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TRUST AUDIT
Use these questions
to gauge where your firm stands on the trust issue.
- Do people in the firm at all levels
feel free to express themselves?
- Does the firm verbally encourage reasonable
risk-taking? Do people take risks?
- Is risk-taking actually supported and
rewarded?
- Are people suspected of hidden motives
and agendas when they take initiative?
- Are communications between colleagues
open? Relaxed? Joking?
- Or are communications guarded and defensive?
- Is more information passed through
the grapevine than directly from management?
- Do associates, managers and junior
partners sense over-control of minor aspects of their jobs?
- Do firm members resist change initiated
by management even when the objective appears to be beneficial?
- Does management resist change recommended
by firm members and employees even when the objective appears to be
beneficial?
- Are senior partners reluctant to forge
client relationships with others in the firm, including those working
on the matter?
- Does the firm have a policy of management
by objectives in which individuals set their own objectives and decide
the means to meet their objectives and measure achievement?
"Yes" responses to questions
to 1, 2, 3, 5 and 12 indicate a solid foundation has been built for
a workplace based on trust. On the other hand, "yes" response
to the remaining questions suggest significant inroads to trust or the
potential for absence of rust that can stifle productivity, creativity,
enthusiasm and desire to remain at the firm.
Act on those red flags ASAP!
© Practice Development Counsel, 1994.
Updated 2001.
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