The Leadership Project Podcast

139. Collaborate and Conquer: Strategies for Team Productivity with Barbara Turley

December 20, 2023 Mick Spiers / Barbara Turley Season 3 Episode 139
139. Collaborate and Conquer: Strategies for Team Productivity with Barbara Turley
The Leadership Project Podcast
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The Leadership Project Podcast
139. Collaborate and Conquer: Strategies for Team Productivity with Barbara Turley
Dec 20, 2023 Season 3 Episode 139
Mick Spiers / Barbara Turley

๐Ÿ’ญ How do you maximize the worldโ€™s most expensive resource - time?

Barbara Turley is the CEO and Founder of The Virtual Hub, a digital first virtual assistant company. Despite having more experience as an individual contributor than leading teams, her strong sense of self-leadership and process efficiency helped shape her ability to lead teams effectively as she leads a 350-strong workforce of offshore virtual assistants. 

In this episode, Barbara shares about how they were able to increase retention rate by engaging all her employees to provide solutions. She also shares the importance of collaboration and ideation when leading remote teams, as well as maximizing digital platforms to align the entire organization towards common goals, thereby reducing miscommunication and increasing accuracy of output.

๐ŸŽง Download this episode to learn how delegation, empowerment and multiplication of impact can help unleash the full capacity of people in your organization. 

๐ŸŒ Connect with Barbara:

Book Reference:

  • Scaling Up: How a Few Companies Make It and Why the Rest Don't by Verne Harnish

Send us a Text Message.

Support the Show.

โœ… Follow The Leadership Project on your favorite podcast platform and listen to a new episode every week!

๐Ÿ“ Donโ€™t forget to share your thoughts on the episode in the comments below.

๐Ÿ”” Join us in our mission at The Leadership Project and learn more about our organization here: https://linktr.ee/mickspiers

๐Ÿ“• You can purchase a copy of the Mick Spiers bestselling book "You're a Leader, Now What?" as an eBook or paperback at Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B09ZBKK8XV

If you would like a signed copy, please reach to sei@mickspiers.com and we can arrange it for you too.

Show Notes Transcript

๐Ÿ’ญ How do you maximize the worldโ€™s most expensive resource - time?

Barbara Turley is the CEO and Founder of The Virtual Hub, a digital first virtual assistant company. Despite having more experience as an individual contributor than leading teams, her strong sense of self-leadership and process efficiency helped shape her ability to lead teams effectively as she leads a 350-strong workforce of offshore virtual assistants. 

In this episode, Barbara shares about how they were able to increase retention rate by engaging all her employees to provide solutions. She also shares the importance of collaboration and ideation when leading remote teams, as well as maximizing digital platforms to align the entire organization towards common goals, thereby reducing miscommunication and increasing accuracy of output.

๐ŸŽง Download this episode to learn how delegation, empowerment and multiplication of impact can help unleash the full capacity of people in your organization. 

๐ŸŒ Connect with Barbara:

Book Reference:

  • Scaling Up: How a Few Companies Make It and Why the Rest Don't by Verne Harnish

Send us a Text Message.

Support the Show.

โœ… Follow The Leadership Project on your favorite podcast platform and listen to a new episode every week!

๐Ÿ“ Donโ€™t forget to share your thoughts on the episode in the comments below.

๐Ÿ”” Join us in our mission at The Leadership Project and learn more about our organization here: https://linktr.ee/mickspiers

๐Ÿ“• You can purchase a copy of the Mick Spiers bestselling book "You're a Leader, Now What?" as an eBook or paperback at Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B09ZBKK8XV

If you would like a signed copy, please reach to sei@mickspiers.com and we can arrange it for you too.

Mick Spiers:

Hey everyone, and welcome back to The Leadership Project with your host, Mick Spiers. We bring you thought provoking guests and topics every week to challenge your thinking about leadership. Our aim is to help you become the leader that you wish you always had, as we learn together, and lead together. Hey, it's Mick here breaking in with an exciting announcement. This episode is brought to you by our new business partner, The Lighthouse Group, we have joined forces with The Lighthouse Group to multiply the impact we're having on the world. The Lighthouse Group work with strategic business leaders who want to make change leaders who recognize that leadership is the key lever of organizational performance. The Lighthouse Group is the how to your why working with you to develop a leadership system that forges a high performance culture, across the breadth and depth of your organization, from the CEO and executive leadership team, through senior and middle management, and all the way to aspiring leaders, those with high potential that will form the next generation of leaders in your business, The Lighthouse Group, accelerating transformation through leadership. Hey, everyone, and welcome back to The Leadership Project. I'm honored today to be joined by Barbara Turley. Barbara is the CEO and Founder of the Virtual Hub. And we're going to discuss today an interesting topic about how we can leverage the time and energy of our very best people. So we're going to be talking a lot about delegation, we're going to talk about time management, we're going to be talking about leadership of our teams so that we get maximum productivity and impact out of those superstars that we know that we have amongst us. So I'm really excited about today's conversation, I want to get straight into it right now. So Barbara, without any further ado, I'd love to hear from you give us a little flavor of your leadership background, and what led you to be interested in this whole element around productivity and time and energy management.

Barbara Turley:

You know, I would love to tell you that I had a background leading enormous corporate teams and that I had HR experience and all these things that you would think would have led me on a path to the company that I run today, the Virtual Hub, which is very much a people field organization. And but no, I did not I had a very individual contributor role. I guess, in my early career, I worked in the financial industry, and I was actually an equity trader. So although that's quite an individual role, I wasn't managing people. In my next role after that I was in asset management sales. And again, I was part of a team, but I was not leading that team. However, what I've noticed over the years, I mean, I've ended up leading people now and accidentally discovering that I was actually quite good at it. And I think some of the reasons for that are, you know, well, first of all, I didn't come in with any preconceived notions of what that should be, I guess sometimes that can be really a benefit to someone starting out something new. But I just discovered that along the way, that leadership of self, I think, is one of the things that if you have great leadership of self, you can start to lead teams more effectively. I think that's number one, when it comes to people leadership and the leadership, the mentoring of where people want to go, and things like that, and seeing leadership as a mentor sort of role. I've always very had a strong always had a very strong sense of self leadership. And that's something I only learned about myself in later life. You know, as we get older, we reflect on our younger years, and I always was able to know exactly where I wanted to go and how to get there. And I'm that sort of person. And but in addition, the other thing I discovered, and I guess this may have come from my early career, I'm very good at systems and processes. And I'm very good at finding the fastest route to anything in particular. And I wonder whether my days on a trading floor may have led to that because you have to be highly efficient, and you have to find the fastest route to the result that you're trying to get. And I think those two things together have really served me well actually, in this company that I'm now running where I'm leading a team of 300 people, we are a digital first remote first company I live in between Europe and Australia, our team are in the Philippines. So you know that there's a lot of leadership involved in that too. And those things have suddenly well, I guess over the test of time.

Mick Spiers:

I'm hearing a couple of interesting things there, Barbara, but I don't want to misunderstand it. So I'm going to throw back to you. And I want you to reflect on whether I'm picking up the right thing here. So the two elements I'm hearing in your discovery of leadership was the leadership of self and I'm extrapolating that in my mind to you thinking about well, how do you like to be led? And what does leadership look like for you? So being able to, let's say, lead yourself and inspire yourself? You then extrapolate that to how you might lead others? And then the second thing and I know that we're going to cover this in this discussion today, for sure this idea of systems or platforms and processes. I'm seeing someone in front of me that must look at problems, there's got to be a smarter way of doing that. So I'm hearing very kind of self leadership, but then on an outward going, how do I apply that to others? And then when you're looking at problems, there must be a smarter way. How does that sit with you?

Barbara Turley:

Yeah, that sounds about right actually, yeah, we can delve right into so many areas there. I think the self leadership is very interesting, because to be a great leader, and I'm sure you've had this conversation with other guests on the show, I think to be a great leader, you have to first have the ability to be able to look in the mirror at yourself, and to see your own areas for improvement, let's call it or areas that might not be serving you well. And then to have the ability to say, What am I now going to do, so that I get where I want to go. And I think that's a really crucial trait to have and to develop in children, for example, I think that's a great trait to develop. And I'm sure parts of my own childhood did develop that trait in me, so that then, you know, you become the leader that can actually help others to do the same thing. I think that's really key.

Mick Spiers:

So I'm hearing two things there as well. I'm hearing self awareness, but then I'm also hearing an element of self motivation or self drive. So the self awareness was the looking in the mirror, but then I'm picking up in your language around, okay, what do I need to do? So I'm hearing an action oriented focus on thinking about where I want to go, and what steps get me there. And I'll have to say to you, Barbara, that I hear a lot of people talk about being lost in their leadership or being lost in business, etc. And action orientation is often missing. So tell me more about your views about that. How do you look at a problem? And then go I'll these are the steps I need to get to where I need to be? I want to unpack that a little further.

Barbara Turley:

Yeah. So again, I think as I've matured, in my life, I've discovered what it is that I'm doing there, I think, is it innate in my personality, maybe, maybe some part of my childhood developed it, I'm not sure. But I have it. And actually one of our core values has been developed from this at the virtual hub, one of our core values is Stay Curious. And another one is we find solutions until solutions find us and I think probably comes from what I've been doing in my own life, and with my leadership and how this has developed in that, really, when you feel lost, you have to take a step back. And you have to kind of root cause analysis is really you've got to stay curious about digging and digging and digging and asking why why why why why and why not? Why not? Why not? Why can't we achieve something until such time as we get to the root of what the problem is. And often you find the root of problems is actually not a system, or a platform, or it's not a tool like in business, for example. It can be things like fear, anxiety, overwhelm, you know, self worth, particularly when you're leading people. And I know this, and when you get to the root of it, like you can change all the other things. But unless you actually find the root, and stay curious to dig until you find the root, the same applies to self, only then can you create an action plan that is going to create success. I hope that makes sense.

Mick Spiers:

It does, Barbara and I want to play back parts of it to you. So I think it's really interesting. The first thing that jumped into my head is the famous adage that sometimes you can't see the forest for the trees. So if you're deep inside the problem, you don't necessarily have the situational awareness of what's happening around you. So your statement of stepping back and looking at the problem, again, was really interesting. And then I was picking up two things. One absolute with love you said about the why, but you also said about the why not. And a lot of companies out there or a lot of teams have a clear vision of where they want to get to. And they think about why that is important to them. But don't necessarily always think about why they might not get there, so challenging the why not is really interesting to me. So tell me more about this, why not?

Barbara Turley:

Yeah, this actually was born quite recently, a few years ago, I guess my own frustration with company growth and lack of growth. And, you know, people will tell you, well, we can only achieve this, I actually I'll give you an example. So a classic situation that happened to us. And this is a major problem in the VA industry or you know, actually in any people industries really is attrition, you know, your turnover of people. And the great resignation was going on a few years ago, and everyone around the world is getting killed with this attrition problem, which is costing companies a fortune. And you know, it's good few years ago, now, maybe three or four years ago, we have a high rate of churn with our people. And it didn't matter. We were paying great salaries. We were doing all the right things. And the answer I got when I was digging, the team were like, well, you know, we're actually we're below industry average. And I said, But industry average is 40%. And we're at 35. And we're saying that we want to be a world class leader in the people industry. I said like, no, no, we have a vision that doesn't align with the numbers and the metrics. And I started saying to the team, but why not? Why can't we have a world class retention rate? Like why do we have to be just below average and be happy with that so we can digging and digging with the team. And I mean, it took two years this and then to rebuild it. I mean, at the moment, we're at 12%. And I've often brought that up with the team and said, that was the entire commitment to saying, but why and why not? Why can't we be better and forcing a team to expand their minds and not to be afraid to think larger than what they ever did before? And actually, it wasn't even me who came up with the ideas, it was actually the team. And I felt like by pushing them, I actually empowered them to go, yeah, why not? And to come up with creative solutions to the problem. And they did, and it worked. And then they felt so proud of themselves. I mean, it's a really proud moment in our company, and they continue to do today. So that's, I guess, the lesson in leadership, like find the root, ask why not, ask why. And then empower your people, they will self organize, actually, to find the creative solutions and enjoy every moment of it when they get success.

Mick Spiers:

I almost feel like that's a self fulfilling prophecy right there, Barbara, like when I listen to your talk. So once again, I love the why and the why not. And there's a challenge for everyone listening to the show right now, when you are doing root cause analysis, yes, of course, you need to ask why. Why is that happening? But then listen to what Barbara saying, why not? When someone says to you why you can't do something? Well, why can't we do that? Why not? Why can't we do that? And I think that's a key one. And one of the questions I often ask Barbara is, what would need to be true for that to happen? Right? So that's also a way of asking, Well, why not? And how can we rather than why we can't? Why I think it's a self fulfilling prophecy is you then turn that into a tool for engaging and empowering your team. And what's the secret to breaking the great resignation? It's engaging and empowering your teams?

Barbara Turley:

Ask your people. Yeah, ask your people, right. Invite them to be part of the vision. Yeah. And we have 300 people. So in the end, actually, we did ask all the people, that was the solution. We said, why don't we just ask, we thought, Well, why are we allowing ourselves to come up with the answer? Why don't we ask the actual people, I even said, we should go to all the people that resigned and ask them anonymously, what did we do wrong? And you know, we did do a step of that. So it was interesting, very insightful. Yeah.

Mick Spiers:

There's another tip right there. There's a number of leadership tips coming out already. Barbara? How do I know what my people in my team want? You ask them.

Barbara Turley:

Ask them. Ask them.

Mick Spiers:

I've seen this in some of the stuff that you write. Sometimes we over complicate these things. If you want to know what someone thinks you ask them, right. So this is really powerful. There was something else I picked up, Barbara, where I want to throw it at you as well. There's also an element of I see teams often forget what problem they were trying to solve in the first place. So when I heard you saying the team go, but we're better than industry average. And you're saying, Yeah, but the industry, sorry to be a bit crass here for a second, but the industry average sucks. So why would we want to be just better than average? So it's often important to also step back and remember what the original challenge or question was? How does that sit with you?

Barbara Turley:

Yes, so with that one, that's very interesting, because in my previous career, I'm trying to figure out where all this stuff came from, for me. And I think a lot of the time our leadership ability actually comes from a whole multitude of areas, not actually, you know, a leadership course as such, I think you learn this from life experience and from various scenarios and bring it back in. And I remember in my previous career, one of my previous bosses or you know, press I reported to amazing guy, he said he wants Don't worry about the competitors, because just listen to the client, you know, is that at the moment, I mean, you do have to keep an eye on competitors, of course, but actually, sometimes the blue ocean as such exists, when you listen to the customer, listen to the client, right? And listen to what the frustrations they have with your industry with what you do with your product. And you'll invariably find that you will enter blue ocean by solving those problems. This is what I did. I actually didn't know any of the competitors that didn't even care. I wasn't even in this industry of VAs. I had never actually been to the Philippines. This was the truth when I first launched this company, and I guess me saying, Well, why can't I do it? I mean, what's so difficult about it, you know, led me on the journey, but listening to the frustrations of employees, listening to the frustrations of customers, ask them and then go to work to solve those problems that will invariably lead you and your company into pole position.

Mick Spiers:

Yeah, I love this. So I have a saying about giving your customers a good damn listening to. And in your case, it's a use your word that you use before it's a curious listening to so you're really getting curious about what are the problems that no one has solved yet? Right? So then that's where your blue ocean is coming from? You're going into the waters and going okay, what is the problem that everyone is talking about, but no one has solved yet?

Barbara Turley:

Or the problem that everyone is saying, Oh, well, that is a problem, but that's kind of not solvable.

Mick Spiers:

Ah, good one.

Barbara Turley:

There's your Why Not. Well, why would we accepting of that because everyone's doing it. So that's the sort of what you do with it. Because you will get feedback and this happened to us. You will in the early days, get feedback from employees, clients, you know, every you will get stuff that will just make you irk what with annoyance going, well, you know that wasn't our fault or this happened. Could you have to be sort of unemotional and say, once you let it sink in, go? Do they have a point? Because from their perspective, they do have a point they always do even if you don't agree with it, if it's a customer, well, you got to think about that go like, well, maybe how can we stop that from ever happening again?

Mick Spiers:

Yeah, that's really cool. And then helping with that curiosity process of going well, why are you just accepting that as well as why can't we solve that? So I love this, why and why not that has come back into our conversation again there, Barbara. And I want to then extrapolate a little bit further, when I listen to your talk. And I can hear in your voice talking about the world of VA in thinking about problems that people were having, but they were just accepting it. I'm also I've got this vision in my head of being able to articulate the problem better than anyone else also lead you towards the solution. First of all, it convinces people that if you can articulate the problem better than they can, they assume that you might have an answer. And then secondly, the more that you keep on peeling the onion and getting curious about it, the solution is going to emerge there somewhere. And I think you said something interesting before was it we look for solutions until solutions find us or something like that. Tell us more about this solution situation you find yourself in? Well, this was born out of running a VA company where people who are looking for VAs, Well, depends on the size of the company. But a lot of people when they're looking for virtual assistants or VAs for those that maybe don't know what that is, you know, you're looking for an assistant to help you to solve problems, some of them and assistant cancelled, but some of them are simple, and you could probably sell them yourself. But you don't have time to do that. And you want someone else to go and research it. And you know, VA13s, depending on how experienced they are, what we noticed was some VAs would become overwhelmed with this, because it's sort of where's the line between strategy and just doing and process following process and stuff. So we started running training programs around being solution minded, and saying that, you know, this staying curious about the fact that you can actually find a solution, these days online, you can find a solution to any problem, you just got to learn how to dig, and you got to learn what objective you're trying to achieve for a client and do your best to kind of come up with a solution. Even if it's not the best solution, yet, a solution is better than nothing better than going, I just don't know what to do, we've got to do something, and then maybe a better solution comes along later. So that was where this core value came from. We find solutions until solutions find us because you gotta keep moving forward. I think what people do, and this happens in business, this happens in life, people get stuck sitting on the fence and not getting in and playing the game. And that was something I learned as a trader, you know, I remember my first year as a trader, the head of trading, saying to me, I was just frozen rabbit in the headlights one day, I didn't know what to do. And he said, it doesn't matter what you do, whether you buy or sell, but you have to do something so that then you're in the game. And then once you're in the game, you make the next decision and the next decision, and that leads you down a decision path, maybe it's the wrong decision path. But otherwise, you just get stuck frozen rabbit in the headlights. So that's sort of the essence of where there's solutions. Just find a solution and let it take you on a journey to the best solution. You got to take action, you know, because otherwise you're not really playing. You're just sitting on the sidelines. Yes, I'm hearing some really interesting things there, Barbara, once again, these action orientation. And I think about what you said before really early on about you deciding the actions that you needed to take to get to where you want it to be. But it was about acting. It wasn't about freezing and not knowing what to do. And when I hear about your use of VAs and this kind of solution mindedness, the words that come to mind I curiosity that you use, and resourcefulness that a good VA is not only curious, but they go away, and they find the answer, they find the answer and they start taking action. And the third part I was hearing then is you said that you might not have time yourself to solve that. So it's about giving it to someone that does have the time that does have the solution mindedness to be curious and resourceful to come back to you with a solution. How does that sit with you?

Barbara Turley:

Yes, and I think just on the leadership thought train that we're on here when dealing with a VA or dealing with anyone who is reporting to you. So it could be someone quite high up. But if they're reporting to you, just in terms of leadership, I think sometimes when we're delegating, and it doesn't matter if we're delegating to someone at a manager level or higher up than that, you know, so we always think this is kind of lower end stuff. It applies across the chamber. When we're asking somebody to do something for us. It's okay to expand out, you know, start with what the objective is of what you're trying to achieve, then some ideas that you have around how this might look so that you don't have misalignment of kind of expectations or solutions and then empower that person by literally saying go away and see what you can find for me in this this in this category are trying to give some parameters and what you want to have as flexibility within a structure so gives Somebody some form of structure around a task or a delegation that you want to do, tell them vaguely what you think success might look like for you, and maybe a good idea what failure might look like, because that's handy too for the person. And you're giving people some parameters around what you want. And then you can also go as far to say, particularly when it's somebody, you know, on an assistant level, who might feel, you know, embarrassed or lesser than you in any sort of way, it's good to say, look, if you find that if you get stuck, just come up with something or just find, empower them that something is better than nothing. And we can chat about it, and you want to empower them to I guess it's that psychological safety, I think, is what they call it in leadership circles, create psychological safety for the person you're delegating to, such that they can come back with something that maybe isn't the right answer, but it's getting us on the path, you know, we don't have to be perfect straightaway. Depends what the task is.

Mick Spiers:

Yeah, yeah, I'm liking this kind of model of delegation that you're talking about. So giving a base or broad brushstrokes of the problem that's trying to be solved. So some setting some expectation of what the problem is, doing a bit of ideation together, so the person is not just completely doesn't know where to start. So doing some base ideation, setting some parameters about what good would look like about what you don't want as well. Because if there's something that you clearly have in mind that you don't want, isn't it better to have that out in the open, and then there's that word empowerment coming through to go Okay, off you go, use your resourcefulness and come back to me with some ideas. And but you also opened up the door, that if they stuck, that they can stick up your hand and ask for help.

Barbara Turley:

Or they can be wrong, open the door that they could come back and be completely wrong. And maybe that's a collaboration that you have to do them, you know, and I also want to talk about this resourcefulness thing. Because I do find that we see this with clients, we see clients saying, Well, I just wanted them to use their initiative. And I'm like, using your initiative is different from reading your mind. So we've got to be very clear that you've got to take someone a bit of the way on the journey of what you want. And then resourcefulness can kick in successfully. But if you don't take someone 10% of the way there with what you want to achieve and what you're trying to do, it's very difficult for someone to read your mind. And sometimes people expect that they're like, but isn't it obvious? And like, well, not really. No, you know, not really,

Mick Spiers:

I think we've got, you know, couldn't be interesting balancing act that's going on here by Renova. I'd like to unpack it a little bit more. I think there's something in this for the audience, right. So we talk about delegation, we talked about the importance of it, and some people find it difficult. Maybe we'll come back to that point in a moment. But we talk about delegation and the importance. And then we talk about empowerment, right? And we're using all positive words right now. But for some delegation, plus empowerment looks like application that has go or by Barbara or need you to solve world hunger and come and let me know when you finished that application.

Barbara Turley:

Yeah, my objective is to solve world hunger, you come up with the ideas, the strategy execution plan and do it. Yeah.

Mick Spiers:

Yeah, come back. And let me know when you finished. So that's not delegation. That's abdication. Whereas what you're talking about is a dialogue. It's a dialogue, it's a conversation, it's not just, here it is off you go. It's a dialogue and a conversation. How does that sit with you?

Barbara Turley:

Yeah, look, I mean, I, you know, I'm in the business of assistants, right, which is, you know, support, generally speaking, and Assistant is a supporting role. And delegation, when you're talking about an assistant, you would think sometimes people think, Oh, I don't want to Yeah, I don't want to micromanage, I don't want to tell them what I need them to do. But I have hired people in very high up roles in Western countries as well. And you still have to sit with somebody and unpack your brain of what it is that your vision is what you want to achieve some ideation, that's what you said, I have somebody who's in a very high up business development role, and she demands time needs time with me weekly, so that we can ideate together and we can make sure that we stay on the same page. And then she goes off and does it and that's fine. But she does need, you know, there needs to be collaboration. And that's what running a business is. And when it comes to like the assistant level, I think sometimes people's expectations of what an assistant can ideate and solution find on their own just goes way too far. You know, the purpose of an assistant or a VA, for example, is for you to figure out what are all the things that I shouldn't be doing? Have we got a process for that? Could I systemize that, like, could I create a framework around that and then maybe delegate that to someone like an assistant, which are forgetting that that person doesn't have the IP that you have, and it doesn't mean they can't do it, but maybe they can do 80% of it and free of so much of your time to the matter. They can't do 100% of it. So it's just this kind of just being realistic about working with people in general. You know, people often say I just want to hire an A player and let them matters, but really even an A player needs time with you to figure out what your vision is, what you're trying to achieve and the ideation process that you mentioned.

Mick Spiers:

Yeah, I'm loving this Barbara. I'm hearing two things. The first one is adaptive leadership. So the adaptive leadership is the element that yeah, you are going to delegate differently to someone that's three weeks out of college compared to someone that's, you know, 20 years in the industry, that's clear. But then also heard. And I think it's important for everyone to hear this, that even that 20 year industry veteran is going to perform better with that ideation session, because ideation breeds co creation, and then through co creation, you will jointly the two of you, or more of you, or if there's more of you in the room, you can create something that's greater than the sum of the parts, because you're bringing something to the table. And so are they. And if you're having a curious conversation, where you're building upon each other, you're going to have solve the problem in the first meeting. And then from that platform, the person can go off and create something wonderful. So even the 20 year veteran or 30 year veteran in their industry will still benefit from that ideation session where you do bounce ideas off each other first, before they run off and go and solve the problem. How does that sit with you, Barbara?

Barbara Turley:

Yeah, and I want to add to that, because I completely agree. And here's a really interesting point and something we're working with clients, actually, some of our larger clients, we're working with their operational frameworks right now. And something I talk about a lot is the operational framework that you build a company on. And this works for delegating to VAs or having you know, higher end people or whatever you really want to have. So you can Ida together, that's amazing. But where things start to get misaligned, and where a players this is, what they don't like is when they enter a company that has chaotic ways of updating, so too many meetings, no dashboards and metrics driven things, no way that we need a streamlined way for us to update each other, and not have to have a meeting all the time about everything. How are we all staying on the same page? How do we all know no matter what department we're in, that we're all rowing the boat, which is the company at the right speed in the one direction towards the one mission and vision and that accompany framework and how we do things is really, really important in that environment. So it's really important that we have the right operational framework, such that every person in the company, including the assistant, the CEO, the CFO, the A players, whoever it is that you have on the team, the salespeople, that everybody knows that we are rowing the boat at the same at the right speed, in the right direction, collaboratively, without all of us having to be in the same office in the same meeting in the same update. And that's something I'm very passionate about. And a player's perform much better when you have that kind of structure as well, because everyone knows how to plug into the game to use the game analogy again, and how to play the game that is this company.

Mick Spiers:

Yeah, this is really interesting. I want to unpack it a little bit more, Barbara. So this is the kind of platforms and processes kind of thought and absolutely with you on the alignment, and you can dominate any industry, if you have everyone in the boat rowing in the same direction at the same speed like you're hinting towards there. What I'm curious about is for some, the way that they've always done that up until now, up until let's say the digitalization era has been through those meetings. And in fact, there would be people that would be very offended that they weren't invited into that update meeting, for example. But now we're in a more digital age. But for some people that transition is very difficult. Barbara, how can you help maybe someone out there who has been grown up in industry using meetings and using updates to be more digital and the use of platforms for asynchronous updates?

Barbara Turley:

Great question. So first of all, you do not announce that now our company is not using email for internal communication anymore. And we're going to reduce meetings dramatically. And we're all going to be told to use an online platform, because that is going to terrify people who are not ready yet. And with change management, and that includes changing of platforms changing of process, what you have to consider is the leadership that is involved in the change management of the people. And you have to accept that some people will be emotionally destabilized by these changes. And the best way to do it is to it's like creating vision. First you have to create a vision, then you have to create a roadmap, then you have to show where we're trying to get to and why and how this might look. And then you absolutely need a transition phase. So when you're asking somebody to move from or being in an office, for example, now we all got thrown into an COVID, where we all had to all of a sudden work from home. And people very quickly started to use Zoom. And people very quickly figured it out, right, because that was a very shock sort of event. But I wouldn't advise doing a shark attack with a company on its own. But I think it's creating the vision for why we're doing this, why it's good for them and then allowing a transition phase so that they can try it out and never say by October we're going to be off this thing. You can say that event To leverage, you first got to let them try out the toys and they will resist, they will say I don't like it that way doesn't work for me. But at the end of the day, there is what I mean, I could unpack this in a much longer podcast. But there is a way of using objectives and key results, water falling down from the top of the company from the vision, the objectives and key results, right water falling down through the organization so that everybody knows what they're working on and how it impacts the actual results we're trying to achieve as a company. So that's kind of a process piece. And then tying the platform piece is how do you wrap all of that into a platform. For example, I'll just touch on Asana, big shout out to Asana amazing company doing amazing things. There are other platforms that are doing similar things. But Asana has created a cross functional collaborative platform that you can actually create a sort of a digital virtual office environment inside, run your OKRs and connect strategy at the top right down to the bottom of execution that even a VA is doing, and bring everybody together into a digital space, eradicating email, not eradicating all meetings, because meetings are important. But you want to make sure that your meetings become about discussing roadblocks and finding solutions, and not about presenting data and updating each other that needs to be done differently through dashboards and status updates and things like that. That's a very quick round the grounds of what's possible for the change management as the people is possibly the most difficult part. And that requires leadership from the top of the company, not just like, you can't delegate that to some department or to a consultant, for example, it needs to be led and driven by the CEO, the CFO and the executive committees of a company.

Mick Spiers:

Yeah, really, really interesting by where so I'm hearing the platform and process helping you to drive that alignment that you spoke about with the OKRs. And I'm going to say alignment in both directions. So alignment in one direction, yes, opened down, and then status back up, and new ideas are bubbling up as well. So getting that that alignment through the business and using platforms and processes, I'm going to extrapolate a little bit and say, in a way that it expedites some of that alignment, and remove some of the human error to some degree in that because if you're having a series of cascading meetings, I can tell you it's like Chinese whispers and Chinese whispers. Absolutely. By the time it gets to the root level, the essence of the message as well and truly been reinterpreted multiple times. So with having a platform and a process approach, you're going to get that alignment in a much faster and more accurate way is what I'm hearing. But I love that you never lost the people element, right?

Barbara Turley:

People are every single, and all of this is actually designed, if I could say, really, what are we trying to do? So at the Virtual Hub, we are a VA company at our core, you know, we do support stuff in the Philippines for companies all over the world. That is really what we are at our core. We also do implementation and consulting on platforms and process now for clients that want to do the whole three P's of operational efficiency, which is what I call it, but actually, what are we really, what is the purpose of us with this company? And what are we what am I trying to achieve with this company? It is actually about people because what you find is people in companies all over the world are drowning in work are drowning in confusion and chaos and mistakes. And firefighting and passion is waning, and people are burning out. Why? Because people are overburdened with, you know, key people are doing stuff that is important, but not significant enough for their pay grade to do. But it isn't enough to hire a local assistant. They're not delegating effectively down, they don't believe that parts of what they're doing could be delegated. We're not using platform and process properly, and async communication and all these cool things that are available in the digital world now. And the purpose of doing all of this is actually to free your key people, the people in any business so that you create space in their head, so that they can focus on the work that moves the needle, because that is the purpose of any company, right? We're not here just to do busy work, we're here to grow. But we need to be strategic about how we think about our most expensive resource, which is our people's time and energy and platform process. And offshore teams and delegation is designed to make sure that we're using efficiently the time and energy of the most biggest resource we have, which is our key people really.

Mick Spiers:

Yeah, I'm loving this, Barbara. So the interesting thing here is that the platforms and the processes are using to enhance people not to replace people. So that's one of the fears that people have around digitalization is that they become irrelevant. But what you're saying is the platform and process First of all, it's that alignment. And now it's the multiplication of impact. It's to free up people's time so that they can do what they do best. So you have your best strategic thinker in thinking mode, the majority of the time and you have your best dua in doing mode, the majority of the time and you have the best planner in planning mode, the majority of the time so you I'm hearing platforms and processes, but I'm also here And to make sure that you're an capping or unleashing the full capacity of the people in your organizations to do the work that they do best. How does that sit with you?

Barbara Turley:

Yeah, because you know, people are out there. I mean, come everyone's out there calling for more people, you know, there's a gap right now. And, you know, hiring is difficult. And my argument is, there is a strategy here, whereby you can multiply the time and the resources of the people that you already have, by just sitting back for a second and looking at Platform process people, what everyone is doing, how we're doing it, the structure of the whole thing. And yes, there's change management involved. It's not something that you can do overnight, but I'd suggest six to 12 months, you can absolutely change the game with this. And you know, it's not about you know, I always say this is not about cheap stuff in the Philippines. This is about growing small to medium businesses all over the world, because that is the backbone of our society. That is where growth comes from. And we all know the world needs growth right now. That's what we need. We need productivity, we need growth, we need companies to thrive, we need to be more strategic and not to be afraid of bringing in offshore teams, you know, creating careers for people in the Philippines, that's great. Using platform using process and just becoming even AI use it, it's here, get over it. It's here, you know, and that's it.

Mick Spiers:

There are a lot of companies out there, Barbara right now saying that we can't find enough people, we can't find enough of the right people all of these things, but are they getting the most out of the people they already have? Or are those people getting bogged down in tasks that aren't the best use of their time? Etc, etc. So how do we become a force multiplier?

Barbara Turley:

And getting back to our Why? Why do we need more people? What if we didn't need more people? What if we actually went back a step and said, you know, root cause analysis? Like, is it because we're not being as efficient as we possibly could with the time that we already have? And can we multiply the time that we already have using platforms and processes and digital tools? You know, that's the whole point of this? It's just it's staying curious about? Are we answering the right question?

Mick Spiers:

Yeah, I love it. And that's a beautiful full circle moment back to what we were talking about earlier. Want to ask another question now, that might be interesting for a lot of people that are either working in multinational companies across multiple time zones, or they could be interested in dipping their toe in the water of having a virtual assistant somewhere like the Philippines, but they might 65% of this audience are in in the US as an example, Barbara. So there might be people listening to this podcast from the US going yeah, I've always wanted to try this. But the timezone differences too difficult. How do we master the use of platforms and processes when it comes down to very large timezone differences?

Barbara Turley:

Okay, so a few things. First of all, we operate 24-5, so which means we're five days a week, 24 hours a day, I was adverse to that, from a people perspective, in the early days, when I launched the virtual hub, I didn't like it, I thought it can't possibly possibly have people working at night, I just don't like it. Then I went to the Philippines. And I discovered that the nighttime is alive over there. And there are people that prefer to work the night shift, don't ask me why. But they do, I think is they've always done it. I've had this conversation with many of them. The Philippines has worked with the US for a long time. And they're so used to this. And there's a pretty vibrant nighttime thing going on over there. So that was what got me over that. And we now do us timezone shifts. However, if you don't want to do that there are, so you need to use the tools very effectively, and you have to have cross over time. So now I'm going to come full circle and go, you must have meetings. So while we want our meetings to be very focused, you have to have at least a couple of hours, I feel I've crossed over time for collaboration, that is real, real time. If you are not going to do that, and you want to work completely asynchronous Lee, and the word has been hard to say, if you want to work completely asynchronous with your team synchronous, then you need to be very good at writing bullet point, right, you need to be very clear and very precise, you need to be very good at using loom to record videos back and forth. And for both of you to learn how to collaborate fast in an asynchronous type scenario, it's doable. It's not easy to get it right. I've done it, but you need to be a very good delegator. And I wouldn't start there. I think that's what I want to say I wouldn't start there, I tried to get some crossover time. And then you can evolve together up into a completely asynchronous relationship.

Mick Spiers:

So I'm hearing two possible paths there. The first one, I'm going to go the negative I'm going to work to the positive. So to me, it's about clarity of communication, clarity of expectation, and I do like your cross over time, this the bit where it crosses over. And just think about if I get this wrong, if I'm not clear in my communication, when I wake up tomorrow morning, I'm going to wake up frustrated that the person that took up the task went in a completely different direction. And I feel like we lost 24 hours because now we've got to start the clock all over again and reset tomorrow. Whereas if I take the time to be very precise and clear in my communication, I'm gonna wake up tomorrow morning to the task having progressed eight hours, and I'm going to pick it up where it left off the night before. So I'm going to say it's like an investment. If you invest the time in that overlap that you spoke about the crossover time, if you invest in clear communication during that, you're going to have a force multiplier where you wake up and while you're asleep, work was getting done, productive work was getting done. That was important. If you don't get it right, non productive, frustrating work is going to get that how does that sit with you?

Barbara Turley:

Yeah, I mean, I do. I've got lots of team members that I never really get on a call with. But we have we actually have we have a fun relationship with through loom and through Asana, where we where we communicate, but yes, getting it right, I think you have to develop your delegation muscle quite strong, you know, you have to be very clear on the objectives, the key results we're looking for, and then what needs to be done, like we said earlier, just more information rather than less and don't leave things open to assumptions that helps. You know, I think one of the reasons we do work through the night is we most of our US clients, we have VAs working the full business day with them. Because I do firmly believe the majority of people in this world are not yet. They're just so many people are bad at delegation as it is that I just think this async thing needs a lot of work. We're not quite there yet, as a world, I think those people listening who are successful as it won't believe me, but trust me, 95% of the people are really bad. It's going to fail. Just be careful with it. Yeah.

Mick Spiers:

Yeah. It's interesting what you said, because if I wasn't good at delegation, in a real office, like as in a bricks and mortar office, working in the same office as someone, what makes me think I'm going to be good at delegation to someone that's, you know, in another country working asynchronously. To me, that's, that's a good one to think about. Doesn't mean that you can't, but it's gonna take work.

Barbara Turley:

Yes, it just got to really be good at it. Yeah. And, you know, I think one of the things I realized like I've delegated to loads of VAs over the years, I've been doing this for 10 years, it's, you know, I've done this many times, and a few times VAs have come back with something that just wasn't what I wanted. And I literally have done like, you know, facepalm going, Oh, I see what I wrote that. Yeah, I see how that happened. Never have I come back and gone. How did you miss that? Maybe once or twice, maybe once or twice? And I think I see clients coming back with that all the time. And we think well, why do I never come back with that? And maybe it's that self reflection thing where I can look in the mirror and go, Yeah, that was a bit vague. Actually, I could see how they read it that way. You know, maybe a comma was missing. Oh, yeah. Okay, fine. So I'm just to your point about the the investment, I do describe this as like a dividend. So you know, the investment that you make today in time and energy and learning how to delegate effectively getting a team working and delegating properly. You know, it takes time today, and a lot of people will say, I don't have time for this, I go, Oh, yeah. But if you invest the time today, this is going to pay dividends into perpetuity for you. Like if you get this right, and I'm a living breathing example of that. I mean, I've had two children in the time that I've built this company, I'm very passionate about how women work, in particular how mothers work, I didn't, you know, I was able to do this without driving myself into the ground. I did build a scalable company, and I had two children at the same time. And it's not because I'm Superwoman, or I drove myself into the ground, it's because I'm very good at systems, processes and delegation, and maybe leadership of people. So I think those things and I've had to learn the hard way over the years to get those things, right. I haven't always been great at them. But it was a commitment to getting those things, right, that has actually freed me, as an entrepreneur, as a CEO, as a person, as a mom to do both things. Yeah,

Mick Spiers:

Yeah. And I should say, congratulations on your success. We completely glazed over that during the intro. But you have been very successful in this and the way that you've systemized it. And I love this word, investment and dividend and to challenge the thing about, I can't afford the time to do this, I'm going to say you can't afford not to, if you really want to make if you really want to make an impact on the world, you want to maximize or multiply your own personal impact, let alone your company. These are the skills that you need to learn you are only given 24 hours a day, we are only human. But if you're able to master delegation, whether it's asynchronous or synchronous, if you're able to master delegation, you can then start multiplying your impact on the world.

Barbara Turley:

Or you know, I mean, sometimes sometimes you say you can multiply your impact on the world. Or let's say you just choose the as a, let's say a mom, you just want to be the mom who picks their kids up at school every day. That's okay, too. You know, you don't have to change the world's maybe just changed your family. That's what you can delegate for.

Mick Spiers:

Yeah, love it. All right. So we don't normally do this. Barbara, I'm gonna do something interesting here. This is a thought leadership show. We don't do kind of, let's say advertising or anything like that. But if someone's listening to this show, and they're going, You know what, I've always thought about having a VA or thought about this process. How does someone engage the Virtual Hub?

Barbara Turley:

Sure. So our website thevirtualhub.com You can head over there, it's a wealth of resources over there from the blog to the guide. There's lots of ways of expanding out I even have a podcast over there shameless plug, I did 50 episodes on how to delegate manage VAs and all sorts of does every sort of show there. And people learn a lot from about how to get this right and deeper of what I've been talking about today. But you can also book a call with our team, and you can get to chat to someone about you know, what we can help you to unpack what we could help you with, what we can't help you with where to go for anything like that. And then we can we can take you on the journey with us. And we partner with our clients along the way, we don't just give you a VA and then off, you go by yourself, we have a client success team, you know, we engage heavily with our clients all along the way, we have a training team for VA, so we train vas. And we really are committed not just to growing our numbers, but we are I mean, of course, from a business perspective, that's important. But the success metric for us is longevity of client and success and longevity of employee. So those two things are very important for us to get right.

Mick Spiers:

The interesting thing I'm picking out there, Barbara, if I can is the help you're giving to make it successful. Like if I wanted to go on Fiverr, tomorrow, or Upwork or anything, I'm sure I could just find a VA and the VA would be at a certain labor rate per hour. But what's missing there is the whole of that thought process about what am I delegating? How am I delegating? Why am I delegating all of those things that you and I have discussed about in this episode, what I'm hearing in the virtual hub is that you're setting up the process and the platform for success, as opposed to just matching a, let's say, a small to medium sized enterprise on one side of the world with a virtual assistant on the other side of the world, anyone could do that. But what I'm hearing you do is work on the platforms and the processes to make the delegation a worthwhile investment. How does that sit with you?

Barbara Turley:

Yes, we are doing all of that. And I will say for those who have tried VAs before and maybe you know, it's for some reason, it's not easy to get it right, you can go on Upwork. And you might get a home run like you could you can hire someone amazing, it is worth having a crack at that. But I guess you don't get the infrastructure we are all about like we create culture for our VA, we've got all the health cover, you know, we do a lot of that sort of thing. And we create teams, and we do team buildings and people. So it depends what you want. If you want to have you could of course go and get a VA on up work or one of these things and like say make it really successful even listen to the things I've been talking about and implement those things yourself. Or if most business owners don't really have time for it, though, and just managing it can be challenging for lots of reasons, particularly offshore. And we partner with our clients who are growing teams. And we've got clients who just say I need another VA next week. And we're just like, boom on it. We got it in straightaway, transitioning that sort of thing. So we're more of a premium service in that way. And then we help on the platform and process side of course, too.

Mick Spiers:

All right, wonderful, Barbara, this episode has been really full of some golden nuggets about really stopping and thinking about self leadership around delegation around processes and platforms. And the people element of all of that there's lots of really interesting takeaways, things like questioning why but also questioning why not? You know, all of these things have been wonderful takeaways for me in this episode today. So thank you for sharing your wisdom and your insights with us. I'd like to now take us to our Rapid Round. So these are the same four questions we ask all of our guests. The first one Barbara Turley, what's the one thing that you know, now that you wish you knew when you're 20?

Barbara Turley:

I think it's that trusting your own intuition. And that's hard to do when you're young. But you know, as I've gotten older and gotten more experienced over the years, I sort of knew some things in my soul when I was younger, but I didn't trust that I knew or that it was right. You know, it's hard to do that when you're young. So I think if we could learn more of that at school, that would be really quite a useful skill.

Mick Spiers:

Yeah, really good. What's your favorite book?

Barbara Turley:

Do you know, I'd love to have some amazing, you know, thought leadership book or whatever. But actually, the book that has impacted my life the most is a book by Vern Harnish, who's the founder of The Entrepreneurs Organization globally, wrote a book called Scaling up. And I read that book on my first ever trip to the Philippines when I did have a sort of a business there. But it was a bit of a mess in the early days. And I read the book on the flight over there, I came back and I rebuilt the company based on the book. Two years later, I did the course, the online course in the states completely changed the game. There's a lot of people in there and strategy, who should and from that, for unharnessed, heard about our company became a client has become a massive advocate for what it is that we do. And yeah, but the book really changed everything from me. So it's called Scaling up. And I think anyone should read it, it creates a methodology that's really easy to follow to actually scale a company.

Mick Spiers:

Really nice full circle moment there for you as well in that that's really beautiful. And what's your favorite quote?

Barbara Turley:

My mother used to always say to me feel the fear and do it anyway. I don't know who said it wasn't her one. If you Google it, I think there is someone who said that, but that's what she always said to me. I'm going to call it my mom's quote. And I have lived my life like that so far.

Mick Spiers:

That's the definition of courage to me and you know, people talk about fearless leaders, there's no such thing like fear. Fear does exist. But courage is the ability to take action despite fear and just love it. Yeah, really, really good. And finally, I mean, you've already a little bit answered this one going, but I'm gonna give you that opportunity. Again, if people want to connect with you, personally, Barbara, or they do want to connect with the Virtual Hub. How do they find you?

Barbara Turley:

Sure, so if you want to connect with me, personally, please come over to LinkedIn, where I do share quite a lot of my thoughts, not just on VAs, I mainly share my thoughts around you know, my own journey in business in life, what I've read working on around platforms and process and more in depth about what we've talked on this podcast, you can message me over there, follow me just arbitrarily. And if you're ready to talk to us about or you want to learn more about this VA thing, please pop over to thevirtualhub.com. And check us out over there and book a call with our team. We've got a great team of people that can chat to you and help us figure out if we're right for you.

Mick Spiers:

Oh, thank you so much, Barbara. It's been a wonderful time having you on the show today. Thank you so much for sharing all of this, I took some great personal takeaways today, and I'm sure the audience will as well thank you for your time. This episode was brought to you by our new business partner, The Lighthouse Group, we have joined forces with The Lighthouse Group to multiply the impact we're having on the world. The Lighthouse Group work with strategic business leaders who want to make change, leaders who recognize that leadership is the key lever of organizational performance. The Lighthouse Group is the how to your y working with you to develop a leadership system that forges a high performance culture across the breadth and depth of your organization, from the CEO and executive leadership team through senior and middle management and all the way to aspiring leaders, those with high potential that will form the next generation of leaders in your business. You can find more details about The Lighthouse Group in the show notes and don't forget to tell them that I sent you, The Lighthouse Group accelerating transformation through leadership. Thank you for listening to The Leadership Project that mickspiers.com A huge call out to Faris Sedek for his video editing of all of our video content. And to all of the team at TLP- Joan Gozon, Gerald Calibo and my amazing wife Sei Spiers, I could not do this show without you. Don't forget to subscribe to The Leadership Project YouTube channel where we bring you interesting videos each and every week. And you can follow us on social particularly on LinkedIn, Facebook, and Instagram. Now in the meantime, please do take care. Look out for each other and join us on this journey as we learn together and lead together.