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Accountability Circles

by JimRaffel on February 10, 2011

image of accountability circlesWant to stay out of trouble? Of course you do. More success comes your way when you are staying out of trouble. Besides, you wouldn’t be reading this blog is you didn’t want to be more successful. Well here’s a way to improve your success.

Create Accountability Circles

In six tips for the traveling business executive, I discussed the importance of checking in with your team. In fact, that was my #1 in the list of six tips. Lately, I’ve been thinking a great deal about how that one relatively minor adjustment had dramatically improved my business.

It sounds like such a simple thing: Pick up the phone around 9 a.m. every morning no matter where you are and check in with your business partner. Trust me, some days remembering and finding the time are tricky but I manage to make it happen about 3-4 times each week.

What’s really happening with these calls is Mike and are becoming more accountable to each other than we have been in the past. First, I share status updates from the customer side of the business with him. Then, together we work out what the priorities of the back-room side of the business should be.

During our daily calls, short-term is the next 24 hours and long-term is the next seven to 30 days. Anything on our plate that requires us to think further out than that we set aside for an afternoon meeting. The key is short-term customer-centric thinking.

The average call takes thirty minutes or less, and I feel the payback is several additional hours of productivity each week for both of us. We are working on the right tasks when we should be and not shifting from task to task as frequently.

Because I know on any day Mike could ask me about a critical customer relationship, I need to make sure I stay up to speed on all of those. Because Mike knows that on any given day I will ask him about the critical projects, he needs to have the key information for those at his finger tips.

That’s the accountability circle that makes us both more productive and better business partners. We bring very different skill sets to the business and basically stay out of each other’s way. That does not, however, mean we can fail to communicate.

By improving our communication, we have also become more accountable to each other and by extension to our customers and partners. Your mileage may vary but that’s how it’s worked out for us.

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Continue Reading 2 comments }personal development, Small Business 101

Trust Circles Influence Communication Types

by JimRaffel on March 16, 2010

The concept of social media circles of trust has caused me to revisit my Three Types of Communication post from last June.

I was dealing with trust issues in my life when I wrote Three Types of Communication. In the previous six months I had made many bad choices inconsistent with my long-term life goals. I felt I could no longer trust my own instincts.

In the eight or so months since I wrote that post I have….

Met new people through social media like Twitter who support and encourage my strengths.

Found it interesting to meet people face-t0-face whom I already felt like I knew through on-line communication.

Realized accurately accessing someone’s trustworthiness face-t0-face goes much quicker when you have known them on-line.

Learned to trust people I meet on-line who have street cred.

Together with my wife began to form circles of trust with many of the people we have had communication with on-line.

For those who fall inside my circles of trust

I am more comfortable relaying on written communication.

I am more willing to use rich media communications forums even for complex business discussions.

I absolutely love spending time with you face-to-face.

I’d be interested to know if the level of trust you feel with someone influences the communications mediums you are willing to utilize with them?

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Continue Reading 2 comments }blogging, goals, motivation, personal development

Trust as Currency

March 10, 2010

Today I experienced first hand what if feels like to hold the currency that is the trust of another human being. Early in the day I learned that a new customer has chosen to go with my proposal based upon the recommendation of “Fred,” a customer I wrote about in my Regaining Trust post. Later [...]