The 10 Keys Of Effective Supervision: Building Healthy Organizational Cultures through Servant Leadership
By Rick Pierce and Jim Rowell
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About this ebook
UNLOCK YOUR ORGANIZATION’S POTENTIAL AND IMPROVE PRODUCTIVITY
“I hate my boss.” Most employees have said or felt something like this at some point in their working lives. Many have resigned as a result, costing their employers untold amounts of money. With The 10 Keys of Effective Supervision, Rick Pierce and Jim Rowell hope to reverse that trend. The authors examine the following 10 Keys chapter by chapter: Supporting Growth Uniting Your Team Praising Others Expecting Excellence Requiring Accountability Valuing What You Believe Instilling Independence Sharing Continuously Optimizing Ownership Realigning Your Efforts
The bottom line is productivity. Organizations exist to get things done. The objective is growth. If organizations are to thrive, they need the right kind of employees and the right kind of supervisors to lead them.
About Rising Sun Consultants: Rising Sun Consultants is a management-consulting firm based in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, which uses a holistic approach to servant leadership. Using a unique questioning style, Rising Sun Consultants helps clients improve productivity by focusing on the growth and development of their people.
“It is our goal to serve organizations in creating, developing, and maintaining a culture which inspires and motivates people to reach new horizons—both personally and professionally.”
www.risingsunconsultants.com
Rick Pierce
RICK PIERCE is cofounder and senior consultant for Rising Sun Consultants, LLC, as well as an Associate Professor at the Pennsylvania State University. Rick has extensive leadership experience in both the nonprofit and for-profit fields. He has owned his own small business, served on several major boards, and also served on the senior leadership team for one of the nation’s largest nonprofit organizations. An award-winning teacher and motivational speaker, Rick holds a BS in psychology from Monmouth College, an MS in counseling from the Pennsylvania State University, and a PhD from Texas Tech University in counseling psychology. Rick has over thirty years of professional experience providing psychological and business-based assessments on both an individual and group basis. Rick is a family man with three grown children and lives in central Pennsylvania with his wife, Jayne, of more than thirty-five years.
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The 10 Keys Of Effective Supervision - Rick Pierce
Table of Contents
Foreword
Acknowledgments
A Word from the Authors
Introduction
A Servant’s Heart
Chapter 1
Supporting Growth
Chapter 2
Uniting Your Team
Chapter 3
Praising Others
Chapter 4
Expecting Excellence
Chapter 5
Requiring Accountability
Chapter 6
Valuing What You Believe
Chapter 7
Instilling Independence
Chapter 8
Sharing Continuously
Chapter 9
Optimizing Ownership
Chapter 10
Realigning Your Efforts
Conclusion
A Developmental Approach
About Rising Sun Consultants
Foreword
What characterizes a leader you will trust and follow?
Too many leaders don’t know the answer to that question—or they haven’t internalized it in their own beliefs and behavior. In this wonderful book, you will find 10 Keys that will help you unlock the answers to being the kind of leader you would be willing to follow.
Much of my professional work and personal calling has been in the domain of helping people gain credibility and behave in ways that inspire trust—as a person, as a leader, as a contributor in a community. High-trust leaders possess the same intent servant leaders do—purely and simply to serve others—coworkers, customers, partners, communities. Your intent—your motive, your agenda—may be intangible and invisible. But don’t think for a moment that it is hidden. People sense it and feel it in everything you say and do.
The servant leader is motivated by caring, and the agenda she seeks is mutual benefit: Yes, I want to win, but it is equally important to me (and perhaps even more important) that you win.
I have worked with plenty of servant leaders and smart supervisors. When their intent was pure, I knew it. And I never needed to second-guess their agenda or motive. And, significantly, I wanted to give them my best in terms of quality work and personal loyalty. They truly inspired me to perform better, and they absolutely brought out the best in me. As Cheryl Bachelder, CEO of Popeye’s Louisiana Kitchen and one of the world’s great servant leaders today, stated, All truly great leaders are servant leaders because they serve the people well—and the followers know the difference.
But why wait for people to infer your intent? You can accelerate trust by declaring your intent.
The intent of the authors of The 10 Keys of Effective Supervision is to equip you with the practical thinking, tools, and tips that will help you become a better servant leader and supervisor. This book does so admirably. I believe Rick Pierce and Jim Rowell have made a significant contribution to the applied fields of both servant leadership and effective supervision. Like my father, the late Dr. Stephen R. Covey, I have been a long-time advocate of the principles of servant leadership and this book is a must-read for anyone serving others in a leadership role.
How does it do so? Through simple structures that transform conceptual ideas to practical actions any leader can take. You’ll find this book an easy read. Each chapter begins with an engaging story of a coach from a summer camp that illustrates the concept that follows. And each of those chapters is structured by the ingenious acronym SUPERVISOR
that helps you remember—and turn—the 10 Keys they have identified in effective servant leaders.
By the end of the book, you will know that although servant leadership is not necessarily always the easiest route to take, it is always the right route to take. Treating people with dignity and respect, building people up rather than tearing them down, and leading from your intent rather from your position absolutely pays off in ways you can’t even imagine yet.
My congratulations to Rick and Jim on an excellent book that is both insightful and practical. I trust it will help you in your journey of helping people as a servant leader!
—Stephen M. R. Covey
Author of The New York Times bestseller, The Speed of Trust, and former President & CEO of Covey Leadership Center
Acknowledgments
First, we would like to acknowledge God in providing the first Servant Leader and giving us the wisdom and strength to share His picture of positive leadership.
Next, we would like to thank our families, without whose constant patience, love, support, and sacrifice neither Rising Sun Consultants, nor this book, could ever have been possible:
Jayne, Alexis, Samantha, and Tom (Elerowski) Pierce
Diane, Danielle, Benjamin, Rebecca, and Emily Rowell
We would also like to thank the following three individuals for their input, comments, and support on the initial version of this book and the development of the 10 Keys model:
Lynn Tonini
Kim Garosi
Dennette Moul
We would like to thank all the members of the copy, editorial, and design teams at Advantage—particularly Bob Sheasley, Alex Rogers, Katie Biondo, Megan Elger, and Nate Best for their constant advice, support, and encouragement throughout this process.
We would like to offer special thanks to Dr. John Covey for his continuous love and support throughout our years of friendship.
We would especially like to thank Stephen Covey for his kind words and support for this project and for writing the foreword for the book.
Finally, we would also like to thank all of our supervisors, mentors, and clients who have helped teach us the importance and meaning behind serving others and leading with a servant’s heart.
A Word from the Authors
Rick Pierce
I have been very lucky to have had a unique and diverse career. My experiences have ranged from college professor to small business owner to executive leader to international consultant. When I was in my midforties, I was given what I thought was the opportunity of a lifetime—I was hired for a senior leadership position at one of the largest nonprofit homes/schools for disadvantaged youth anywhere in the world. It was there that I met my friend, coauthor, and business partner, Jim Rowell.
An extremely wealthy organization serving disadvantaged youth in the middle of Central Pennsylvania—what could go wrong? What I quickly learned was that lots of money, a powerful mission, and beautiful surroundings meant very little if I didn’t have the knowledge and skills I needed to create a healthy organizational culture.
When I was first hired at the school, a new organizational chart was issued naming me as the new dean. Right there at the top of the chart, in bold letters, it said Richard A. Pierce, PhD—Dean.
My ego was on fire.
However, I soon learned that it meant nothing if the rest of the names on the chart didn’t feel valued and supported. After reading an article on servant leadership, I asked my administrative assistant to redo the chart, putting me at the bottom. Just above my name, we listed my direct reports. Above them were the frontline administrators and above them the houseparents who directly cared for the kids. Finally, at the top of the chart, where I used to reside, were the students. After all, the kids were what the school was all about. I then asked my assistant to put a graphic of a pair of hands around the chart to illustrate the idea of support from the bottom of the chart to the top.
That upside-down approach, as it turned out, was really the right-side-up approach. The gesture pleased many of the staff and led to my lifelong study of, and commitment to, the principles of servant leadership. My desire has always been to help and to serve others. I wanted that to be the nature of my life’s work. Wherever I worked, I wanted to wake up eager and grateful for the privilege of being there. What I have learned through the years is that the relationships within a company can be even more meaningful than the work itself.
A strong, clear culture is what makes a company great. In such a culture, the employees will serve the organization loyally—and not because they must do it but because they want to do it. As my career evolved, I kept asking myself these questions as a supervisor: How can we do this better? How can we treat people so that they want to come to work? How would I like to have me as a supervisor?
Many organizations find themselves experiencing high turnover rates, and research suggests that most people are not leaving because they will be getting more money but rather because they are fleeing a poor relationship with a supervisor. With this in mind, we write this book primarily to the middle managers or supervisors, the ones who directly supervise the workers.
Good relationships with employees engender both loyalty and productivity. That is why supervisors should care about what we are communicating in this book. Treating their employees with dignity and respect and value will make a huge difference in their lives—not only will it be the right thing to do but they will also be helping the bottom line.
Every chapter of this book begins with a few paragraphs about a man I’ll call Coach.
As you read about this man, understand that the portrait created about him combines the observations and experiences of many people who knew him—including me.
Coach was the head counselor of a boys’ camp in the Pocono Mountains region of Pennsylvania. His life lessons always meant a lot to me, as well as to many others who knew him. It was from him that I learned much of what I know about strong supervision and leadership. Coach knew instinctively how to use the Keys that