Productivity expert Maura Thomas joins Brian to tackle this #truthbomb:
Your team's biggest productivity barrier might be you.
Through engaging stories and practical examples, Maura reveals how leaders unknowingly create chaos through their communication habits and "always available" mentality.
Learn simple yet powerful changes you can make as a leader to transform your team's effectiveness, including why "I trust your judgment" might be the most important phrase in your leadership vocabulary, and why being too available to your team can be just as damaging as being unavailable.
See the full details and links on the episode's page: https://www.productivitygladiator.com/episodes/breaking-your-teams-biggest-success-barrier-7-simple-changes-with-maura-thomas
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References In This Episode
Maura Forbes Article on defining Open Door Policy - 10 Things Leaders Need to Get Right For Happy & Productive Employees
Harvard Business Review Article, The Downside of Flex Time, the Communication Guidelines chart Maura mentioned in the interview is down at the bottom of the page.
Maura’s Forbes article: What Does Work-Life Balance Even Mean?
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Episode Digest
Breaking Your Team's Biggest Success Barrier: 7 Simple Changes
While many organizations still frame productivity challenges in terms of time management, the real barrier isn't time – it's attention. Maura Thomas said it best:
"We've all had days where we said to ourselves, 'My gosh, that was such a good day. I got so much done.' And we've all had days where we said, 'My gosh, I was busy all day and somehow I got nothing done.' and in those two instances, same 24 hours."
You can't solve a distraction problem with a time solution. The real challenge lies in how organizational culture, particularly leadership behavior, shapes productivity.
Here are seven specific changes leaders can implement to transform their team's productivity:
1. Be Specific About "Responsiveness" Expectations On The Different Communication Types.
When leaders tell their teams to "be responsive," what they're really saying is "be fast." This creates a culture where employees feel compelled to monitor every communication channel constantly, making it impossible to prioritize effectively. Instead, clearly define what responsiveness means in different contexts and establish realistic response-time expectations. State these somewhere so staff can point to them and reference them.
2. Create Clear Communication Channel Guidelines - What Type Of Communication Goes Where & When.
Organizations often introduce new communication tools without providing guidance on how to use them effectively. This results in redundant messaging (like sending a chat to say "I just sent you an email") and information overload. Establish clear guidelines for which communication channels should be used in specific situations. Examples:
—Your “bat signal” - Which method is your “stop everything, I need you right now, it’s an emergency” channel?
—What’s worth a phone call?
—What’s a Teams/Slack Message for? Or an email? What’s the difference?
—Do we text message for work? If so, for what, when, and why?
"If you communicate urgent or time-sensitive issue
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