Friday, December 23, 2016

High-performing teams, Part II - Being proactive

There is not one thing which creates a high-performing team (HPT). Trying to define the numerous aspects of an HPT culture took me an entire blog post. However, being proactive is one key attribute required for all individuals of a high-performing team.

Doing what is expected
My prior post discussed team growth expectations. In order to achieve continuous growth, each individual simply doing what is expected of them is not enough for achieving HPT status.

Take a software developer, for example. They are expected to create X features working on Y product while collaborating with their teammates. They are expected to complete those features on time, follow proper standards, and ensure their code is efficient and secure. That is the baseline. That is expected of them each and every day. While that may sound great, my view is if everyone on the team did that year after year team growth would be stagnant. (And it may get boring for the developer!)

Being proactive
Being proactive is the key to unlock exponential growth and creativity in both individuals and teams.

The definition of proactive:
Creating or controlling a situation by causing something to happen rather than responding to it after it has happened.
Take a software developer again as an example: They can be proactive in numerous ways, including identifying a new solution to a problem the team is facing (without being told, of course), implementing it, and organizing a lunch-and-learn session to ensure everyone is aware and understands the new way forward.

The key is for individuals to take the initiative in looking for ways they can help improve themselves, the team, and the company. This is often where new and creative ideas emerge, which naturally leads to learning and mastery.

The proactive expectation (and contradiction?)
I argue being proactive is therefore expected of all team members.

Does this mean, however, any proactive work is then simply viewed as par for the course? Does this mean no individual can ever be seen as going above-and-beyond?

No. The beauty of being proactive is while it is expected of everyone, there are so many ways in which it can be done. Therefore, it is impossible to define exactly how to do it, so it can never be explicitly expected.

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