Remove Development Remove Execution Remove Leadership Remove RACI
article thumbnail

Building a Culture of Accountability

The Center For Leadership Studies

Consider this (simplified) example: Executive Assistant Ryan is responsible for compiling results for his organization’s monthly sales reports for VP of Sales Emily. First and foremost, building a culture of accountability requires consistency, patience and possibly a shift in thinking from an organization’s leadership.

RACI 52
article thumbnail

Manage The Challenges of Working In a Matrix

Jesse Lyn Stoner Blog

They offer the advantages of increased information flow across boundaries, deeper development of expertise and knowledge, and greater flexibility and responsiveness. Leadership In a Matrix. Everyone must provide leadership and assume responsibility for success. Create a RACI chart. Set up a communication plan.

RACI 208
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

To Hold Someone Accountable, First Define What Accountable Means

Harvard Business Review

As prescribed in the commonly used responsibility models — RACI, RAPID, and the others — accountability should fall to one (and only one) person per item, even if the work involved requires input and contributions from others. Consider this example. ” But what did Paul mean? .” ” But what did Paul mean?

RACI 10
article thumbnail

A Bad Reputation Costs a Company at Least 10% More Per Hire

Harvard Business Review

A few years ago, domain registrar and web hosting company GoDaddy was known for its racy ads featuring NASCAR driver Danica Patrick and The Biggest Loser star Jillian Michaels. Get executive buy-in. The difference between mediocre and great employer branding often is executive involvement.