Deadwood or System Failure?: Diagnosing if the Person or the Process is Broken

Deadwood or System Failure?: Diagnosing if the Person or the Process is Broken #

The label “deadwood” often lands like an axe blow – signifying an employee deemed disengaged, unproductive, and draining team vitality. But before branding individuals as the problem, leaders must ask a critical diagnostic question: Is this truly a people problem, or is it a camouflaged system failure? Just as arborists distinguish between naturally decaying branches and those stressed by poor soil or disease, managers must discern whether performance issues stem from individual shortcomings or the environment they operate in. Misdiagnosis leads to costly cycles of turnover, resentment, and recurring dysfunction.

Reading the Signs: Individual vs. System Culprits #

Pointing to the Individual (“Deadwood”):

Pointing to the System (Failure):

Strategic Interventions: Fixing the Root Cause #

For Individual Mismatch:

  1. Clarity & Realignment: Have candid “Two-Way Mirror” conversations: “Here’s what success looks like in this role. Does this align with your strengths and goals?”
  2. Targeted Development: Offer precise, just-in-time upskilling (e.g., pairing with a mentor on specific client negotiations).
  3. Reassignment: If misalignment persists, explore internal mobility. A struggling technical writer might excel in QA or support.

For System Sabotage:

  1. Process Autopsy: Map failing processes with frontline staff. Example: A marketing team traced missed deadlines to a 7-layer content approval chain; streamlining to 3 layers fixed it.
  2. Resource Audit: Quantify “compensatory labor” – hours wasted on workarounds (e.g., manual data entry due to poor software).
  3. Psychological Safety: Implement blameless problem-solving. One hospital saw medication error reports soar 70% when focus shifted from “Who messed up?” to “What broke down?”.

Cultivating a Resilient Ecosystem: Prevention #

Proactive leaders prevent decay by fostering healthy conditions:

The Leadership Imperative: In a thriving forest, deadwood isn’t merely removed – it’s understood as part of a natural nutrient cycle enriching the ecosystem. Similarly, underperformers often reveal critical cracks in the organizational foundation. Before concluding “this person is broken,” ask: What conditions allowed this to take root? Fixing the soil – not just pruning the branches – builds resilient organizations where perceived “deadwood” becomes fuel for collective growth.

www.farizal.com

 
0
Kudos
 
0
Kudos

Now read this

Navigating Nature, Nurturing Connection: A Father-Son Camping Guide

Embarking on a camping trip with your son is more than just an outdoor adventure; it’s an opportunity to forge lasting bonds, teach valuable life skills, and create memories that will last a lifetime. In today’s fast-paced world, taking... Continue →