
Best Workplaces, Employee Experience, Leadership & Management, Recession, Trust
With Vrio鈥檚 10.5 million subscribers and more than 9,000 employees, Vrio seems to master the five key elements of what we are calling the 鈥淟eadership Mindset鈥.
These five elements have been crucial for Vrio throughout the Covid-19 crisis and continue to set an example for companies around the world.
1. Love of self-development
Leaders at Vrio are self-aware. They are truly motivated to become better versions of themselves. They actively look for authentic feedback in different forms:
- results
- Feedback from coaches and mentors
- Listening to people in skip-level meetings
- Leadership calls
- Walking around the office every week
- Seeking to connect with people who think differently from them across the organization
These quotes from Vrio leaders prove that they are commited to developing their leadership skills and deepening their relationships with their people:
"I won鈥檛 ever stop learning and growing. As leaders we have to get feedback from other sources. We have to help ourselves and model this so that people on the team pursue self-development.鈥
鈥 Melissa Arnoldi, CEO, Vrio Corp. 鈥 AT&T Latin America
"The greatest challenge as a leader is to influence people who think very differently from you. It is very easy when you feel a natural connection with people, but the real challenge of a leader is to find ways to break the ice and connect with people when running into obstacles. If the leader doesn鈥檛 seek to approach these people and find a way to connect with them, conflicts and disconnections will possibly start.鈥
鈥 Mariano Montaldo, Country Managing Director, DIRECTV Chile
2. Focus on values, vision and purpose
Leaders at Vrio exemplify personal and company values by leading through purpose. They believe in transparently sharing detailed information about the company鈥s direction. This helps employees feel respected and gives them a clear view of where the company is going and how they fit into the company鈥檚 plans.
Focusing on purpose has been especially important as people adapt to a new structure and way of working.
Maria Casanovas, Vice President & Chief Financial Officer at DIRECTV Latin America, says Vrio takes these conversations to the next level by turning purpose into business objectives:
鈥淲e conduct weekly meetings to discuss our goals relative to our business direction. We discuss annual, monthly, and weekly objectives. All leaders participate in these meetings and are informed about the different scenarios if we reach our goals by a 100%, 90% or 50%. We discuss tactics and course correct our actions on time to achieve our goals, instead of waiting until the end of the month to see that we probably didn鈥檛鈥 make it.鈥
3. Transparency and respect
Vrio leaders are deeply aware of how their actions set the tone of what鈥s culturally acceptable throughout the entire organization.
That鈥檚 why they lead with the truth. They believe in sharing as much information as possible to demonstrate they are trustworthy leaders:
鈥淪ome people say that it鈥檚 better to hold information. I do not agree with that. I like to share a lot of information. You need to explain the 鈥渨hy.鈥 When you do, people get a perspective that wasn鈥檛 available to them before.鈥
鈥 Mariano Montaldo, Country Managing Director, DIRECTV Chile
鈥淭he worst thing you can do is to hide problems from the organization. It鈥檚 better to present them, explain them and find solutions with the people.鈥
鈥 Diego Benavides, Country Managing Director, DIRECTV Peru
Most leaders mentioned that using a respectful tone is one of the keys to being transparent and trustworthy every day, especially when communicating difficult messages. Leading meant they had to deliver difficult messages more than once.
These leaders are deeply aware of the tone they use to interact with every person they do in the organization:
鈥淚 strongly believe in the importance of the tone we use. We could be communicating something truthful, but if it鈥檚 said with a negative tone, it won鈥檛 land well.鈥
鈥 Mariano D铆az de Vivar, Country Managing Director, DIRECTV Colombia
4. 鈥淩eporting down鈥
Vrio leaders challenge traditional hierarchical power dynamics that prevent them from building authentic relationships across the organization. They believe that leaders should 鈥渞eport down鈥 and let people know not only their decisions, but also the rationale behind them:
鈥淲e embrace a variety of different leadership styles, but we are clear on what elements are non-negotiable regardless of personal style: transparency, approachability, knowing people鈥檚 names, how long they have been with the company, their family and if there is any personal or family issue they may be going through.鈥
鈥 Diego Benavides, Country Managing Director, DIRECTV Peru
Frontline employees appreciate this horizontal approach, according to their open-ended survey answers. When we asked about something unique their leaders do, one employee said, 鈥淛ust having the ability to talk in the same conversation with our company President and with a person who cleans is very unique. It has given me a vision about how I want to be when I get to that role.鈥
Vrio even makes leadership effectiveness part of their performance evaluation system. For them, it鈥s not good enough to be great at doing the work 鈥 to be great at Vrio, you鈥ve got to be an exceptional leader, too.
5. Visible leadership
Frontline employees told us through the open-ended survey how much they appreciate the approachability of their top leaders. Since employees see leaders frequently, it feels natural to ask them questions when difficult news comes.
When social distance isn鈥檛 an issue Vrio leaders schedule weekly leadership activities in their calendars, such as:
- Walking around every floor in their buildings
- Visiting different locations
- Traveling across countries to listen to their people
鈥淚t is about hands-on leadership rather than leading from your desk.鈥
鈥 Maximiliano Kassai, Chief Operations Officer, DIRECTV Latin America
Leaders proactively look for opportunities to connect with all organizational levels and listen to their experiences. Melissa Arnoldi, CEO at AT&T Latin America鈥檚 Vrio Corp., sets the tone by traveling to all regions as often as she can, now something she and the management teams accomplish virtually in the post-COVID landscape.
Regional and country leaders frequently show up at offices all over their regions and countries. For example, Maximiliano Kassai, Chief Operations Officer at DIRECTV Latin America, told us he takes employees with him to visit places where there is a market opportunity for them:
鈥淗ow could I ask a Marketing Director or a Sales Director to go visit the market if I don鈥檛 do it? Our culture is hands-on. We go, visit and see how we are executing. If someone doesn鈥檛 want to do it, this culture isn鈥檛 for them.鈥
Has your company mastered the 鈥淟eadership Mindset鈥?
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