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The Worst Thing Any Leader Can Do To High Performers

This article is more than 9 years old.

If you’ve managed a team for even a year, you know the crazy behavior that human beings can deliver.  As a CEO for 23 years, I remember dozens of times I sat with my head in my hands, wondering what a team member was thinking, if anything.  If you’re the type of leader who hates to confront people problems head on, this will be a painful (but essential) read.

In my last post, knowing that I’d be sitting with Hall of Fame quarterback and football legend Joe Montana, reader John O’Dea requested that I ask about the challenges of building a strong cohesive team out of so many high-octane individuals.  He was thinking of the 49’ers team led by Bill Walsh, under whose leadership Joe Montana played most of his career.  I was able to fire John’s question at Joe, and his answer came from the perspective of being one of the highest performing team members (not from being the coach/leader).

Joe Montana speaks at the Association for Corporate Growth M&A conference in San Francisco.

Many leaders tolerate team damaging behaviors when individual performance is strong.  They often have some coaching conversations and ask HR to get involved. The leader will do damage control after especially bad behavior and otherwise work to mitigate the inflammation that occurs under high maintenance team members.  Sometimes leaders hesitate due to misplaced loyalty.  Sometimes they just hate confrontation. Consider the case of one digital production director who did a great job of moving his department forward technologically.  However, the 6 foot 4 inch karate black belt had an anger management problem, and his often grumpy mood would shift into a full temper tantrum monthly. After each tantrum he’d be counseled, he’d apologize, he’d be charming for a week, and then it would repeat. He lasted three years, having a chilling effect on the corporate culture.  In contrast, Joe Montana told the story of one high-priced 49’er who constantly harangued his team mates to praise him to the press.  Bill Walsh traded him after only a few months.  Just a few months!  Fast.

It is the leader's job to enforce the values and behaviors that make up the company culture. A healthy company culture is a set of norms and behaviors that support high performance and the company’s ultimate success.   Since midsized companies (and larger) are completely dependent on teams to accomplish critical tasks,anyone who damages teamwork can’t be allowed to stay.

As we heard Joe tell stories and talk about his 49er years (we had a private lunch, followed by a keynote talk for the Association for Corporate Growth, San Francisco’s M&A conference--and yes, Joe was the consummate gentleman), it became clear that Bill Walsh was the enforcer of team values.  Joe described how whenever a team member exhibited problem behaviors, after a few months, “He’d be gone”.  No doubt traded away by Bill Walsh.  Joe didn’t elaborate on the headaches of dealing with problem team mates, or how the team had to adapt to manage a problem team member. They didn’t have to. They knew their coach, Bill Walsh, would do his job and either repair the problem behavior or replace them with someone better.

A great book that delves into this subject further is The No Asshole Rule by Robert Sutton.

The leader must defend the team, tackling the people problem head on even if it means cutting a high performer. The 49ers didn’t have an incredibly long stretch of peak performance because of any one high performing player—even Joe Montana.  They were an exceptional team, year after year, despite some significant changes in players.  That speaks to team management.

In front of five hundred people Joe Montana answered another of my questions.   “What is the worst thing any coach (or manager) can do to a team?”  Joe paused, and answered, “To do nothing”. It drives peak performers crazy when bad team mates are allowed to stay.  Bill Walsh never let that happen, and neither should you.

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Follow me @RobertSher and check out my upcoming book, Mighty Midsized Companies; How Leaders Overcome 7 Silent Growth Killers.