themselves, but that decision is really harmful to their company, especially in the long term. Because they will not focus on their company current aim, and move their attention from their company’s profit to themselves benefit, which is wrong.

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Shuchen, An excellent example of “self-orientation” we talked about in our session tonight. thank you.

      Reply
  47. indoblackjack.wordpress.com

    Having read this I believed it was rather enlightening. I appreciate you finding the time and
    energy to put this article together. I once again find myself personally spending way too much time both reading and leaving
    comments. But so what, it was still worthwhile!

    Reply
    • Karin Hurt

      Thanks so much. We are glad it was helpful. Lovely to have you join the conversation!

      Reply

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Other Related Articles

Karin Hurt

Karin Hurt helps human-centered leaders find clarity in uncertainty, drive innovation, and achieve breakthrough results.  She’s the founder and CEO of Let’s Grow Leaders, an international leadership development and training firm known for practical tools and leadership development programs that stick. She’s the award-winning author of four books including Courageous Cultures: How to Build Teams of Micro-Innovators, Problem Solvers, and Customer Advocates and Powerful Phrases for Dealing with Workplace Conflict, and hosts the popular Asking For a Friend Vlog on LinkedIn. A former Verizon Wireless executive, Karin was named to Inc. Magazine’s list of great leadership speakers. Karin and her husband and business partner, David Dye, are committed to their philanthropic initiative, Winning Wells – building clean water wells for the people of Cambodia.

Be More Daring

BUILD CONFIDENCE, TRUST AND CONNECTION WITH CONSISTENT ACTS OF MANAGERIAL COURAGE

Get the FREE Courageous Cultures E-Book to learn how

7 Practical Ways to be a Bit More Daring

Be More Daring

BUILD CONFIDENCE, TRUST AND CONNECTION WITH CONSISTENT ACTS OF MANAGERIAL COURAGE

Get the FREE Courageous Cultures E-Book to learn how

7 Practical Ways to be a Bit More Daring

Leadership Training Programs