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You Don't Have an Accountability Problem

You Don't Have an Accountability Problem

Season 2 Episode 120 Published 2 months ago
Description

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Every leadership team has declared accountability as a cultural priority. Almost none of them are more reliable for it. The word gets dropped in meetings, printed on value slides, and attached to dashboards — and somehow execution is supposed to improve. It doesn't. Because accountability is structurally backward-looking: it names the failure, points at the person, and asks everyone to feel appropriately serious about something that already happened.

Jackson and Scott spend this episode dismantling the accountability reflex and replacing it with something that actually moves the needle: reliability — not as a buzzword swap, but as a structural shift from blame to design. The difference between an organization that does what it says and one that perpetually chases accountability comes down to three conditions, all of which must be built before a commitment is made, not after it breaks. And if you run a high-kindness, high-trust team and feel good about your culture, this one is especially for you.

What You'll Learn

  • Why accountability is backward-looking by design — and why reliability is the architecture that prevents the miss before it happens
  • The three conditions that define a reliable organization: commitment clarity, an early flagging norm, and design-focused post-mortems
  • Why high-kindness, high-trust teams are often the most operationally unreliable — what kindness without rigor actually produces
  • What commitment clarity requires in practice: what done looks like specifically, who owns it by name, and what dependencies must be named upfront
  • Why the manager's reaction to an early flag either builds or destroys the norm — and why that single behavior matters more than any policy
  • How the post-mortem is a CHRO moment — and the one question that shifts the room from defensiveness to analysis
  • Five concrete plays you can run this week to start moving your organization from accountability to reliability

Key Quotes

"Accountability is the word that sounds serious without requiring whoever's speaking it to do anything about the system that produced the miss."

"A risk named six weeks before a deadline is a problem with options. The same risk named the day before is a crisis."

"Kindness without rigor produces social comfort and operational drift."

"The design question produces learning. The blame question produces protection."

Sources for Statistics Cited

Support the show

If this episode landed, the next move is yours. 

Coaching is where it closes fastest — Jackson has developed CHROs from both sides of the table, as their leader and as their coach. The CHRO Ascent Academy, CHRO Chronicles, and the best-selling Substack are there too. 

All at mytalentsherpa.com.

In private equity: Propulsion AI surfaces workforce risk before the close and translates strategy into individual accountability after it. Before AI automation -  drive outcome clarity with digital teammates to do the work fast and at scale. 

All at getpropulsion.ai.

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