Business Growth & Strategy

What Makes a Person Accountable?

Are you as sick of the “blame game” as I am? Occupy Wall Street protestors blame the “nasty, greedy, wealthy” companies and their executives for their suffering. Politicians spin stories about how the current economy is someone else’s fault. Retail workers claim it’s not their fault that a product is out of stock. (After all, that other department orders it.)  These are obviously examples of what accountability is not. So, what makes a person accountable?

What is Personal Accountability?

Personal accountability means that I am 100% responsible for:

  • my choices
  • my feelings
  • my opinions
  • my beliefs
  • my actions
  • the results and the consequences of all of the above.

Linda Galindo, author of “The 85% Solution”, goes further:

Unlike responsibility (the before) and self-empowerment (the during), personal accountability is the after. It’s a willingness—after all is said and done—to answer for the outcomes of your choices, actions, and behaviors. When you’re personally accountable, you stop assigning blame, “should-ing” on people, and making excuses. Instead, you take the fall when your choices cause problems.

Locus of Control

Locus of control is a psychological term referring to a belief system of an individual.  It is either internal or external and identifies where, to whom or to what you assign responsibility or control for what happens, regardless of the outcome. Julian Rotter originated this concept in the 1950’s. This orientation is also the primary determinant of an individual’s accountability and is represented by the sliding scale below.

External-The Victim

Internal-Accountable

 

External Locus: “The Victim”

If you have an external locus of control, then you believe factors (people, diseases, luck, etc.) outside of your control are responsible for your failure, unhappiness and disappointment. If you don’t experience yourself as being in control, how can you be responsible?

If you have a Victim mentality, you believe that you are helpless. Everything always happens to you, and you experience external stimuli as negative or even tragic. You blame others and project an image that you are doing your best in spite of THEM.  Nothing is your fault. You are angry most of the time and annoyed or complaining about almost everything. You are a master of blame and unconscious rationalization which allows you to see yourself as an honest and good person. You do not understand that your preferred weapons of blame and judgment separate you from those with whom you want to connect most. Through this process of self-justification, you believe your own lies and are blind to any errors that can be attributable to yourself.

Feeling in control promotes self-confidence. Is it surprising, then, that an external locus of control also results in low self-esteem and a mindset that others (not ME) need to change?

Internal Locus: “The Accountable Person”

If you have an internal locus of control, you believe that you can control (or at least influence) the events in your life and how you experience them. Outcomes are products of your freely chosen decisions and actions. Even though some external events are out of your control, you understand that you are in total control of how you experience them.  Ultimately, you control the quality of your life.  You consistently honor your commitments and responsibilities. You do what you know you should do when you need to do it. You seldom make excuses. Your learning mindset fertilizes your routine reflection.

Conclusions:

After many discussions with my member executives and months of reading and thinking, I conclude that:

1. An internal locus of control kills “Victim” thinking and is the foundation of personal accountability.

2. Accountability in organizations ONLY happens when its employees are personally accountable.

3. Accountability is not learned in the most homes or schools. I base this conclusion on my members’ recruiting experiences. I consistently hear that 50-60% of job applicants have difficulty passing drug and alcohol tests. Of the remaining 40-50%, many do not show much, if any, initiative. Unless the applicant has read self-help books or participated in a personal or spiritual development program, then personal accountability appears to be a foreign concept.

4. Most people don’t understand the concept of locus of control and accountability. This knowledge gap needs to be closed. If you, as a CEO or President, want accountable employees, you need to first be a role model for them, and then teach and continually coach your workforce.

5. Everyone chooses to be, or not to be, accountable. Some individuals do not want to want to lose their “victim” stories. After educating and coaching these employees, respect these individuals’ choices, and exercise your own choice of employing them!

In my next blog, I will summarize a couple of models that you can use to increase your awareness of your own accountability and use it to teach your workforce.


Category: Business Growth & Strategy

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About the Author: Cheryl McMillan

Cheryl is a Vistage Master Chair and Executive Coach. She has a passion for raising awareness in leaders about how their choices and unconscious actions impact their results. She leads two C-Suite peer advisory boards, comprised of CEO's or …

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  1. Guest

    January 5, 2012 at 2:06 pm

    How do you implement the personal accountability mindset in your organization?

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