How to Focus Joyriders on Your Team
Joyriders are team members that you don’t invest a lot of leadership capital in, but you also don’t get anything back from them in terms of results.
Your Joyriders occupy the lower right corner of the Leadership Matrix. You don’t put in a lot of time and energy but you also don’t get anything back in terms of results. Joyriders can be really tricky to identify. They have a lot of energy and enthusiasm. They seem to constantly be busy. Unfortunately, they seem to work on everything except their core responsibilities. Leaders tend not to spend a lot of leadership capital on joyriders because they seem like they’re delivering results. But at the end of the year they tend to come up short on what was expected of them.
Some ways you can spot a joyrider are they’re high energy, they’re enthusiastic, they’re busy, and they’re social at work. They have broad interests in a lot of different areas. They constantly come to you with new ideas. They’re the first person to suggest launching a new special project. They’re constantly volunteering for things outside of their area of responsibility. They also have a very light track record on results. They’re hard to pin down on their core deliverables and their deadlines. Their teammates end up covering for them and doing the work the joyrider was supposed to be doing. It’s easy to miss a joyrider. The key is to look for a lot of activity and not a lot of results.
How to Focus Joyriders
Leading joyriders involves investing additional time and energy into monitoring this person’s activities and focusing them on their core responsibilities. This means more frequent check-ins and putting more structure and measurement to their work. The additional leadership capital you spend on them is designed to improve their results. Once their behavior’s changed and they start delivering what’s expected of them, leaders can typically pull back and give them the room to operate.
Your goal is refocusing a joyrider on their core responsibilities. Inventory their workload. Reassign or stop unnecessary work that isn’t related to their core responsibilities. Closely manage them against their core duties. Add structure to their check-ins. Have them come in with a list of all the projects they’re working on. Have them articulate what the status is for every single project. And if they start talking about something that’s outside their responsibilities, put a stop to it immediately.
The benefit of more effectively leading a joyrider is that it’s going to surface a core performance problem. You’re going to see where there might be skill gaps or results gaps in what they’re delivering or not delivering. This is also going to demonstrate a results-focused leadership style to the rest of your team. Your team knows this person isn’t getting their work done, mostly because the other team members have to do the work for them. They’re probably not very happy about that. When they see you finally holding this joyrider accountable to doing their job, they’re going to feel a lot better about the work they’re doing. It’s also going to get that extra work off their plate and onto the joyrider’s plate where it belongs. You’re now going to be getting results from a previously non-producing part of the team.
The other benefit is there’s potentially a dramatic performance turnaround here. This person has a lot of energy. They have enthusiasm. Your job as the leader is to make sure you focus it on their most important responsibilities.
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