Here is another excellent guest post by Jon Edlin. Jon is the Marketing Manager for the Nazarene Publishing House. You can follow him on Twitter or Facebook. You should guest post! Read about it here.
I am the type of person who always sees the glass as half-full. I can usually dismiss a person’s character flaws because I am so hopeful about helping them reach their full potential. Although my wife says she finds this personality trait of mine endearing, it has recently brought difficulty for me in the workplace. In fact, when I had a difficult employee, I was so busy trying to develop that employee that I did not notice the rest of my team was suffering.
In March, I had the opportunity to attend Dave Ramsey’s EntreLeadership 1-Day Event in Kansas City. I took away a wealth of information from that event, but what Dave said about building the right team really caught my attention. Dave mentioned that when visitors meet his team, they are often amazed at how nice everyone is.
Dave went on to explain that of course he has nice people working for him. He fires the ones who aren’t. He explained that if you have a team member working for you who you don’t like, there is probably a good reason for that. Chances are that person could be bringing everyone on your team down.
As soon as those words came out of his mouth, something clicked for me. My attempts at developing my difficult employee had been unsuccessful and all the while, the morale of my team had been steadily decreasing. I wish I could say I went back to my office ready to defeat the virus that was plaguing my team, but I didn’t.
I continued to give my difficult employee chance after chance until I lost a perfectly good team member due to the unbearable environment I had allowed. It was too late to prevent him from moving on, but it was then that I decided to keep the rest of my team from the same fate. So I did it. With good reason, I fired the employee that was holding my team back.
Since then, there has been a complete 180-degree shift. My team is now working on all cylinders. A cloud has been lifted, and for the first time I can see a bright future.
Questions: Who’s holding your team back? If you don’t like them, why are they working for you?
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One bad apple…..
…spoils the bunch! So true!
Chris,
What are your thoughts about firing when the church is the “business” you’re in? How much grace is too much? How much weight should the fear of congregational backlash carry?
You should always approach the situation with the knowledge that Jesus is sitting in the chair next to you. If you have done EVERYTHING possible to make that person successful, and you’ve given them ample time and they still can’t get there, then it’s time to let them go. As far as congregational backlash, I’m the wrong guy to ask. I don’t feel you should EVER fear what the congregation is going to say. There’s a reason they are the congregation and you’re the one God placed to lead them. Your responsibility is to God, and running His church in a way that Glorifies Him. Make sense?
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