As your organization grows, it becomes harder to know whether the information reaching you reflects what’s really happening on the ground. If you rely only on reports and dashboards, you risk making decisions based on an incomplete picture. Here’s how to get a clearer picture of what’s really happening.
Look beyond reports. Summaries and dashboards are useful, but every layer of reporting filters information. Spend time where the work happens. Join operational discussions without a formal agenda, ask people to walk you through recent decisions, and compare perspectives across teams.
Make gaps visible. Create simple ways to uncover differences between leadership’s view and employees’ experiences. Regularly ask managers what their teams believe that senior leadership may be missing. Treat recurring themes as signals worth investigating.
Reward honesty. People share what they believe is safe to share. Reinforce candid conversations by responding constructively to difficult feedback and acting on what you learn. When people see that uncomfortable truths lead to improvement instead of punishment, they become more willing to speak openly.
Question your assumptions. At least once each quarter, ask yourself where leadership’s view and day-to-day reality may be telling different stories. Building this habit helps you identify problems before they become crises.