In 2018, the executives at banking giant Wells Fargo issued a new strategy for their business: the overall goal was to create long-term banking relationships with their customers. And to measure how well the company was executing on that strategy, they began tracking “cross-selling.” In other words, employees would be measured, and rewarded, based on the number of different accounts—from deposits and credit cards to auto loans and mortgages—a customer opened with the bank. The CEO at the time even coined a slogan: “eight is great” to illustrate the optimum number of accounts a customer might have with the bank.
On paper, you could argue that the more accounts a customer had would likely equate with a longer-term relationship with the bank. But, if you’ve been paying attention to the news for the past few years, you know that things went spectacularly wrong.
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Because they were incentivized and pushed to cross-sell, employees at the bank opened up millions of fraudulent accounts. The irony, of course, is that Wells Fargo has since lost millions of customers—on top of paying hundreds of millions of dollars in fees and penalties. How did things go so off the rails?
Of course, the Wells Fargo case is an extreme example. Not every company will find its employees performing illegal activities to try and get their bonus.
A more typical example could be sales commissions that can sometimes create misaligned incentives for people. Think about when a salesperson is more encouraged to close a sale—any sale—rather than find the best sale that builds the long-term value of the business. The incentive is for them to chase the metric that they get rewarded for rather than stick to the firm’s strategy.
For practitioners of the Great Game of Business®, you might even find this kind of behavior happening with your MiniGames™—particularly if the metrics being tracked inside the game don't exactly align with the company's Critical Number™.
That’s a key reason why the High-Involvement Planning™ (HIP) process is designed to engage everyone inside the business with setting the long-term strategy of the business. Rather than executives creating something that cascades from the top-down, HIP creates momentum from the bottom-up. When everyone has a voice in setting the direction and goals for the business, they can then set and track metrics that actually support the overall goals of the business.
As Rich Armstrong and Steve Baker write in their book, Get in the Game, about the HIP process:
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So when it comes to setting a strategy for your business, don’t go it alone. Make it a team effort. As the Ultimate Higher Law states: “When you appeal to the highest level of thinking, you get the highest level of performance.”
Want to learn more about getting your entire team involved and invested in the success of your organization?
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How The Great Game Helps Create Sustainable Enlightened Businesses
How Playing the Great Game Helps You Prepare for an Unpredictable Economy