Victoria looked a little down. “Why the long face?” I asked.
“Ugh,” she replied. “I think I just entered the J-curve. We had to let two more people go last week, I had to reassign some of their work to other people. Empowerment, you know the drill. It’s tough getting people to do new kinds of work. Their new responsibilities are suffering, big time.”
“What do you think is the problem?”
“The new things they have to do aren’t that difficult, but I am getting resistance. And some of the new decisions they have to make, well, maybe, with a little experience they will do better.”
“Describe the resistance,” I shifted.
“It’s not really resistance. They don’t say anything. But I can tell. It’s like a blank look. A nod that says yes, but a feeling that says no.”
“What do you think you are going to do, to get a different result?” I pressed.
“I am going to give it more time. Maybe things will improve.” Victoria was an optimist.
“And, what if they don’t improve? First, how will you know whether they are improving? And what if they don’t improve? What will you do differently?”