Are You Getting In The Box or Staying Out?
You’re backed against wall. Mechanical contractor behind. Need air handlers commissioned. Their leadership team not doing job. You take group through project. Grow frustrated. Cuss out and berate individuals. Tell them if they don’t get air handlers up, you’re going to kill somebody. Their leader calls your supervisor. You get into trouble. Realized you lost cool by getting in box. Did not presume positive intentions. Prevented positive outcome. Didn’t even get what you wanted. That’s being in box. Term from Leadership and Self-Deception by Arbinger Institute. Mental perspective deceiving us in leadership. You exaggerate others’ faults. Exaggerate your own rightness. Blame others for feelings. Behaviors become habitual. Way out is do right thing. Assume they have good intentions, doing best they can. Calm down. Control behavior. Think of solutions. Different from superintendent who developed 14 resolutions. No cussing. Never get angry. Bring high energy to every interaction. Referenced list every morning. Everything designed to generate harmony and happiness. That’s staying out of box.
Here’s what most superintendents miss. They think when backed against wall, response is yell, scream, say offensive things. Milestone-driven so let temper get away. Say things not proud of. Behave unpredictably. Reputation suffers. That’s being in box. Self-deception. Exaggerating others’ faults while exaggerating own rightness. Different from superintendent who referenced resolutions every morning generating greatest harmony. Presuming positive intentions. Controlling behavior. Thinking of solutions instead of escalating.
The challenge is most superintendents never learned how to work with others. Never taught in schools or colleges. Don’t learn through trades. Never read How to Win Friends and Influence People. Never developed resolutions about communication. Never learned plan is only successful as communicated. Never learned to harness team energy. Energy originates with superintendent. Must be sense of urgency, pace, optimism keeping people working efficiently. But superintendents never learned this, wonder why projects lack energy when answer is they’re in box blaming others instead of presuming positive intentions.
Read How to Win Friends and Influence People
One of first steps in leading as superintendent is ability to influence people. Skills typically not taught in schools or colleges. Definitely don’t learn through trades. Recommended habit: read How to Win Friends and Influence People by Dale Carnegie.
You can make more friends in two months by becoming interested in other people than you can in two years by trying to get other people interested in you.
Field director reading book reported it brought more success than any other. Improved relationships at work. Fixed family issue brewing for years. Book outlines common sense approach implemented by any builder. Learn and implement principles, immediately become more effective, happier at work, more influence with everyone.
Develop 14 Resolutions About Communication
Knowing what to do is one thing. Knowing how to carry out assignments is another. Superintendents best served creating list of resolutions determining course of action and behaviors daily.
Was so milestone-driven would let temper get away. Would say things not proud of. Behave unpredictably. Use unacceptable language. Reputation suffered. Following trusted mentor, listed 14 resolutions for behavior. Wrote how would communicate, solve problems, maintain good character. Referenced every morning. Immediately saw success. Everything designed to generate harmony and happiness.
The 14 resolutions:
- No cussing.
- No accusing others.
- Never get angry again.
- Stay moral.
- Stay outside box with everyone.
- Message company positively.
- Take time with people.
- Give service first.
- Fail forward.
- Bring high energy to every interaction.
- Keep confidence.
- Help others feel safe.
- Smile.
- Don’t stress about hard things.
So focused on what we need to do, forget how we’re going to do it. Writing resolutions on how to actualize rules is key to interacting with team. Best way to self-correct and encourage new habits.
Ever had feedback in performance review that keeps coming up? Ever had something holding you back but haven’t corrected it? Keeping list of daily resolutions you reference verbally every day helps guide behavior and make changes preventing repeat conversations.
Create list supporting future success. Make habit of re-emphasizing daily. Consider discussing with colleagues so they hold you accountable. You will become person you want to be through proper behaviors.
Communicate Everything: The Takt Plan Story
Plan is only successful as communicated. Strategies only implemented when everyone heading same direction. Superintendent’s main focus: define and provide clarity, align entire team towards effective communication. Get everything out of your head.
Project utilized Takt plan. After initial pushback, all trades bought in. Every foreman had 11×17 laminated copy. Adhered to gang boxes, taped inside hoist, present on every floor. Project always knew end date and where each contractor should be. If you asked what end date was, answer was December 6, 2017. Team saw as group, knew as group, acted as group.
Increase communication throughout site through visuals, meetings, emails, huddles. Ask important questions: Do all contractors understand master schedule? Do all workers know plan for day? Do all trade partners know plan for next week and committed 100%? Do all workers know what’s happening that day and how to be safe? If no to any, we have work to do.
Every part of plan should be communicated to appropriate people when needed. Use all methods: audibly, in writing, physically through mockups, most importantly visually. Superintendent’s responsibility to communicate clarity around plan. Not just communicate but communicate for understanding. Double amount of communication currently disseminated.
If 6 to 12 people on team know plan, imagine if everyone on site knew plan, could follow it, help achieve goal to see, know, act as one unit. Accomplish goals, standards, milestones with more people working towards them.
Stay Out of Box: Presume Positive Intentions
Being in box means mental perspective deceiving us in leadership. Many times superintendent backed against wall, knee-jerk response is yell, scream, say offensive things. Must have better options. Always expect others are doing their best. Presume positive intentions.
Mechanical contractor behind in commissioning air handlers. Leadership team not completing committed tasks. Took group through project, grew frustrated, cussed out and berated individuals. Some focused only on manner of speaking rather than discussing issues. Told them if they didn’t get air handlers up, was going to kill somebody. Their leader called supervisor. Got into trouble.
Realized lost cool by getting in box, did not presume positive intentions, prevented positive outcome. Helped escalate bad situation. Didn’t get what wanted.
When negativity occurs, tendency to deceive ourselves about their intentions. Problem: you exaggerate others’ faults, exaggerate your own virtue, overstate importance of factors justifying self-betrayal, blame others for feelings. Over time becomes habitual.
Way out is do right thing. Choices must be made before reaction escalates. Stop letting others control behavior. Assume they have good intentions, doing best they can. Calm down. Control behavior. Think of realistic solutions. Staying out of box allows successfully navigating conversations.
The System Failed You
Let’s be clear. When superintendents get in box and lose cool, it’s not entirely their fault. The system failed by not teaching skills for working with people. Never taught in schools or colleges. Don’t learn through trades. Nobody showed milestone-driven leading to temper is being in box. Nobody explained exaggerating others’ faults is self-deception. The system taught push through when actually presume positive intentions.
The system also failed by not teaching to develop resolutions about communication. If your project needs superintendent coaching, project support, or leadership development, Elevate Construction can help your field teams stabilize, schedule, and flow. Writing resolutions on how to actualize rules is key. No cussing, never get angry, bring high energy. Referenced every morning generates harmony. The system taught wing it when actually develop resolutions.
The system fails by not teaching plan is only successful as communicated. Takt plan where every foreman had laminated copy. Everyone knew end date: December 6, 2017. Team saw as group, knew as group, acted as group. Communicate for understanding. Get everyone knowing plan. The system taught tell people when actually communicate everything until everyone sees, knows, acts as one unit.
The Challenge
Here’s your assignment. Stop getting in box. Start presuming positive intentions.
Read How to Win Friends and Influence People. Field director reported more success than any other book. Improved relationships. Fixed family issue. Learn principles. Become more effective, happier, more influence.
Develop 14 resolutions. Write how you’ll communicate, solve problems, maintain character. Reference every morning. No cussing, no accusing, never get angry, stay moral, stay outside box, message positively, take time with people, give service first, fail forward, bring high energy, keep confidence, help others feel safe, smile, don’t stress. Create resolutions supporting success. Re-emphasize daily.
Communicate everything for understanding. Get plan out of head. Visuals, meetings, emails, huddles. Every foreman with laminated copy. Everyone knowing end date. Team seeing as group, knowing as group, acting as group. Double amount of communication.
Stay out of box. When backed against wall, choose before reaction escalates. Stop letting others control behavior. Assume good intentions, doing best they can. Calm down. Control behavior. Think of solutions. Don’t exaggerate faults. Don’t blame others. Presume positive intentions.
Harness team energy. Energy originates with superintendent. Sense of urgency, pace, optimism keeping people working efficiently. Control energy you bring, urgency you communicate, environment you create.
On we go.
FAQ
What does “in the box” mean?
Mental perspective deceiving us in leadership. You exaggerate others’ faults, exaggerate your own virtue, blame others for feelings. Over time becomes habitual. Way out is do right thing, presume positive intentions, assume they’re doing best they can.
What are the 14 resolutions?
No cussing, no accusing, never get angry, stay moral, stay outside box, message positively, take time with people, give service first, fail forward, bring high energy, keep confidence, help others feel safe, smile, don’t stress.
Why read How to Win Friends and Influence People?
Field director reading it reported more success than any other book. Improved relationships. Fixed family issue. You can make more friends in two months by becoming interested in other people than in two years trying to get them interested in you.
How do you communicate for understanding?
Takt plan where every foreman had laminated copy. Everyone knew end date: December 6, 2017. Team saw as group, knew as group, acted as group. Use visuals, meetings, emails, huddles. Double communication. Get everyone knowing plan.
What’s the mechanical contractor story?
Behind in commissioning air handlers. Superintendent grew frustrated, cussed out and berated individuals. Told them if they didn’t get air handlers up, would kill somebody. Leader called supervisor. Got into trouble. Lost cool by getting in box, didn’t presume positive intentions, didn’t get what wanted.
If you want to learn more we have:
-Takt Virtual Training: (Click here)
-Check out our Youtube channel for more info: (Click here)
-Listen to the Elevate Construction podcast: (Click here)
-Check out our training programs and certifications: (Click here)
-The Takt Book: (Click here)
Discover Jason’s Expertise:
Meet Jason Schroeder, the driving force behind Elevate Construction IST. As the company’s owner and principal consultant, he’s dedicated to taking construction to new heights. With a wealth of industry experience, he’s crafted the Field Engineer Boot Camp and Superintendent Boot Camp – intensive training programs engineered to cultivate top-tier leaders capable of steering their teams towards success. Jason’s vision? To expand his training initiatives across the nation, empowering construction firms to soar to unprecedented levels of excellence.