What do your organization, our democracy and sports have in
common?
They all depend on fair process for success.
No one likes to lose. But we can't always win. Our team is
eliminated from the playoffs. Our candidate loses the
election. We don't get the promotion we had hoped for.
We adjust. Life goes on. We try harder next time.
And yet, sometimes the inevitable losses leave people
bitter, suspicious and whispering in the corridors.
Why aren't they adjusting? Moving on? Trying harder?
It's simple. They believe they have witnessed an injustice
and the process is unfair. The referees are biased. The rules
unclear. Too many decisions made behind closed doors.
A fair process is the critical difference between gaining
acceptance and unleashing revolt.
A fair process requires that people:
- Understand how decisions are made - how goals are
scored, penalties called, promotions received, strategies
formulated, votes counted
- Know where decisions stand - on 2nd base, in the
penalty box, awaiting trial, flashing red in the rear view
mirror, in committee, improvements underway
- Trust decision makers are informed and fair -
unbiased refs, lawful judges, open and competent
managers, informed resources, reasonable representation
- Have the opportunity to influence the process -
elect new lawmakers, suggest policy and procedure
changes, submit feedback on a superior
We may not
like a decision, but if we trust the process, we can accept
the situation and work within the system to make things
better.
Without a fair process, we see things happening without
cause, without due process, without fair warning, counter to
the rules, and through manipulation.
Without fair process, no one feels they can win.
Without fair process, people lose trust and hope.
Without fair process, morale and productivity plummet.
Unsure whether your organization is seen as fair? See
symptoms of concern? Need assistance in assessing or
establishing fair process? Give us a call at 413-527-3737.