The Importance of Partners Agreeing on Goals

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Dear Bev,

Three equal partners came together 17 years ago (one FA has a small book with a previous partner that generates approximately 5-8% of his total revenue), and we’ve largely marketed the team’s horizontal structure as a benefit to clients, even though it presents some internal challenges. Each of us, especially early on, leaned on the others to help reach breakpoints/bonuses/etc.

Nowadays, that is less of an issue, and has been for five to seven years. Effort and results have ebbed and flowed naturally until the last few years. However, a pattern has emerged. The issue you mentioned in the workshop I attended, of accountability, prompts my question; all three of us will discuss an opportunity/challenge, agree on a plan and then, many times (especially with prospecting), fail to follow through for any number of reasons.

With prospecting, it is usually because we were “just too busy” or “didn’t have enough time.” Other times it is simply that one of us changed our mind. But in reality, we just didn’t spend the time we had on achieving the agreed upon goal, or never agreed with the plan in the first place.

How do we maintain motivation/commitment from all three partners and keep each other accountable while compensating each of us commensurate with our levels of effort/results?

S.D.

Dear S.D.,

The way you’ve written your inquiry implies that, when partners are “equal,” they are not able to hold one another accountable as easily. You might be inferring that when someone is the boss, or senior to another person, they are able to get them to follow through more easily. It sounds like it should work well, but in the decades I’ve been doing this, I can say accountability is hard to bring about in another person no matter what your position or relationship to them might be.

That said, you actually have a better opportunity to maintain motivation and commitment through holding one another accountable. In the workshop you attended, we used our trademarked SHIFT Model as the basis for our discussion, but I’ll expand on it here for your specific situation: