Executive Mini Deck Flashcards

(25 cards)

1
Q

What is the leader’s real role in implementation?

A

To shape conditions so that desired practice is possible, safe, and sustainable—not to motivate or pressure people.

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2
Q

Why do good ideas fail after leadership endorsement?

A

Because endorsement does not remove workload, redesign systems, or resolve trade-offs.

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3
Q

What does it mean to truly prioritise an initiative?

A

Something else must slow down or stop. Without explicit trade-offs, priority is symbolic.

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4
Q

Why do frontline teams judge leadership by actions, not words?

A

Because actions determine staffing, time, risk, and workload. Messages do not.

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5
Q

What is the most common leadership mistake in implementation?

A

Layering new work on top of existing work without removing anything.

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6
Q

Why does pressure often make implementation worse?

A

Pressure suppresses learning signals and drives workarounds instead of improvement.

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7
Q

What does rising enforcement usually indicate?

A

Loss of trust and poor system fit, not lack of effort.

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8
Q

Why is ‘just make it happen’ a warning sign?

A

It transfers risk downward without providing support or redesign.

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9
Q

What does early success often hide?

A

Fragility created by extra effort, champions, or temporary support.

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10
Q

Why is silence from staff not reassuring?

A

Silence often reflects overload, fear, or disengagement—not smooth implementation.

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11
Q

What does leadership protection of learning look like?

A

Allowing instability early, responding constructively to problems, and resisting premature judgement.

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12
Q

Why do metrics sometimes mislead leaders?

A

Because numbers can look good while real work deteriorates or shifts off-system.

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13
Q

What metric question should leaders ask first?

A

What decision will this metric help us make?

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14
Q

Why does implementation increase risk initially?

A

New workflows and unfamiliar routines create instability before they stabilise.

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15
Q

What role do leaders play in safety during rollout?

A

Setting risk tolerance, protecting escalation, and responding visibly to concerns.

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16
Q

Why do mandates produce fragile success?

A

They create surface compliance while hiding misfit and workarounds.

17
Q

What does sustainable success look like from a leadership view?

A

Boring, routine use without escalation, reminders, or heroics.

18
Q

Why is champion-driven success risky?

A

Champions burn out or leave; systems must carry the work.

19
Q

What does ‘capacity’ really mean for leaders?

A

Time, staffing, attention, and recovery—not just headcount.

20
Q

Why is fairness not sameness in implementation?

A

Sites and teams start with unequal capacity and need different levels of support.

21
Q

What leadership behaviour most supports adoption?

A

Removing barriers leaders control: time, access, staffing, and conflicting priorities.

22
Q

What is a red flag during scale-up?

A

Expanding while existing sites still need intensive support.

23
Q

Why must leaders stay engaged after go-live?

A

Because go-live is the beginning of learning, not the end.

24
Q

What does leadership silence signal to teams?

A

That the work is optional and can be deprioritised.

25
In one line, what makes leadership help implementation succeed?
Leaders who make trade-offs explicit, remove barriers, and protect learning over time.