• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Schlegel Consulting

Evolutionary Team Effectiveness

  • Home
  • Services
  • Success Stories
  • FAQ
  • Blog
  • Contact
  • This Book’s For You

Leadership

How Millennials Lead and Make Decisions

August 4, 2020 by Matt Schlegel Leave a Comment

As a Gen X parent of two Millennials and one Gen Z, I have had a front row seat experiencing how these generations have come of age.  Their experience couldn’t be more different from my own, when I grew  up in a Boomer-dominated education system.  The Millennial generation’s childhood experiences color their preferred leadership and decision-making styles, presenting challenges and opportunities for organizations.

Pods not Rows

As a young parent, I remember walking into my oldest child’s elementary school classroom and being stunned. All the desks were clumped together into groups of five or six. When I was growing up, the desks were all in rows, all separated, and all pointing to the front of the class at the teacher. My classroom was designed for me to learn from the teacher.  Not so with Millennials.  From the outset of their education, they were expected to work with and learn from one another.

Importantly, Millennials were taught that learning from classmates was as important as learning from the teacher.  Millennials were raised to work in teams, and not simply follow the instructions of an authoritative figure. They were given autonomy and flexibility to be creative.

What Millennials learned in Kindergarten continues to influence their behaviors in the workplace. Millennials expect to have more say in decision making. They will question why things are done a certain way and not take anything as a given.  They want to ensure that their teammates are included in decision making and will listen carefully to what they say. They want to work together, collaboratively, to solve problems.

Flat Organizations

The Millennial’s team-based collaborative style has led to the rise of “Flat Organizations.”  These organizations have fewer levels of hierarchy in the management structure and more emphasis on teams working together, collaboratively leading themselves.  Millennials tend to have higher self-awareness and an understanding of their own strengths and weakness as well as those of others.  This understanding informs their team efforts and allows them to share leadership and delegate tasks so that the team benefits from the strengths of all players.  Having conversations about collaboration from the time they were young makes it very natural for them to bring collaborative behaviors into the workplace.

Collaborative Leadership and Decision Making

The nine-step collaboration strategy based on the Enneagram that I describe in my book Teamwork 9.0 overlaps with the Millennial style of leadership and decision making.  Unsurprisingly, the Millennial generation’s interest in self-knowledge has led to a surge in interest in the Enneagram, a tool used for understanding personal motivations, feelings and behaviors. There are vibrant communities on social media, in particular YouTube and Instagram,  centered on the Enneagram.

For example, I was fascinated by a recent book entitled Millenneagram by Hannah Paasch. Paasch has written an Enneagram book for Millennials by a Millennial.  She brings the wisdom of this system directly to her generation in a way that is highly tuned for them. If you already know the Enneagram, you can learn a lot about Millennials by reading this book!

The Teamwork 9.0 method assumes that employees will work together to creatively solve problems, precisely the way Millennials expect to work together.  Here is a breakdown of the nine steps in terms of how Millennials want to work:

Step 1 – Collectively decide which problem to pursue

Step 2 – Make sure that everyone is included

Step 3 – Listen to everyone’s ideas for how to solve the problem

Step 4 – Pick the ideas that everyone likes

Step 5 – Analyze and validate the ideas that are most likely to work

Step 6 – Build a plan based on everyone’s talents and contributions

Step 7 – Make sure that everyone is comfortable with the plan

Step 8 – Move forward together to solve the problem

Step 9 – Make sure that everyone is happy with the outcome

In Teamwork 9.0, I describe these steps in detail. I also include chapters on shared leadership, leadership growth and contributions, and creativity—topics important to Millennials and how they work together.

Intrinsic Motivation

Teams derive great joy when working together with autonomy, choosing which problems to tackle and how to tackle them. That joy has been instilled in the Millennial generation and provides the intrinsic motivation for how they work together to solve problems.  The top-down command-control approach simply does not work well with this generation. Nor do extrinsic motivation techniques like the dismissive, “we’re paying their salary, so they should do what I say.”  Intrinsic motivation is much more powerful than extrinsic motivation. Successful organizations tap into the Millennial’s intrinsic motivation.

Participation Award

Life is a team sport—we’re better when everyone participates. One of Boomer parent’s gifts to the Millennial generation was setting the expectation that they participate.  Making the effort to participate is itself enough for recognition. And though some thought this trend was fodder for mocking humor, the Millennial kids did not. They took it to heart.  We trained them to be team players, and now they expect to participate on teams and expect others to do likewise.  This expectation can present a challenge for organizations that are structured in a siloed hierarchical fashion.  Millennials have learned to vote with their feet. They will seek out organizations that welcome and embrace their collaborative style.

OK Boomer

Boomers and Gen X express frustration with how to manage Millennials and how to lead Millennials. They frequently claim that Millennial and Gen Z workers have a sense of entitlement and that they do not appreciate the value of starting at the bottom and working their way up the ladder as their generation did. And with that sentiment, Boomers reveal their misunderstanding. There are no ladders in the minds of Millennials. Instead there are teams, collaboration and networks. They learned how both to listen to others and to share their own thoughts. They DO expect others to listen to them.  While Boomers may think Millennial employees on the “low rung of the ladder” are entitled, it’s just because those employees expect to be heard.  Boomers can learn much about leadership by understanding how Millennials collaboratively lead themselves.

How are Millennials assuming leadership and decision-making roles in your organization? What’s working well? What’s not?

Filed Under: Decision Making, Leadership, Millennials

How to Lead a Board of Directors Change Management Task Force

July 24, 2020 by Matt Schlegel 2 Comments

Faced with extraordinary challenges, boards of directors are establishing committees and change management task forces, teams of people responsible for formulating plans to address acute problems the  organization faces.   Here’s how to lead a change management task force team through transformational change with maximum stakeholder buy in.

Structure

Your change management task force will benefit by using a structured process.  The process serves as a framework that helps focus conversations and keeps your task force team moving forward towards successful outcomes.  I detail a framework ideal for change management task force teams in Chapter 2 of Teamwork 9.0.

Nine Steps

The change management framework consists of nine steps that takes your task force team from Step 1, defining problems and goals, tthrough Step 9, assessing the solution’s effectiveness.  Here’s a summary of the nine-step change management process:

Step 1: Problem-Goal — Identify the problems and define the goals.

Step 2: Stakeholder Identification — Recruit the committed team.

Step 3: Ideation — Generate ideas for solutions.

Step 4: Emotional Reaction — Select ideas with the most positive response.

Step 5: Logical Analysis — Study and score the ideas.

Step 6: Planning — Select the most promising idea and build an action plan.

Step 7: Promotion — Passionately promote the plan and get approval to proceed.

Step 8: Implementation — Execute the plan and solve the problem!

Step 9: Integration — Confirm the problem is solved for all stakeholders.

You can find more details about each step in this article:

https://evolutionaryteams.com/change-management-and-the-enneagram/

In this video, I run through each of these steps:

 

Don’t Forget Step 2!

The successful task force will carefully dedicate time to each step as they work through the initiative.  Inadequate time in a step, or worse skipping a step, will result in poor outcomes at best and a stalled initiative at worst. Here’s an example of what happened when a task force skipped Step 2.

At a workshop in which I took a group of policy makers through this nine-step framework, one of the attendees came up to me afterwards with excitement in her eyes.  “Now I get it,” she said, “now I understand why my task force stalled. We skipped Step 2!”  Step 2 is the step in which you consider the perspectives of all stakeholders who are impacted by the problem or will be impacted by the solution.

This policy maker reported that her task force team didn’t dedicate time listening to all the stakeholders who would be impacted.  After defining the problem and setting the goals, they skipped Step 2 and went on to Steps 3, 4, 5 and 6.  When they got to Step 7 and presented the plans to solve the problem, there was outcry and backlash from various constituents of the community.  Why?  Because they had not considered everyone connected to the problem in Step 2 and had not incorporated their concerns and perspectives when defining problems and goals.   This reaction from the community compelled the task force team to return to Step 1 with a reconstituted team of stakeholders.

Leading A Change Management Task Force Team

Every task force team will have a unique set of characteristics.  The nature of your organization influences these characteristics as do the personalities of the individuals on your task force team. Teams love to play to their strengths and downplay their weaknesses.  For instance, a highly analytical team may love spending time in Step 5, but be reluctant to move on to Step 6.

As the task force leader, you need to recognize the distinct tendencies of your team and when it may spend too much or too little time in each step. Keep the team on track by spending an adequate time and energy in each step while not feeling rushed to jump to the end.  This change management framework helps you do this.  It provides you with a vocabulary and enables you to communicate the importance of each step  to the overall success of the initiative. Another benefit of this framework is that it gives everyone a chance to participate, not just the most outspoken team members.

What challenges does your organization face?  What changes are you managing through? How have you led your change management task force team?  In which steps did your team excel?  Which steps were skipped?  How could the results have been better?

Filed Under: Change Management, Leadership, Problem Solving

2020 Killed Hyperbole – How to Lead a Team through Change

July 3, 2020 by Matt Schlegel 2 Comments

This is a video of a talk I give to groups of CEOs about how to lead a team through change during challenging times.

This leadership framework is based on the method I describe in Teamwork 9.0.  Specifically, check out chapter 2 of the book.

Here is a transcript of the talk:

A global pandemic sweeps across the earth killing hundreds of thousands of people in its wake.

Economies are wracked by recession, with no end in sight.

40 million people are thrown out of work in the US alone.

People are fearing for their lives to simply go to work or go shopping for groceries.

Nationwide, protests erupt-against police violence, and the police respond with …. more violence.

2020 has killed hyperbole.

In normal times, a CEO faces existential threats to their business,  every day. 

Your organization has a mission and you’ve grown a team to deliver on that mission with ever more effectiveness and efficiency.  Your team excels at operating in-the-business.

They know how to respond well to all known threats—HR with employment issues, your safety team with worker safety and compliance issues, your sales team with the competition.  They’re expert at dealing with these threats.

But what happens when the threat comes from outside the normal course of business?  When the normal patterns of behavior no longer apply? How do you and  your team agree on the nature of the problems and coalesce around solutions that will lead to new behavioral patterns, behaviors that will allow your team to survive and even thrive in the new environment? 

How do you create a-new-normal?

It was with this type of challenge in mind that I wrote my book Teamwork 9.0.  I developed a problem-solving framework that organizes teams to solve big, challenging problems with maximal buy in from all stakeholders. 

[Slide 2 – Enneagram]

I developed this framework based on a powerful tool called the Enneagram.  The Enneagram is commonly used as a personality dynamics system. It’s extremely useful and valuable for understanding yourself, your friends, family and team members, and the interpersonal dynamics that occur.

Not only can it be used in this way, I discovered that it can also be used as a problem-solving-framework for teams.

I had a question: Why is the Enneagram Type 1 the 1, why is Type  2 the 2, and so on.  Why couldn’t Type 1 be the 7, or Type 5 be the 3?

It turns out that the number assignment is not arbitrary.  There’s a specific reason for the order. The numbers represent the order of a process. If fact, it’s the order in which humans–solve–problems.

[Slide 3 – The Circle]

The problem-solving nature of the Enneagram is described by the outer circle.  Each of the nine Enneagram dynamics describes a specific step in problem solving.  This use of the Enneagram is not commonly known or understood, which is why I was compelled to write my book, Teamwork 9.0, and share my discovery with you today.  Let me briefly go through each step

[Slide 4 – Step 1]

What’s the first step in problem solving? It’s realizing that you have a problem.  Enneagram Type 1 is often called the Perfectionist.  They are often the first type to point out that things aren’t right, aren’t as they should be.  

They also have a clear vision of how things should be.

In problem solving, describing how things shouldn’t and should be corresponds to problem definition and goal.  Problems and goals are two sides of the same coin, and the-first-step in problem solving.

[Slide 5 – Step 2]

So, who cares about the problem?  Step 2 is where you identify the people who have an emotional connection to the problem.  Enneagram Type 2 is often called the Helper.  They understand the emotional desire to solve problems and want to chip in and help. 

In Step 2, you establish your team of committed stakeholders – those that will help solve the problem.  This is your problem-solving team.

[Slide 6 – Step 3]

Your team will have many ideas for how to solve the problem.  Step 3 is when you capture all the ideas.  Enneagram Type 3 is called the Achiever.  They are constantly looking for ideas that will lead to success. 

Each team member may have a different idea of what success looks like.  You’ll want to understand each member’s perspective.  It’s important in this step not to react negatively to any idea.  You want to create a positive environment, encourage everyone to contribute, and capture all ideas. 

[Slide 7 – Step 4]

Anytime anyone expresses an idea, you’ll have a reaction. That idea’s great! Or, that idea sucks!  You can’t help yourself; it happens naturally and instantaneously.  Enneagram Type 4 is sometimes called the Artist—they are the type most in tune with the emotional impact of any idea.

In Step 4 you want to determine the set of ideas that are most favorable to the team.  These are ideas that have the most positive emotional energy, energy your team will need to carry the project through to successful completion. I usually use a simple vote on each idea to make this determination.

The combination of the Idea Step 3 and Reaction Step 4 reminds me of the saying, “throwing spaghetti against the wall and seeing what sticks.” It’s this combination that allows your team to come up with the ideas that they want to pursue.

[Slide 8 – Step 5]

Having a handful of positive ideas to explore, it’s now time to turn to the left-brain activities starting with analyzing each idea for feasibility. Enneagram Type 5 is often called the Analyzer, and in Step 5 of problem solving you perform pro/con and cost-benefit analysis of each idea.  Out of this step comes the top 1, maybe 2, ideas to solve each problem that the team is pursuing.

[Slide 9 – Step 6]

Step 6 is where your team takes the most promising idea and builds a project plan that gets you all the way to the goal – who does what and when.  Type 6 is often called the Questioner.  Their brain is constantly asking questions—what if this happens; what if that happens?  They’re constantly on the lookout for pitfalls and developing strategies to avoid them.

In Step 6 of problem solving, you’ll want the team to build a low risk plan that gets to the goal; the plan can include risk mitigation strategies and contingency plans. 

[Slide 10 – Step 7]

Now that you have your plan, the team needs to take it back to the broader set of stakeholders for buy in.  Enneagram Type 7 is often called The Enthusiast. They are the ones who get people excited to try something new.

In Step 7, you socialize the plan with your organization. You remind everyone of the problems they face and show how the plan will solve those problems.  Done well, this socialization will lower barriers and resistance during implementation.

[Slide 11 – Step 8]

In steps 1 through 7, what have you done? Talk, Talk, Talk.  Step 8 is the time for action.  Enneagram Type 8 loves to get to action.  They will be the type that is most frustrated as the team works through the first seven steps. You will want to coach the Type 8s on your team to have patience during these early steps.

But, in Step 8, the team gets action!   With the approved plan in hand, your team’s now ready to march ahead, solve the problem, and achieve the goals!

[Slide 12 – Step 9]

YAY! –you’re DONE!  The team finished the project. How did they do?  Whenever you undergo a transformation, some toes will be stepped on and feathers will be ruffled. Enneagram Type 9 is called the Harmonizer, and in Step 9 you want to debrief the project and listen to feedback from the stakeholders.  If you have your detailed list of problems and goals from Step 1, now is the time to review that and score the project.

As you have these conversations with the stakeholders, you’ll uncover that there may be lingering problems and perhaps new problems that need to be addressed.  And, this is why….

[Slide 13 – Process + People = Purpose]

…the Enneagram is a circle, not a line.  Step 9 leads right back to Step 1 and illustrates the human desire for continuous improvement.

The aspect I love about this problem-solving framework is that there’s a direct link between each step in problem solving to a specific personality dynamic that is particularly suited for that step. 

Now more than ever, organizations are being challenged with threats that require everyone in the organization to collaborate and find new ways to survive and thrive—working ON the business not just IN the business.  

Using a step-by-step-approach-to-problem-solving can get your team to  focus on the challenge and invent a new path forward.

Filed Under: Employee Engagement, Leadership, Problem Solving

How To Reduce Product Returns

July 1, 2020 by Matt Schlegel Leave a Comment

In this video, I share a story about how a client used the problem-solving framework I describe in Chapter 2 in my new book Teamwork 9.0.

In Chapter 8 of the book, I use the tools to analyze this team’s dynamics in the section called “All In The Family.”

Here is a transcript of the video:

It was 2009, in the heart of the Great Recession, Allen had the perfect product for the times.  Online video content was exploding, and Allen’s company had a low-cost video production solution that enabled anyone to produce professional-looking content at a fraction of the price of commercial equipment.

Allen was a caring soul.  Responsible for operations, he wanted to deliver the best possible customer experience and bended over backwards to do that.  And, while customers loved the products and demand was soaring, the organization had reached a limit—the telltale sign? …  Product reliability suffered.  Nearly 1 in 3 products shipped out were being returned for repair.

Allen wanted to solve the problems-causing-returns, but couldn’t get the attention or resources necessary.  Everyone was too busy working on the “next thing” and too willing to blame others for the current problems. That’s when Allen thoughtfully asked for my advice.

I suggested that he form a cross-functional team and use the team-based problem-solving method that I detail in my book Teamwork 9.0. He convened a meeting and encouraged everyone to share their thoughts on the causes of product returns. 

Over the course of an hour, a transformation occurred.  The participants stopped blaming one another and started getting intensely curious about the root causes of the problems.

That spark-of-curiosity ignited a fire—the team was on a quest to identify and solve each of the underlying issues.

After that initial meeting, Allen was able to get the attention of the team members and secure the resources he needed to address all the problems. Under his leadership, return rates plummeted.

Clearly defining a problem, sparks the intense human desire to-solve-that-problem. Step ONE in problem solving is to instill your team with that intensity.

Filed Under: Employee Engagement, Leadership, Problem Solving

Back to Work—Creating the New Normal

June 16, 2020 by Matt Schlegel Leave a Comment

Organizations are being challenged to respond to a series of crises, not the least of which is a global pandemic.  These challenges require organizations to respond in creative ways outside of typical work patterns.  Here is a framework for organizing your team to face these challenges.

Working On the Business, Not In the Business

Organizations are designed for a purpose, to fulfill a mission.  An organization’s people, processes and products/services are all aligned to deliver on that mission, forming behavior patterns that enable the organization to become ever more efficient on that delivery. But what happens when the organization is faced with a challenge that falls outside of that mission?  Most organizations are not designed with the overheard or capacity to rethink, re-invent and rollout entirely new sets of behaviors that adapt to the challenge.  How does your organization respond when faced with a challenge that requires it to work on the business, not in the business?

Problem Solving Framework

When faced with an extraordinary challenge, your leadership can benefit from adopting a flexible problem-solving framework that serves as a guide for the team to work through the challenge.  Chapter 2 of my book Teamwork 9.0 presents a framework designed for these types of challenges. The framework consists of nine steps. Here’s how you can use it to address the challenge of working during a pandemic.

Step 1—Problems and Goals

The first step in problem solving is to list the problems that challenge your organization—reduced productivity, falling sales, distracted customers/vendors/employees, broken supply chains, broken delivery channels, new workplace regulations/guidelines, etc.  Each organization faces a unique set of problems that need to be overcome.  Remember, the problems that get listed are the problems that get solved, so be sure and capture all the important issues.

Next, envision how the world could be when the problems are solved.  Remembering the mission of your organization, what is now possible in light of this disruption? How can your organization emerge even better and stronger than before?

Step 2—Build the Team

By its very nature, the challenge of working during a pandemic affects everyone in your organization.  The team responsible for leading the organization through this challenge should have representatives for each of the organization’s constituents.  Customers can be represented with sales and customer service leaders. Your vendors can be represented with leaders from procurement.  Each department will want to participate in the initiative—operations, IT, human resources, finance, product development, etc.  With your team established, loop back to Step 1 and make sure that the problems facing each stakeholder group are listed and their visions for the future are captured. 

Step 3—Ideation

By now your team is excited to share ideas about how to solve the problems and realize the vision for the future.  During ideation, you want to capture ALL ideas—dismiss nothing.  Here is your chance to tap into the creative potential of your team, and you want to encourage everyone to participate.  Ensuring that everyone has a chance to contribute their ideas and listen to others’ ideas moves the group towards finding solutions that work for everyone. 

Step 4—Positive Ideas

Once you have a rich set of ideas to draw upon, you will want to explore a few ideas more deeply.  The team can determine the high priority ideas to pursue by deciding democratically with a vote.  Deciding in this way, the team will choose the ideas that have the most positive energy behind them, energy that the team will need as they work towards the solution.

Step 5—Analyze the Ideas

Each idea delivers a benefit with a cost. In this step, the team performs the cost/benefit analysis to arrive at the top one or two ideas that will deliver the greatest positive impact to the organization. Each stakeholder will have distinct perspectives on the pros and cons of each idea, and it’s important that every perspective is considered at this phase.  Out of this step will emerge your top candidate for a solution set along with alternatives, should they be necessary.

During this step, you also research all pertinent data related to the effort.  In the case of returning to work, examples of such resources include:

https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/community/guidance-business-response.html

https://covid19.ca.gov/pdf/guidance-office-workspaces.pdf

Clare Price’s Free Book “Make Remote Work”

Step 6—Plan for Success

Having identified the best path to the goal, the team can develop the detailed plans for getting there. In this step you determine who will do what when, laying out the timeline for implementation to solve the problems and realize the goals.  Each group in your organization will contribute to implementation, so it’s crucial to have them participate in building the plan.

Step 7—Promote the Plan

Prior to implementation, the team needs to socialize the plan with the organization.  Start with context by highlighting the current problems and presenting the vision for the future.  Then, share the details of the path forward to the “new normal.”  If all stakeholders have been well represented to this point, then the organization will embrace the proposal thereby lowering any barriers during implementation.

Step 8—Implement!

With everyone on board, your organization is now ready to implement the plan and transform the organization, creating the organizational systems, processes and behaviors that will fulfill the mission and thrive in the new environment.  While steps 1 though 7 may have taken as long as a few days each, Step 8 will often be the longest step as the team works through the plan.  If challenges arise during implementation, the team can revisit previous steps to get back on track and back to implementation.

Step 9—Debrief and Harmonize

What’s working well? What needs adjustment?  In this step you reflect on the transformation that has taken place and determine what needs smoothing out.  Referring back to the list of problems and goals from Step 1, you can score your effort. You may find that some problems are not adequately solved. Perhaps new problems arose. Rather than a line from start to finish, think of problem solving as a circle—a cycle of continuous improvement getting you ever closer to meeting all your goals.

The New Normal

There is a natural order to problem solving. When faced with a large challenge, your team will go through all nine steps listed above.  By taking the team through each step deliberately and systematically, you will arrive at a satisfactory outcome much more quickly and with much greater stakeholder buy-in.   Doing so creates effective and lasting solutions for your organization.

What methods are you using with your team to adapt to the new working environment? What’s working well? What suggestions would you make for others?

Filed Under: Employee Engagement, Leadership, Problem Solving

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 11
  • Go to page 12
  • Go to page 13
  • Go to page 14
  • Go to page 15
  • Go to page 16
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Your Number Makes a Difference™

Make your life even better, personally and professionally, by knowing your Enneagram type.
Reveal Your Number with a Free Enneagram Questionnaire »

Follow Matt

  • rss
  • twitter

Get Posts Direct to Your Inbox!

Solve Your Teamwork Dilemmas With Matt’s New Book

View Book Reviews

Latest Posts

  • Don’t Give Me That Look! – Enneagram Type 2
  • How’s your sarcasm game?
  • Why are there so many major floods lately?
  • How’s your hoodie game? Inside Out 2’s Embarrassment and Enneagram Types 4, 5 and 9
  • Climate Moment August 2024 – Degrowth

Categories

Recent Comments

  • Matt Schlegel on I am 2% Neanderthal
  • Jill on I am 2% Neanderthal
  • Matt Schlegel on FAQ: Enneagram — Team Effectiveness
  • Matt Schlegel on How to Lead a Board of Directors Change Management Task Force
  • LBF on How to Lead a Board of Directors Change Management Task Force

Footer

Matt Schlegel

Send Matt a Message »
+1 (650) 924-8923

  • Home
  • Services
  • Success Stories
  • FAQ
  • Blog
  • Contact
  • This Book’s For You
Solve Your Teamwork Dilemmas
With Matt’s New Book

© 2025 Schlegel Consulting · Evolutionary Team Effectiveness · +1 (650) 924-8923 · Email Matt
Creative Consulting by JMF · Web Design by Sarah Ruediger · Sitemap

Your Number Makes a Difference.™ Reveal Your Number with a Free Enneagram Questionnaire »