Buchzusammenfassung
Chris McChesney and Jim Huling are leaders at FranklinCovey, a company that helps individuals and businesses to improve their performance.
Focusing on actions that drive progress, rather than dwelling on past outcomes, is essential for achieving significant goals. While lag measures, such as profit margins or customer satisfaction scores, reflect past performance, they offer little guidance for future success and can lead to discouragement. Instead, lead measures, which track current behaviors and can be influenced in real time, are far more effective. For instance, monitoring calorie intake and exercise levels in a weight-loss journey provides actionable insights that directly impact results. Success requires narrowing your focus to one or two Highly Important Targets (HITs) that are specific, measurable, and impactful, as seen in NASA’s clear goal to land a man on the moon by 1969. Implementing the Four Disciplines framework in a large organization involves defining a primary Wildly Important Goal (WIG), aligning departmental WIGs, educating leaders, refining processes, and maintaining accountability through regular reviews. Creating a scoreboard to track progress and fostering a culture of accountability through consistent WIG meetings are critical steps. These practices not only engage employees but also ensure sustained focus on lead measures, enabling teams to overcome daily distractions and achieve their objectives.
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