Phorest FM Episode 112: Steve Gomez On Interdependent Leadership & Holding Empowering Meetings
Steve Gomez is recognised as one of the top business systems experts in the beauty and wellness industry. With over 24 years of business coaching experience combined with a background in marketing, communication and operations, he has personally supported hundreds of salons and spa businesses throughout his career. On episode 107 of the Phorest FM podcast, he discussed how to put emotions aside to coach based on data-backed decisions. Today, he's back with one simple goal: to make every staff, salon owner and leader feel empowered by the meetings they attend and hold.
Guests
Stephen Gomez
Transcript
Killian Vigna: Welcome to the Phorest FM podcast, episode 112. Iโm Killian Vigna.
Zoe Belisle-Springer: And Iโm Zoe Belisle-Springer. This week, weโre picking things up right where we left them in episode 107 with salon business coach, Steve Gomez. Weโll be talking about, what Iโm sure is everyoneโs favourite topic, meetings, but more specifically, how to use them in a way that turns each staff member into leaders.
Killian Vigna: So, grab yourself a cup of coffee, sit back, relax, and join us weekly for all your salonโs business and marketing needs. Good morning, Zoe.
Zoe Belisle-Springer: Morning, Killian.
Killian Vigna: So, interesting one here today. This man has managed to make his way into doing a part two here today.
Zoe Belisle-Springer: Yes, Steve Gomez back for part two. So, episode 107 was all about understanding what your salon numbers were telling you and coaching accordingly, and I, personally, thought it was a very inspiring episode. I remember the lastโฆ
Killian Vigna: Very good, yeah.
Zoe Belisle-Springer: Yeah, remember the last bit? We discussed goal setting and where it should start, and it was all about finding your staffโs โwhy?โ. That really, really stuck with me.
Introducing Steve Gomez [01:12]
Zoe Belisle-Springer: So yeah, I suppose letโs get into it, right? Without further ado, welcome back to the show, Steve. Great to have you on!
Steve Gomez: Thank you very much to both of you. Iโm really glad to be here, letโs jam!
Killian Vigna: Oh, heโs pure excited. Look at him; heโs sitting here wearing his Irish jersey. When I saw the camera turn on, I just was in stitches straight away, did not expect that.
And, thatโs actually the jersey you bought here in the Guinness Storehouse in Ireland, for the Salon Owners Summit, isnโt that right?
Steve Gomez: That is correct. So, we have to represent; we have to channel that great energy, go back to great moments in life, and itโs all the things that we either wear or surround ourselves with, that are constant reminders of great things that weโre up to.
So yeah, this is a great thing that the three of us are up to, in support of people out there that need to grow and need to develop themselves, so letโs rock and roll.
Killian Vigna: And speaking of growing and developing, todayโs topic isโฆ Itโs talking about that dreadedโฆ The meetings, or what weโฆ We like to call them one-to-ones, and you said that you want to make people excited about meetings.
Team meetings & one-to-ones: it starts with the leader [02:13]
Killian Vigna: So, I suppose straight off the bat, when youโre consulting with clients, whatโs the first reaction that people have when you talk about meetings and one-to-ones?
Steve Gomez: Well, whatโs interesting isโฆ The typical reaction is the word that you shared, dreaded, so letโs just start with that. I believe that if somebodyโs dreading a meeting, on either side, whether itโs the owner or manager, or itโs the employee, technician, contractor, whoever it is, come into the meeting, if theyโre dreading it, thatโs a symptom of something missing.
Thatโs all it is, so we need to stop and get aware and conscious of, โOkay, why am I feeling this way about having the meeting?โ On either side of the coin; and if Iโm feeling this way, whatโs missing, that if we added it, would make this more inspiring? Would make this feel like a good use of my time?
And, it has to start with the owner first. While it does take two to tango, the owner or manager, the leader, has to turn the mirror and look at themselves first, and say, โOkay, why am I dreading this?โ Or, โWhy do I feel that energy on the other side of the table? Why am I feeling that person not be as connected to this? Why am I feeling pushback or indifference? Or, somebody being impatient and just wanting to get through this? What am I doing all the time thatโs just the same old same old? How can I break this up and shake it up? Whoโs this all about, me or them?โ
Those are the type of questions that a leader needs to look at and ask themselves so that they can shift it. So, it starts there, how am I relating to it?
Killian Vigna: And thatโs exactly what you touched off when you said your three-tiered approach. Youโve got your values, and the one that you were talking about there is your perception. How do you perceive what youโre doing? Then, the last one you had was the habit and behaviour.
But yeah, itโs that perception that you have about yourself and how youโre going to get past that.
Steve Gomez: Correct.
Why we tend to dread meetings [04:31]
Zoe Belisle-Springer: Do you feel like that often time, itโs due to a lack of structure in these meetings thatโs causing most of these issues, and most of the dread, I suppose?
Steve Gomez: Completely. Itโsโฆ Well, itโs two-sided. There is either no structure, or in my experience, the structure is all about the owner and leader, and what they see, the owner and leader, and what they need. Itโs typically one-sided.
So, Iโm going to sit down with you, Killian, and weโreโฆ Itโs once a month, and letโs take a look at your numbers, and hereโs what youโre producing, and hereโs what need you to produce, what are you going to do differently? I need this out of you. Itโs I, I, I, I, conversation, not a โweโ conversation. There are no questions being asked, there is, โHereโs what I see youโre doing that I need you to do differently, or need you to do more of.โ
Zoe Belisle-Springer: Itโs kind of like those job offers, right? Where someone is saying, โWe have a job opening, hereโs what you need. Do you want to work in this place, this place, this is what weโre looking for.โ Whereas, if you switch the job offer to, โDo you want to work on your career?โ And make it a focus on the actual stuff, and why they would benefit from joining that team, it changes the whole conversation.
Steve Gomez: It really does. To me, thatโฆ The more I can find out about how youโre thinking, the more I could find out about why youโre inspired about something, and maybe why youโre not inspired about something else inside of your job and what you have to do. The more I can help guide and shape you, I can help direct you to where you say you want to go, and if Iโm directing you to where you say you want to go, I increase the odds of you actually doing something different to make that happen.
If Iโm just telling you what I see and what I expect out of you, youโre going to shake your head and yes me to death, when maybe, in the back of your mind, youโre agreeing with half of what Iโm saying, so it reallyโฆ Really has to go back to, โWhatโs in it for them? What are they committed to?โ And, if you over there know that Iโm genuinely committed to helping you get that, more often than not, youโre going to listen to my ideas after I find out what youโre thinking, but it has to start with your thinking first.
Structuring an effective & empowering meeting or one-to-one [06:50]
Killian Vigna: So, how do you structure the meeting? I suppose youโre saying a good bit of focus should be kind of on whom you are doing the one-to-one with. Prior to that meeting, okay? Should an agenda be put in place, or should there be objectives outlaid for that meeting? Thereโs nothing worse than being called to a meeting, and you donโt know what itโs about, or you donโt know whatโs going to be discussed.
Steve Gomez: Yes. So, Iโm going to take a two-pronged approach to this. Iโm going to answer in the immediate, and then Iโm going to backtrack to the genesis and beginning of the whole thing, to begin with.
So, in the immediate, I have a system that I wrote that I attached to my interdependent leadership book, and that is called โThe Planning and Review Form.โ So, this monthly planning and review form is all about taking the time to reflect, and in this reflection form, it should be handed out to the team member at least 24 to 48 hours before the meeting, and they have to fill it out, answer the questions, and come prepared with it.
So, the first part of the meeting, if Iโm meeting with you, Killian, youโre turning this in, and weโre sitting down and going through your answers. So, whatโs happening is, itโs giving you the chance to reflect on your own time and space before the meeting, and then for me, the leader, Iโm dialling in immediately at the start to you, and what youโre looking at, thinking about, and relating to your position within the company.
The questions that I wrote on this reflection form are things like this:โWhat are three things you love about working here? Whatโs one way that we, as a business, can improve, and whatโs your idea or solution? What are three things that you think youโre doing well? And, whatโs one thing you want to improve upon in the next 30 days, and whatโs the step youโre going to take?โ
Now, if we were to break those questions down, and get into the psychology of it, โWhat are three things you like about working here?โ Weโre starting with a positive. I have you not focus on things that you are struggling with, or things that maybe youโre frustrated with about the salon, Iโm having you start with what you like about being here, what you appreciate about being here, what do you love about being here?
Weโre starting with positive and affirming thought processes, so then, I get to dance with you on those answers. โTell me a little bit more about this. Why do you love that? How long have you felt this way? Did something happen to have you feel this way?โ So now, Iโm digging into, โWhat did we actually do right?โ
Because, by nature, us humans can be very critical first, so I want to be able to isolate what the heck we did do right that has this person happy about that, so we can keep replicating it. The next question comes right on top of it, which is; โHow can we improve as a company? And, whatโs your idea and solution?โ
So, there are two parts to that. There are actually three parts to that โ one, coming off the heels of positive thought process. The personโs going to be looking at answering that subconsciously in a more empowered way. Now, itโs not going to land as just some complaint, because they just wrote all these things they like, so now, without them even knowing it subconsciously, their brain is thinking more proactively, instead of a negative or complaining way.
And, because Iโm asking your idea, Iโm edifying who you are and that youโre important to the salon, and that you matter, and I want to know what you think and what you see. So, as you answer that question, then that allows you to feel heard, and it allows you to contribute.
The second part of that question is; โWhatโs your solution?โ Because, if thereโs no solution thought of by the person answering the question, then theyโre basically are just laying a complaint at my feet, that now I have to solve, and while I might have ideas around it, I want you to put your thinking cap on. I wantโฆ If you see something that maybe Iโm missing as a leader, tell me, show me, and whatโs your idea? Because you work here, and youโre probably going to have to be the one that has to implement it, so give me some ideas.
So, weโre challenging somebody to think positively, โWhere can we grow? Whatโs your idea?โ Now, we have it shift to them personally. So, โWhat are three things you think youโre doing well?โ And, the keyword in that is โthink,โ because if I come into a meeting, and Iโm not asking questions, and letโs say that, Zoe, you and I are meeting, and I see that you can improve your retail performance, but Iโm not checking in with you, and Iโm just coming in and telling you that you need toโฆ โHereโs your numbers, your retail to service percentage is at 15%, you need to be at 20%.โ
And Iโm showing this to you. You might, again, shake your head yes to me, or cross those arms and get defensive, and all that stuff, but when Iโm asking you what you think, first, and you write down, โIโm doing great at retail.โ Well, thank goodness I asked that question first because now I see that you think youโre doing great at retail, where I was going to come into the meeting and talk about how you need to get better at it.
So, thatโฆ So, that shifts me, as a leader, to then say, โOkay, so you wrote down that youโre doing great at retail, so tell me, specifically, a little bit more about that. Whatโs your experience? Whatโs happening?โ
โWell, I was always struggling to sell that colour shampoo and conditional to my colour clients, and in the last couple of weeks, I focused on it, and Iโve had a breakthrough. I had a couple of people buy it.โ
โAwesome, give me an example of a few of those people.โ
โWell, I worked with Killian, because he really wanted to accentuate that redโฆ Those red curly locks on top of his head, so I recommended the colour, and he went for it, and heโฆ I recommended the colour conditioner, and blah, blah, blah, and he said yes, and it made me feel great.โ
โThatโs an awesome breakthrough, now how can you make that applicable to other parts of your retail experience? Would you say that you can do that all around your retail?โ Yes.
So, it shifts. Thatโs the power of finding out what somebody thinks theyโre doing well. It gets me out of my perception, and it gets me into theirs, and then I could dance with their thinking, and really get more related, and really shift how I coach, instead of going in and, maybe, being potentially abrupt, and then cutting somebody off, and making them feel disempowered.
And then, the last question is; โWhat are you working on in the next 30 days, and what step are you going to take?โ And thatโs critical because now, weโre getting into the future. So, weโve done nothing but positive and empowering things throughout, asked your ideas, where are you working on and being strong? How do you want to improve? All right, now, how do you want to improve? What are you going to do about it? Would you like my ideas?
My ideas come where? At the end. But, by that point, the personโs ready to listen. Whoโs it all about? Itโs all about the other person. Itโs not about me, the leader, itโs about them. And if these conversations are being had once a month, once every six weeks, and weโre getting into the psychology of how somebodyโs thinking and relating, we have a really empowered breakthrough with that person. Weโre guiding them; weโre helping them build; itโs all about them.
That creates a dynamic shift in, โoh, the dreaded meeting.โ Now, it becomes about, โI canโt wait to sit down and talk with my mentor.โ
Zoe Belisle-Springer: Yeah, it becomes more of a conversation than telling.
Steve Gomez: Correct.
Killian Vigna: Youโve just built a leader from the ground up.
Steve Gomez: Yes.
Killian Vigna: Theyโve come to you with everything. Theyโve told you what they think theyโre doing good, told you what they plan to do next. You havenโt really had to do anything, only just, I suppose, sit there and kind of direct them, or like you said, dance with them.
Steve Gomez: And, think about this, Killian, based on what you just said, even if at the end of that going through the form, they havenโt said, or we havenโt addressed, a couple of things that I see that I want to address, then I can address them at the end, and by that time, I have somebody who is that much more receptive to listen to other areas that I see they can improve. The whole course of that has set it up for the person now to be open and wanting to hear, realising that itโs all about them, and Iโve got their interest at heart, and โIโm here to help you, so please share your opinions. What do you think?โ
It just recreates the thought process. The other thing is, in order to do this, a leader has to honour the time, so if that meetingโs in the schedule, it has to be honoured, and it canโt be like, โOh, a colour client just wanted to book at the last minute, so letโs cancel this and do that.โ Only emergency things that are drastic should get in the way of it, like, โThe water heater broke, and we immediately have to make phone calls to get it fixed, and I got to do that.โ
Some things happen that can get in the way, but they should be very minimal, and it should be in a quiet, uninterrupted space. If that phone is turned up, and the ownerโs looking down at it, if the knock is coming on the door, and the interruptionโs being allowed, those are disrespectful to the time that that person deserves from the leader.
I coach my clients that they should be taking their employees off-site. Go to the coffee house down the street, go somewhere outside of the norm, so that itโs one-on-one. Itโs in a different space, and it creates more intimacy.
Killian Vigna: Couldnโt agree more there.
Coaching questions & techniques for salon owners and managers [16:07]
Zoe Belisle-Springer: You just made me think about something. Earlier this year, I read โThe Coaching Habitโ by Michaelโฆ Iโm not 100% sure how to pronounce his last name.
Steve Gomez: Come on, Zoe. Come on!
Zoe Belisle-Springer: Michael Bungay Stanier? I donโt know. Iโd know how to pronounce it in French but in Englishโฆ Anyways, he was listing off seven essential questions to coach, and now Iโm curious to hear about which one would be your favourite.
So, he had, โWhatโs on your mind? And what else? Whatโs the real challenge for you? What do you want? How can I help? If youโre saying yes to this, what are you saying no to?โ and, โWhat was most useful for you?โ
Steve Gomez: I would go with all of the above.
Zoe Belisle-Springer: Oh, really?
Steve Gomez: I loveโฆ Look, the more questions you have, the better. I had the honour of learning somebody years back, and he gave me some great coaching, and he was coaching me to be a coach, and he said, โSteve, as you prepare to have a conversation with any of your clients, or if youโre teaching them how to coach their team, as you go into the conversation, you minimally should have three questions that youโre prepared to ask, and each question, naturally, based on the answer you get, is going to lead to other sub-questions, and typically, you might not even get to those three prepared questions, because the first one or two, and the sub-questions thereafter inside the dialogue is going to flush out and bring out a lot of great dialogue.โ
But, being prepared with questions is critical. Thatโs why, when I wrote the reflection form and created that, if you think about it, there are four basic questions in there. Soโฆ And, weโre giving it to someone and having them think about it beforehand, so theyโre coming in prepared, and itโs all about them.
Zoe Belisle-Springer: Yeah.
Steve Gomez: So, you just gave a line of seven questions that, if we had a half-hour to meet, we might even get through all seven of those. Justโฆ All right, what was the first one, again?
Zoe Belisle-Springer: Whatโs on your mind?
Steve Gomez: Whatโs on your mind? Okay, so I donโt know if Iโd lead a meeting off with that because then that might put somebodyโฆ โWell, what do you mean whatโs on my mind? Whatโs on my mind is, why am I in this meeting?โ Right?
So, I might start with a few of the other questions, and then use that question somewhere else in that line, just as a way, if I see somebody stuck, thatโs a great question to ask. โWell, tell me whatโs really on your mind.โ
Zoe Belisle-Springer: Yeah, get the conversation going.
Steve Gomez: Itโs a wonderful question, but itโsโฆ To me, itโs not a conversation starter as much as itโs something to help unblock, get somebody unstuck. Another greatโฆ
Hereโs a great coaching technique; a lot of times youโre going to ask somebody in a meeting a question, and youโre going to get that immediate answer; โI donโt know.โ And, the I donโt know is one of two things going on, you either have somebody whoโs genuinely stuck and doesnโt come up with an immediate answer, so the conditioned response is to say, โI donโt know,โ so I donโt have to think hard, and now itโs back on your shoulders to tell me.
Or, the โI donโt knowโ means Iโm indifferent, I donโt care, this doesnโtโฆ This isnโt important to me, so yeah, I donโt know.
Killian Vigna: Putting up a wall.
Steve Gomez: Yeah. Yes.
So, when you get the โI donโt know,โ the best thing to do is say, โWell, if you did know, what would it be? If you did know, what do you think?โ And literally, Iโll be on calls with clients, and Iโll keep gettingโฆ I was on a call last week, and for five minutes, we were going through the โI donโt knows,โ and as a coach, you have to stick with it, literally.
โWell, if you did know, tell me. Iโm not letting you off the hook. Come on, think. Give me something. Iโm not looking for the right answer; Iโm looking for you to think about it. Iโm not here to tell you, Iโm here to have you think and grow, so if you did know, what do you think it would be?โ
So now, that person knows that Iโm fighting for them to grow. Iโm not here to just tell you everything; thereโs no growth in that. I donโt want just a good soldier on the field; I want a thinker that sees the next moves happen in the battle.
So, if you did know, what would it be? If you did know, what would it be? Over and over until that person comes up with something, and whatโs amazing is, usually, in that line of questioning, youโre going to find somebody popping like popcorn within a minute or two, sometimes even quicker, because they just have to get out of their own way, and if you have the indifferent person, the one that doesnโt care thatโs just throwing the wall up, the, โIf you did know, what do you think?โ
Theyโre going to keep throwing the wall up, which is great, because now you can say, โOkay, Iโm sensing that you really donโt want to have this conversation, so Iโm putting that question aside, and now letโs talk about this. Whatโs missing here? Whatโs going on? Why am I feeling this energy? Letโs talk about that.โ
Which is even better, because now weโre getting into the truth, now weโre getting into authenticity, now weโre having somebody share what may be really going on behind the veil, because a lot of people just come in and put perfume on a pig, right? Thatโs just trying to cover up the stink thatโs not there, but we all smell it. Wait a minute, okay? Letโs quit masking, letโs dance here.
And, as a leader, leaders have to be willing to work through this, because you canโt be a dictator, and you canโt be a doormat, you have to walk that fine line.
So, I challenge any salon owner or leader listening to this, I challenge you to think about what your natural tendency is, because if your natural tendency is dictator, or to just take the bull by the horn and run with it, then you need to dial you down, because the energy is going to be felt, and if youโre more of the person that doesnโt like confrontation, then you have to understand thatโฆ
Notice the word confrontation; itโs just a conversation. Youโre the one shifting it to having it be a confrontation; it doesnโt have to be that way. So, when youโre going into meetings, you have to check yourself before you potentially wreck yourself, you know what Iโm saying?
Zoe Belisle-Springer: Nice plug there. Nice plug there.
Steve Gomez: I mean, you have to be able to notice how you are relating to it, and ask yourself why, and if you canโt get beyond it, this is why working with coaches are critical, because people like myself, we come in, and we help you work through how youโre relating to it and help you put the systems in place, and do the work, and get the courage, and put the size 12 foot on the butt to help you move through this.
I donโt think any of us, especially as weโre in adulthood, are going to change how we naturally relate to things. What is critical, is that we get conscious of how weโre relating to it, so we can choose to think differently in the moment, but weโre always going to have that tendency to feel that anxiety about something, or to feel that aggression, and want to go, โOh, my god. I canโt believe that Zoe did this! Zoe, get in here andโฆ โ
People are going to be one of two ways, really. Theyโre going to be that way, or theyโre going to be quiet and keep it to themselves, and then itโs going to bubble over, right? So, you got to notice how youโre relating to this as a human being first, take the title leader off, and look at yourself as a person, and be responsible for the energy youโre bringing to the meeting so that you shift you so that you becomeโฆ
Thereโs an opening there. You become open to the person, you accept that theyโre human, too, and just because they donโt get it at the way you do, doesnโt mean thereโs anything good, bad, right, or wrong, about it. Itโs about understanding their actions, or thinking is the way it is and helping them shift over to how you see things. This is a learned practice, so if these are recorded, and people can listen back to this, and youโre one of those owners that really is on one side of the coin, not kind of in the middle, keep listening to this over, and over, and over, again.
Keep listening to this, so you can let what Iโm saying to you sink in because all the growth youโre looking for lies inside of you shifting how you relate so that you can help others do the same. Thatโs where the magic is.
Recognising when a staff member isnโt willing to be coached [23:58]
Killian Vigna: Have you ever had to devise, I suppose, an exit plan? So, you are just stuck with that one stubborn person that wonโt give you anything.
Steve Gomez: Yeah. So, ultimately, there has to be accountability, so if somebodyโs not opening up, then you just have to be honest.
So, it could go like this; โSo, Killianโฆ So, Killian, obviously thereโs something there. Iโm not feeling that thereโs a willingness on your part to share with me whatโs going on, and I respect that. However, Iโm going to have you clock out for the rest of the day, and Iโm going to have you go home and really think about whatโs occurring for you, and whatโs important for you.
I value that youโre here, however, at the end of the day, we have to work with each other, and there needs to be open lines of dialogue, and there needs to be clear communication. Somethingโs missing, and Iโm asking, and youโre not sharing, so I invite you to go home and think about it, and then circle back around, and we can touch base on this first thing in morning, or if you feel you want to give me a holler later, we can do that. If I have the time, weโll make that happen. But obviously, somethingโs missing, and we need to figure it out.โ
If you donโt stand for something as a leader, you fall for anything. What are you standing for? Itโs a great quote that I heard years ago, and itโs so powerful. Iโm not going to sit there and beat a dead horse over the head. Iโm just not going to do that as a leader. Also, think of it like this; the analogy of the bull and the matador. Are you chasing the emotional red cape that somebodyโs laying out for you as a leader, or are you going to get the cape back?
So, at that moment, itโs taking the cape back and saying sorry, but if youโre unwilling to dance with me, you need to check out for a minute and really reflect and think about the why, and letโs have a dialogue because, at that moment, I donโt know. It could be me, it could be them, maybe they have something going on in their personal life thatโs impacting them, but Iโm done fishing. I can only go so far, so I have to then take control back, and say, โThis is how itโs going to go.โ
And, if a leader is unwilling to do that, then theyโre allowing that person to be in control of the relationship, and theyโre giving their power away to it, and also, owners are going to do that because โOh well, Zoeโs bringing in $2,000 a week, and I donโt want to push her, because if I get her upset, she might leave.โ
And, if an ownerโs thinking that way, then youโre allowing the almighty dollar to control the conversation, and youโre selling your integrity down the river, and thereโs not one dollar or one person thatโs worth that, period.
Coaching recently hired staff members [26:32]
Zoe Belisle-Springer: Well, letโs talk about the why. When you have a new staff member coming in, joining a team, or even a new manager coming in and joining the team, sometimes it does take a little while to get up to speed with, first of all, just getting to know people and jelling in with the team and the people youโre going to work with on the daily, and then also, just understanding how the salon works in general.
So, howโฆ Where do you start your coaching journey if youโre an existing manager coaching a new staff member? And, on the flip side of that, if youโre a new manager joining an existing team?
Steve Gomez: Okay. Zoe, thank you for bringing me back to the point that I forgot to make!
Killian Vigna: If you want to take a moment to think and reflect?
Steve Gomez: Exactly. Yes, thank you, Killian. Weโll now take a 10-second pause, queue the music.
Killian Vigna: The elevator music.
Steve Gomez: Yeah, exactly. Yeah, mine would be heavy metal elevator music, but anyway, hereโs the thing; if we go back to the genesis of how the relationship begins, it all comes back to how youโre recruiting, hiring, training, someone. It all comes back to the type of questions you ask in the interview process.
Killian can be an amazing colourist, and he can have a full book, but if Iโm not asking those subjective questions to understand how he thinks and what his personality is like, if Iโm not listening in those questions for if heโs saying a lot of I and not enough we, then I might be missing some of the things that are then going to present themselves two or three months down the road.
Thereโs always that dating period, and thereโs always thatโฆ The first couple months of a marriage period with employees where everythingโs great, and everybody loves everything, and then behaviours and habits begin to show up, and thinking and perception begins to show up. So, it really goes all the way back to the type of questions that youโre asking inside the interview process that help you increase the odds of finding the right type of thinker to be on the team with you.
From there, it then gets into orientation, and one of the things that I see is that thereโs not a empowered systematic integration into the culture. The orientation process, in and of itself, needs to have checkpoints where the educators on the team that are helping that new staff member really come up to speed and be part of the culture, need to be having meetings daily, beginning and end of day, with that person.
The leader, manager, owner, whoever it is in that role, needs to be meeting with that person minimally once a week if theyโre not the active educator. There needs to be a structured approach that also will teach the new hire that, โHereโs how we operate here. Hereโs how we communicate here.โ
So, to me, it gets back to that, and when Iโm getting the team more involved in this, itโs not just me trying to figure it out, based on the business size, some salons may be really small, and if youโre listening, and itโs just you, then itโs just you for now. Handle! If itโs you and one or two other people, you got to do what you got to do, but at any rate, it comes back to systems.
Do I have a progression? Is it written down? Is it in a calendar? And, am I presenting that to the new hire, in a way that shows them Iโm organised? We had a great interview, you sold me on you, blue skies, apple pies, right on, everything looks great, but now hereโs where the rubberโs going to meet the road. Hereโs what Iโm expecting of you, you told me that you take the ball and run with it, and work independently. Well, hereโs your schedule.
And, a lot of times, we donโt have that inside of a salon environment, so then the new hireโs kind of standing around waiting to be told what to do instead of following a schedule and holding themselves accountable. So, thereโs a lot of things like that, Zoe, that I think need to be in place, that can take some of those symptoms and get them turned around into solutions.
Zoe Belisle-Springer: And, what about if you already have an established team, but youโre bringing in someone from the outside in a managerial position?
Steve Gomez: If Iโm bringing somebody outside into a managerial position, Iโm going to get the team involved in helping me to identify why we need to bring somebody in from the outside. Iโm going to get them involved in coming up with, what would be the things we would need somebody, that weโre going to respect as a leader, a; to do for us, the type of person they need to be, whoโs going to be the type of person that inspires you to push them?
And then, in the interview process, I would get team members involved in that process, too. The more involved the team is, we increase the percentages of them wanting to then follow through and execute upon whatever the initiative is, whether itโs hiring somebody, or bringing in a new product line, or whatever it is. So, Iโd get the team involved, and then when Iโm bringing that new manager in, Iโd have them shadow with each team member, I would have them get to understand what makes those people tick, and I would be holding them, as a new leader, accountable to come back and tell me observations, and what theyโre going to do about it.
Show me what you think, tell me how we can make our culture better. What are your ideas? So, Iโd be getting them involved more that way. A lot of times, an owner will hire a manager without the teamโs input, and then the teamโs just going to have whatever resistance to change they normally have, and theyโre going to have, maybe, resistance to not knowing that person. Thereโs no built-in respect.
So, there needs to be some level of built-in respect, and an owner shouldnโt hang on their teamโs every word with that, and say, โOh, my god. Two out of my ten people didnโt like the person; Iโm not going to hire them.โ
Zoe Belisle-Springer: Yeah.
Steve Gomez: Ultimately, as a leader, I still need to make my decision, but I do want team involvement because it justโฆ Again, it creates that interdependence.
Killian Vigna: So, how do you knowโฆ Iโm the salon owner; Iโm going to beโฆ You say I have to coach the manager. As a manager, I have to coach the staff members, but how do you know youโre the right person actually to coach someone else? Especially if youโre promoted to a senior role where youโve never had to coach someone before. Does that not feel like a lot of weight for them?
Steve Gomez: Naturally, it could. So, I need to understand how much of it actually it is. I useโฆ The scale method quite often, and the scale method is, okay, Zoe, tell me on a scale of one to 10, how you relate to having to coach a peer who now youโre leading and managing? A one would be; โYeah, I feel no confidence at all. Iโm completely freaked out, head in the sand. Can I clock out and go home? Can we have this conversation at the pub?โ
A five would mean; โWell, it really depends on the person; it depends on the circumstance; it depends on what I have to talk to them about.โ
A 10 would be; โI donโt really feel I have any problem with it at all. Iโm really ready to go make it happen. Doesnโt mean Iโm not going to make a mistake, but I feel comfortable and confident.โ
So then, Zoe would say, โYeah, Iโm a six.โ So then, I would say, โOkay, well what has you be a six, and not a five, or a four, or a three, or a two, or a one?โ
So, Iโm starting with the strength first. โWhat has you be a six and not lower?โ
โWell, you know? I really feel confident. I have great working relationships with everybody, and we all have a lot of respect for each other, so I feel really comfortable with everybody in the salon right now.โ
โOkay, great. So then, what would have you be a seven instead of a six?โ Notice how Iโm not trying to get a ten, I just want to go one wrong up. โWhat would have you increase to a seven?โ
โWell, Iโm new to the role, so I need to have a better understanding of what Iโd be coaching them on.โ
โExcellent, let me get my shit together and help you with that.โ
And then, an eight wouldโฆ โAll right, so what would have it be an eight?โ
โWell, you know, different circumstances may get in the way for me, and maybe if I have to coach somebody on their behaviour, that might be a little bit more challenging for me than coaching them on getting better at colouredโฆ Or offering retail.โ
โOkay, awesome. So, letโs dig into some behaviour work together. Letโs go through some scenarios. What would be some of the things that you think would get you stuck, and plug you, so I can help you work on getting unplugged. Would that be beneficial, Zoe?โ
And then Zoeโs like, โYeah, absolutely.โ So, thatโs the way, to me. I think the scale method is always awesome because it creates a little bit more ofโฆ It puts a structure into it.
Zoe Belisle-Springer: Yeah.
Steve Gomez: And, now I understand Zoeโs opinion of herself, and itโs kind of a safe way of doing it, and now itโs like, โHow do we raise from a seven to an eight, to a nine over time?โ Itโs not about perfection, itโs about gradual progression and growth, and if I were to end with anything you guys, meetings donโt have to be something that we dread. Meetings can always be magical. They must be about elevating culture, they must be about supporting somebody to grow and move beyond what theyโre capable of. Make them fun. Make them different, get the team involved, put them in charge of doing things. Shift things up, be creative. If youโre just doing the same thing month in and month out, no wonder youโre getting the results youโre getting, and people are like, โWhy am I going to have to sit here now for the next half hour?โ
So, be creative. Ask the questions, make it about them, notice how you think. Shift you first, and then you increase the chances that they shift as well, and be patient with the process. And lastly, let go of your expectations that youโre going to go in with this plan, and itโs going to go this way, and then when it doesnโt, youโre upset that it didnโt go that way. Itโs not about you as much as itโs about all. And sometimes, people just arenโt going to get it, and they might not get it right away.
Be patient, accept where people are; accept where theyโre not. Accept how they think; accept how they donโt. Accept how they relate and how they donโt; accept what shows up for them and what doesnโt. When you allow people to be where theyโre at, you then, can dance with them and hold them to account, and help them continue to grow.
When you come from that place of acceptance, you become more patient, and with patient energy, you become more empowered, and with empowerment, you become a better leader, and people feel that vibe from you, they resonate with it, and they want more of it.
So, take your time, itโs not a race. Itโs about being open and supportive, and loving people for where they are at on the journey, and allowing them to continue to gradually progress into the highest iteration of themselves.
Zoe Belisle-Springer: Wow. I canโtโฆ I canโt add anything to that. Honestly, both episodes, youโve ended on such a high note. Yeah, Iโm just smiling here listening to all of that.
Steve Gomez: Well, thank you!
Killian Vigna: The very same! I was going to say, I have nothing to add. If thereโs anything to take away from that show, weโre just going to play that last bit out, and I think, on that note, weโre going to say thanks so much again, Steve, for joining us on the show. Itโs been a pleasure.
Steve Gomez: Thanks to both of you, itโs my honour. Love you guys, love what youโre up to, this work is so important, itโs so critical. It really provides such a high level of support for people out there, and itโs so very needed, so keep up the good work, you guys.
Zoe Belisle-Springer: Well, thank you so much, and weโll put all of the links to your business coaching into the showโs notes, as well, and again, thanks so much for joining us.
Killian Vigna: Have a great day, Steve!
Steve Gomez: Thanks, team!
Inside Phorest: reflections, upcoming events & final words [38:02]
Killian Vigna: So, that was Steve Gomez on interdependent leadership and holding empowering meetings. I think everyone, after listening to this episode, is going to be hosting more effective empowering meetings and building a great team of leaders, themselves. Some very good content covered there today.
Zoe Belisle-Springer: Yeah, and it ties back into #30Days2Grow, how that team this year is building unified teams and coming together, working together on these challenges that you face in the salon, so this one is one to bookmark and just get back to and listen to every now and then.
Killian Vigna: I mean, he made me excited to want to book a one-to-one with him. I should haveโฆ He booked himself in for another episode last time. I shouldโve booked in for a one-to-one with him. I missed out on that opportunity.
Zoe Belisle-Springer: Andโฆ But hey, listen guys. So, the second half of the show, we donโt too many announcements. One thatโs a regular one, we have the Salon Mentorship Hub ready there for you to connect with coaches and consultants that we trust, so if youโve been working on some stuff and youโre feeling stuck, everyone on the Hub is happy to help you out with a 15 to 30 minute consultation, free consultation.
You donโt need to be a Phorest client to avail of this. Essentially, what you do, is you go onto salonmentors.phorest.com. You can have a look through topics, or through mentors, depending on if you have already an idea of what youโre looking for, choose whom you want to connect with, and on what topic, and once thatโs done, you will fill out the form, youโll check your emails, and you can book yourself in then with that consultant on a date and time that suits you for the 15 to 30 minute free consultation.
Currently, on the Hub, we have coaches and consultants, Valerie Delforge, Susan Routledge, Danielle Boucher, Richard McCabe, Phil Jackson, Jennifer Swaine, Gloria Murray, David and Nicole Barnett, Stefania Rossi, Katie Lowndes, Susie K. Brooks. So, again, to book your free consultation, head over to salonmentors.phorest.com.
Today, we are actually at the Salon Owners Summit Roadshow, so look forward to an episode live from this event next week, and, well, thatโs all weโve got for this week.
So, as always, if you want to share your thoughts on this episode, or have any suggestions, please send us an email at phorestfm@phorest.com, or leave us a review on Apple Podcasts. We genuinely love feedback and are always looking for ways to improve the show. Otherwise, have a wonderful week, and weโll catch you next Monday.
Killian Vigna: All the best.
Related links
Steve Gomez, Salon/Spa Business Coaching, Trainings & Seminars
Interdependent Leadership To Improve Team Culture & Profits
Book a free 15 to 30-minute consultation on The Salon Mentorship Hub
This episode was edited and mixed by Audio Z: Great music makes great moments. Montrealโs cutting-edge post-production studio for creative minds looking to have their vision professionally produced and mixed. Tune in every Monday for a mix of interviews with industry thought-leaders, roundups of our most recent salon owners marketing tips & tricks, all the latest in and around Phorest and what upcoming webinars or events you can join.
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