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Technology


The good and the bad



How to develop honest and open communication

By Meredyth McKenzie


Smart Business San Diego | December 2008

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Douglas W. Burke<br /> CEO, DefenseWeb Technologies Inc.
Douglas W. Burke
CEO, DefenseWeb Technologies Inc.

Even with his busy schedule, Douglas W. Burke takes the time to get to know his nearly 100 employees. Each month, he takes a small group of them out to lunch to form strong relationships with them and to keep the lines of communication open.

“We want to make them have happy, productive lives here,” says the CEO of DefenseWeb Technologies Inc., a provider of customized software solutions for federal health care. “Part of that is having a relationship with them so that if there are issues, they can come to me or their managers.”

That commitment to open communication has helped the company reach 2007 revenue of $11 million.

Smart Business spoke with Burke about how to create relationships with your employees and keep your communication honest and open.

Q. What are the keys to open communication?

Just making a commitment to doing it and then doing it. Following through on the commitment, walking the walk and talking the talk are No. 1. Being honest at all times — you can’t have a quality relationship without being honest. And always being straightforward and upfront.

The most important thing is to make yourself available to all employees — open and approachable, whether it is an admin staff member or a vice president.

Be honest to the extent you can — relationships are built on trust. When you cannot disclose everything, there are ways of being more honest. Ask your employees what else can you be sharing with them or telling them to make them feel more a part of the process.

Follow through on what you say you are going to do; if you make empty promises, they will tell you, and you will lose trust. Listen to your employees and take what they say seriously. It might not be easy to hear, but if you have developed a culture of honest communication, your employees will tell you the truth.

One of the things I’ve been accused of in the past is that I tend to emphasize the positive things; being a CEO, you’ve got to be overly optimistic about how things are going to go. I got some survey feedback about two years ago that I wasn’t talking about anything negative, and people wanted to hear the bad news as well as the good news.

I took that to heart and started talking about things that weren’t going as well.

Q. How do you balance sharing the positive and negative with employees?

It’s a common thing for CEOs, being more overly optimistic salespeople. If you focus on the bad news, you’d just be depressed and never get anywhere. The goal would be to choose the bad news wisely and try to get some lesson out of it.

It’s important to connect that bad news to lessons learned and is there any sort of silver lining in the bad news. The danger in not doing it is that your employees may look at you like you’re spinning everything, and then you lose credibility and trust from that.

Being honest with bad news can help motivate employees to strive for that next goal.

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