Editor’s Note: Each week Maynard Webb, former CEO of LiveOps and the former COO of eBay, will offer candid, practical, and sometimes surprising advice to entrepreneurs and founders. To submit a question, write to Webb at dearfounder@fastcompany.com.
Q. I have a highly capable executive team, but members are struggling to implement Patrick Lencioni’s “First Team” concept. Specifically, my executives’ first instincts are to be frustrated with other departments rather than working together with their executive teammates to dig into problems, align on a plan, and then pull the levers to execute on it. I think it’s compounded by a COVID remote work culture, but I’m at a loss of what to do.
-Founder whose company just raised a Series A
Dear Founder,
The problem you are facing is a common one. As Patrick Lencioni might put it, your execs are prioritizing the department that they lead over the organization of which they are a member. It’s not unusual for leaders to want to take care of the people who work for them first—they feel responsibility for their team members as well as the success of their org. In some ways, this attention and care demonstrates fine leadership.
However, you and I both know that the route to true success rests with being more focused on the company’s mission than an individual department’s—in other words, prioritizing the entire entity first.
It seems fair to assume that not too long ago, you had a small cohesive team that was aligned on everything. Now, you have different departments with different agendas—and a lot more battles.
Too often we are unprepared for this next phase of business. But with a few shifts in behavior, we can shift this scenario to something that inspires seamless integration that drives growth.
Obviously, you’re doing something right to be expanding—but now you need to find a way to make First Team part of your strategy. Here are some things you can do:
Companies that know how to work as one entity end up much more successful. And the people who work there are a lot happier.
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