ISBN-13: 9783565213511 / Angielski / Miękka / 232 str.
This book examines how performance management systems inadvertently substitute fear for genuine accountability, and why this substitution consistently undermines the outcomes leaders intend to achieve. Rather than focusing on motivation techniques, it explores the structural dynamics that cause teams to prioritize appearance over results, how defensive behavior emerges from poorly designed feedback mechanisms, and how transparency actually operates when psychological safety exists.The exploration reveals how managers confuse compliance with commitment, how metrics become performance theater when consequences feel arbitrary, and how talented professionals disengage when evaluation systems emphasize punishment over development. It demonstrates that sustainable performance improvement requires fundamentally different conversational frameworks than traditional review processes provide.By analyzing management patterns across organizations, the book shows how effective leaders construct accountability systems that separate role clarity from personal worth, how they deliver critical feedback that strengthens rather than threatens professional relationships, and how they design metrics that illuminate problems without creating defensive concealment.The work addresses how to identify when fear has replaced functional accountability, how to restructure conversations around performance gaps, and how to build evaluation systems that teams experience as developmental rather than punitive. This offers strategic insight for leaders seeking superior execution through psychological clarity rather than manufactured urgency.
Teams perform optimally when accountability stems from transparent expectations and supportive feedback rather than anxiety about consequences that feel unpredictable or disproportionate.