What kind of leader are you?
Jo Hands asks the question: What kind of leader are you? Leadership is a gift. It's not easy. It's not a popularity contest. It's about setting up your team for success. Sometimes as leaders we get lost. Meetings, emails, approvals and pressure and we lose sight of what is important - taking people on the journey. We've all worked for good leaders and not great leaders and therefore know what good leadership is ...I think I've learnt the most from the bad leaders that I've worked with.
Leadership is a gift. It's not easy. It's not a popularity contest. It's about setting up your team for success.
Sometimes as leaders we get lost. Meetings, emails, approvals and pressure and we lose sight of what is important - taking people on the journey.
We've all worked for good leaders and not great leaders and therefore know what good leadership is ...I think I've learnt the most from the bad leaders that I've worked with.
Three key considerations for leadership;
Lead from the heart
Consistency is key
Understand your why
Leadership evolves over time. Everyone has their own style and styles are adapted for different people but leaders that lead from the heart is critical to success.
Leading from the heart is not weak but connecting with people and driving and pulling people with a clear vision. A leader that takes this approach will get a better outcome than a stick approach.
Consistency is critical. Having a consistent style and consider how this impacts your team etc. Have you ever worked for a leader who was chaotic and you didn't know what you would get on each and every day? It creates an unproductive and toxic work environment.
Everyone has become a leader for their own reason. Know your why. Be deliberate in understanding the why and deliberate driving the outcome you want. Being passionate and deliberate will drive the best outcome for your team.
At Whiteark we are passionate about leadership and working with leadership teams to get the best out of their people. Reach out to us for a no obligation conversation and advice around managing talent.
The Chiefs Podcast | Tune in to more leadership lessons
Article by Jo Hands, Co-Founder Whiteark
Looking to hone your leadership skills? Let us help.
Whiteark is not your average consulting firm, we have first-hand experience in delivering transformation programs for private equity and other organisations with a focus on people just as much as financial outcomes. We understand that execution is the hardest part, and so we roll our sleeves up and work with you to ensure we can deliver the required outcomes for the business.
Our co-founders have a combined experience of over 50 years’ working as Executives in organisations delivering outcomes for shareholders. Reach out for a no obligation conversation on how we can help you. Contact us on whiteark@whiteark.com.au
Why I joined the Business Chicks, Business Club
Jo Hands writes about why she joined the Business Chicks, Business Club. She explains - “I’ve always loved the Business Chicks events – they are always inspiring, give you perspective and a great way to connect. The Business Chicks brand is strong and it has a strong ability to bring out the best in people.“
Image Credit: businesschicks.com
I’ve always loved the Business Chicks events – they are always inspiring, give you perspective and a great way to connect. The Business Chicks brand is strong and it has a strong ability to bring out the best in people.
Whiteark was launched in July 2020 in the middle of Covid19 and I am lucky to have an amazing Co-founder who is so supportive of me and everything we are co-creating through Whiteark. We have a great team here and 2020 was our foundational kick-off.
In January 2021 I was reflecting on finding some like-minded people that would give me connection, perspective, different experiences and an opportunity to grow. I research and joined Business Chicks Business Club.
The induction session was expectational – inspiring to see so many ladies doing great things for them and looking like me for an opportunity to connect, learn and grow. The fire side chats and virtual events have been great and I’m so excited about attending the offsite in early May 2021. An opportunity to reflect, connect, challenge and really help support each other as we grow our businesses.
In your life, you need to find your kind of people.
People how lift others higher. Who bring out the best in you. Who teach you, who support you and that always know they have your back. What I have learnt about myself from joining Business Chicks Business Club:
People genuinely looking for support / connection
Women are amazing at running their own businesses and juggling so many other commitments
It’s an environment where people want you to be successful and they are interested in you and how to support and help you
In Corporate life, it’s disappointment that it’s normally the more senior women that have made it that don’t provide the support for the women coming up the ranks, why is this? Maybe’s it’s why women go and start up their own thing and do something bigger / better for themselves. I’m passionate about supporting women – helping them find their voice, work through the things that are holding them back and giving them the opportunities to prove to themselves how amazing they are.
If you are looking for your kind of women, people to raise you up, support, connect and provide a sense of tribe – and we are in this together – look no further than Business Chicks Business Club. I’ve only just started but I feel like it’s just what I need right now and probably forever.
Need support in your organisation? Reach out.
Whiteark is not your average consulting firm, we have first-hand experience in delivering transformation programs for private equity and other organisations with a focus on people just as much as financial outcomes.
We understand that execution is the hardest part, and so we roll our sleeves up and work with you to ensure we can deliver the required outcomes for the business. Our co-founders have a combined experience of over 50 years’ working as Executives in organisations delivering outcomes for shareholders. Reach out for a no obligation conversation on how we can help you. Contact us on whiteark@whiteark.com.au
Article by Jo Hands, Co-Founder Whiteark
Leadership – your legacy
Jo Hands writes about leadership - and creating your legacy. It doesn’t mean you are old – legacy. What leadership legacy do you want to leave? What kind of leader you do want to be? What do you want to be remembered for? When I think about Legacy I think about leaders that I have had in my career. Which ones have inspired me and which one disappointed me.
It doesn’t mean you are old – legacy. What leadership legacy do you want to leave? What kind of leader you do want to be? What do you want to be remembered for?
When I think about Legacy I think about leaders that I have had in my career. Which ones have inspired me and which one disappointed me. I use this to work out what kind of leader I want to be. How about you?
Words that I want around my leadership:
Strong
Decisive
Quick to respond
Caring
Challenging
Outside comfort zone
I want to be a strong decisive leader that is focusing on the greater good of the organisation and team. Sometimes this requires you to make hard decisions but you do it for the greater good. I want to encourage, challenge my people and get them outside their comfort zone to do bigger things and know that I have there back. My role is to bring out the best in people, team and organisation and this is about finding the people to invest in and the people to manage out/exit.
Great leadership will not make you popular but it will make you respected. No one wants to be unpopular but as a leaders if you are too focused on making people like you and not upsetting people you will likely be an average leader at best. You have to make the hard decisions – you need to take people on the journey. Change management is not a person/role it’s the way leaders take the team on the journey.
Leadership is a journey – you need to fail to learn and be the best leader you can be. It’s a decision every day, it’s being honest when you get it wrong and it’s having another go the next day – it’s being resilient.
There have been a number of leaders that I have admired in my career – David McGregor from EY, David Thodey from Telstra. These leaders taught me about finding your way, being your authentic self, there is no perfect way but find your way. It is such good advice.
I have learnt just as much from the leaders I haven’t respected and it’s made me realise on the leader I don’t want to be – selfish, focused on individual gain and not taking a strong stance on unacceptable performance.
I love to learn from leaders; what works for them, what doesn’t and what they have learnt on their journey. The highlight of my week to do the Chiefs podcast focused on getting lessons and learnings from a range of different leaders. Tune in …we should add in link.
At Whiteark we are lucky to work with so many amazing leaders, to get leaders to connect and to provide thought leadership and other insights to leaders on key topics that are important to them.
If you want to know more about us, reach out for a no obligation chat.
Want to talk about building your leadership team? Reach out.
Whiteark is not your average consulting firm, we have first-hand experience in delivering transformation programs for private equity and other organisations with a focus on people just as much as financial outcomes.
We understand that execution is the hardest part, and so we roll our sleeves up and work with you to ensure we can deliver the required outcomes for the business. Our founder has a combined experience of over 20 years’ working as Executive in organisations delivering outcomes for shareholders. Reach out for a no obligation conversation on how we can help you. Contact us on whiteark@whiteark.com.au
Article by Jo Hands, Founder Whiteark
How to make change stick
Colin D Ellis explains how to make change stick. Organisations talk a lot about change and transformation, but in general most aren’t very good at doing it. A recent SAP survey found that of the 84 per cent of organisations that started transformation initiatives in the past year, only 3 per cent had actually successfully completed one.
Organisations talk a lot about change and transformation, but in general most aren’t very good at doing it. A recent SAP survey found that of the 84 per cent of organisations that started transformation initiatives in the past year, only 3 per cent had actually successfully completed one.
Thoughts from Colin D Ellis
One reason for this is that while senior managers get very excited about smarter, faster ways of doing things when they’re pulling their business plans together, they forget that to achieve them they have to stop doing some things and redefine the way they get others done.
Cultural evolution is frequently cited as the biggest enabler of successful change, yet very few organisations ever take it on, opting instead for quick-fix training solutions, restructures, operating model changes or (as is currently en vogue) promises of hybrid working.
It’s not that any of these things are wrong, it’s just that in order to deliver transformation and make change stick you need to establish a new foundation upon which to build them. Those foundations contain the following:
A sound business case for change. This will answer the ‘why this and why now?’ questions from staff and stakeholders alike as it’s not good enough to simply say ‘we need to transform’, there has to be a sound and logical rationale for doing so
A redefined culture. This is the activity that almost all teams or organisations forget to do and yet it’s the most important. Without redefining the vision, behaviours and collaboration principles expected of each other you have nothing to transform to
Public accountability. There needs to be a senior executive within the business who is prepared to throw their reputation, energy, money and effort behind the activity to ensure it delivers what was promised in the case for change. This person will also encourage all the other executives do their bit to ensure that the change happens.
Clear, unambiguous communication. This should focus not only on the activities required to complete the initiative, but also on the personal change required to achieve success. I don’t mean an email or poster, in Comic Sans font, pinned up on a noticeboard, but regular effort from those accountable for the transformation.
With an appropriate level of justification, definition, accountability and communication, culture change or transformation isn’t as hard as some would have you believe. If you’re not prepared to do these things, then your staff would like you to stop talking about transformation as if you mean it. However, if you are, then you can guarantee then they’ll be up for it too and that will make everything stick.
Colin D Ellis is an award-winning speaker, facilitator and best-selling author of Culture Fix: How to Create a Great Place to Work. You can find out more about him and the work that he does at www.colindellis.com
Key considerations for building connection across the organisation post Covid-19
Phoebe Reid writes about the key considerations for building connection across the organisation post Covid-19. Companies are finding themselves in unfamiliar territory as their employees return to the office post Covid 19 and are learning how to work together again. Building connectedness is an important part of working together successfully and links closely to employee engagement and ultimately meeting business goals.
Companies are finding themselves in unfamiliar territory as their employees return to the office post Covid 19 and are learning how to work together again. Building connectedness is an important part of working together successfully and links closely to employee engagement and ultimately meeting business goals.
For this to happen, leaders need to lead! Behaviour needs to start at the top and it will flow, employees want and need to have purpose and great leadership will support this happening. Spend the time with your team, have regular check ins, discuss and review/set their KPIs and goals, chat about how they are going, and generally be there for them.
Connection, growth and belonging are all key to a company’s success. Humans naturally enjoy each other’s company and being able to work collaboratively, so it’s often the corridor or kitchen conversation where you really get to understand what is going on. It is about finding the right balance between flexible work from home and time together in the office.
Some initiatives and areas that impact connection building in the workplace are;
Connectedness Initiatives
Having fun at work has been missed by many, it might be the Friday night drinks, bring your pet to work day or the monthly birthday celebrations, people have missed the opportunity to connect. Make sure this is a priority, put together a calendar of fun events, ask your team members what activities would make them feel more connected to each other and actively create an informal environment to reconnect.
Team lunches with employees from different departments are a way to get employees interacting with people from across the business and further promotes connection. Employees will benefit from having team activities like a volunteer day where the team can go and help at a charity. When implemented properly, these activities can be excellent for cultivating a sense of unity and belonging.
Promote the benefits of the office like being able to collaborate in person, informally bounce ideas off each other, the coffee machine and of course Friday night drinks! Set up wellbeing information sessions, often your employee assistance program provider can run these. Organise fitness in the park or at a nearby gym for your employees. For some, the office offers a sense of calm and control over their day and fewer distractions than at home, these people will be key to connecting those that are feeling more anxious about being back in the office. Schedule your team meetings on a day that everyone is in to promote face to face time.
To help employees focus and reengage with your strategy, run cross functional sessions on your strategy and 5-year plan, discuss what’s working well and get feedback on what you can be doing better. Sessions on behaviours and values could also be considered. Consider joint departments leading regular town halls to; share what is going on, interview new starters, share good news like record sales or new business and also acknowledge specific achievements of team members.
Having the right Flexible Work Policy supports connectedness. In developing your policy seek feedback to see what employees preferences are around flexible work. As with any successful change, seeking feedback and employee input will result in a more effective outcome. Employees are working from home in a variety of combinations from 1-5 days per week. Finding overlap days where the majority of the team are in the office is important. Having team meetings on these days and organising fun activities described above to connect people will help with this. Ensure that you have the flexibility to review your policy as things change or if the current arrangement isn’t working.
Employee Engagement
Employee engagement represents the levels of enthusiasm and connection employees have with their organisation. It’s a measure of how motivated people are to put in the extra effort for their employer and is often a sign of how committed they are to staying.
Now would be a good time to run an employee engagement survey. Tailor your questions to get constructive feedback for your business and ask questions about what initiatives will help them in feeling more engaged and connected to your business and their colleagues. Then use this feedback to run cross functional focus groups, then develop an action plan and actually implement it. Too often employees take the time to fill in the survey and provide feedback and nothing is done, this can be demotivating.
This article has described just some of the ways that you can build connectedness across your business post Covid 19. Please get in touch if Whiteark can help you with developing your business and people plans.
8 Key lessons we have learnt from launching our own podcast
Jo Hands unpacks the lessons learnt from starting the Whiteark Podcast - The Chiefs. We have interviewed a range of leaders; young, older, CEO, Executive, owning and running their own business. Each leaders provided so many great tips and lessons around their leadership journey. It’s very inspiring.
We launched Whiteark - The Chiefs Podcast in October 2020. We have loved every minute of it.
What makes leaders tick? The Chiefs gives you insight into what makes our great leaders so great. With organisation’s top chiefs in the hot seat each week, we chat about the highs – and lows – and lessons along the way; tackling the biggest issues people are facing today. We know that leading can be a lonely role and we believe that learning from other great people is one of the best resources we have. So join us on our journey, and enjoy the stories behind some of the greats…
At the end of May here are the key statistics for our podcast:
Number of Episodes: 32
Key Topics covered (maybe some groupings) – People and Leadership, Impacts of Covid, Post Covid Recovery, Data, Transformation, Innovation, Sales and Service.
We have interviewed a range of leaders; young, older, CEO, Executive, owning and running their own business. Each leaders provided so many great tips and lessons around their leadership journey. It’s very inspiring. In 30 mins it’s amazing what you can learn about someone.
We feel privileged to have some amazing leaders that have shared their stories with us and our leaders and we are also privileged to have so many loyal followers.
When I reflect at the end of the week; on my highlight it’s likely that that the podcast will be my highlight – I’ve met someone new, I’ve learnt something new and it’s given me some inspiration / perspective. I feel very honoured and privileged to be able to take their precious time to share their journey and wisdom with our Whiteark family.
There are 8 key lessons we have learnt from interviewing 35+ leaders on The Chiefs Podcast:
1. Everyone has a story – regardless of age/role etc everyone has a story to tell. Tell your story so your business understands how you got here and what this role means to you. People want to know your story.
2. People learn most from their mistakes – failure is ok -it’s how you respond that is important. Everyone makes mistakes, yep it’s true but it’s how you respond that separates people. Learn from your mistakes and move forward.
3. Your job is to make hard decisions. It’s not all about consensus, you need to make the right decision for the organisation. Listen, understand and make a decision – your people will respect you for it.
4. Sometimes your job is lonely so finding like-minded professionals for connection is important. For me business chicks business club has been a God send but find your mentor, your support network.
5. Trusting your employees and giving them he environment to flourish is critical. Trust is easy to say but actions speak louder than words.
6. Being able to navigate ambiguity is critical – make decisions, pivot and dealing with ambiguity and moving forward will be critical.
7. Being a leader requires you to be at your best – look after yourself – put your oxygen mask on first and ensure you look after yourself so you can come back tomorrow for another day.
8. Be authentic – authentic leadership – be yourself and your people will respect you and follow you. While it’s talked about a lot really being true to you and being your own leader is critical.
While there are other lessons that we have learnt these would be have been the top 8.
We continue every week to bring you leaders that inspire, challenge and give you a different perspective. For an investment of 30 mins of your time – please tune into The Chiefs each week on Wednesday to ensure you don’t miss a beat.
If you would love to be on our podcast – please click the button below and we will be in contact.
Want to talk about building your business? Reach out.
Whiteark is not your average consulting firm, we have first-hand experience in delivering transformation programs for private equity and other organisations with a focus on people just as much as financial outcomes.
We understand that execution is the hardest part, and so we roll our sleeves up and work with you to ensure we can deliver the required outcomes for the business. Our co-founders have a combined experience of over 50 years’ working as Executives in organisations delivering outcomes for shareholders. Reach out for a no obligation conversation on how we can help you. Contact us on whiteark@whiteark.com.au
Article by Jo Hands, Co-Founder Whiteark
Being true to your values
Jo Hands, Whiteark’s Co-founder & Director, writes about what it means to be true to your values. She explains, “When growing up, we learn to understand the impact core values have on driving our behaviour and activity, as well as attracting those you work well with because you share similar values.”
When growing up, we learn to understand the impact core values have on driving our behaviour and activity, as well as attracting those you work well with because you share similar values. Your values are critical, they are at the heart of everything that you do.
I attended a Brene Brown course called “Dare to Lead” in 2020 - it was a chance to consider what kind of leader you want to be and understand your values.
My core personal values are:
Connection - I value having strong connections with people and I'm a connector. It drives me and my thinking. I genuinely love people
Achievement - I love to do a great job, I put 100%+ into everything I do
Passionate - I'm passionate about helping people / companies to deliver the best outcome. I have energy and drive to help people find their passion
Company values
Most companies have a set of values but unfortunately most don't live by them – it’s frustrating and impacts the culture of companies.
Company values and alignment with executives / co-founders and employees is important. Data, research suggests that companies where leaders align culturally and on values are 63% more successful than companies that don't.
Having a clearly defined set of values helps your stakeholders to understand what you stand for. Your values provide guidance to your employees in delivering their work and creates a sense of unity and belonging. Your set of values encourage your employees to make decisions that help them achieve the company’s vision and mission.
Whiteark
Once upon a time, in a land (not so) far away, two values aligned human beings came together to collaborate. The result? Whiteark was born. Whiteark is committed to bridging the gaps within organisations and making a lasting difference.
At Whiteark, we have spent the last 6 months refining and aligning on our Vision, Mission and Values before we launch with you all!
Our values are important to us and are at the core of everything we do, who we partner with, who collaborate with, and who employ to be a part of our team.
Here are our values that we live and breathe 😊
Leadership
Shaping the future.
Passion
Energising, engaging and inspiring.
Excellence
Achieving ambitious goals.
Value
Data drive outcomes.
Fun
Doing things differently.
Our values underpin our Vision and Mission and why we wake up every day, excited and ready to help our clients and our networks.
Watch the video that James and I put together for our value launch to understand what these mean to us.
If our values resonate with you and you'd like to have a conversation about working for us, working alongside us or if we can help you, please reach out.