The Lawrence School is recognized as a leader among schools for children who learn differently. It took years — navigating crises and pushing boundaries — to get where the school is today. Yet, as Head of School Lou Salza writes, their quest for high performance continues.

Complacency is the enemy I fear most on the journey to high performance. As programs, finance, governance, and outreach get better and stronger, there is a universal gravitational pull — a siren song — seducing us with the feeling that we have arrived at some hoped-for “destination.” This sense of self-satisfaction is a killer. It kills initiative, diminishes drive, and discourages the disruptive, innovative thinking required to keep on the move toward excellence and high performance.

In the past, for our leadership team’s annual reviews, I’ve chosen books on topics relevant to our mission and asked everyone to respond collaboratively to open-ended questions. The dialogue — which was far more interesting and valuable than the usual fare at annual review time — would result in some insights into how we could function better as individuals and as a team and how we could more effectively advance our mission.

But then I contributed to the Pillar 5 (culture of learning) proof points for the Performance Imperative Organizational Self-Assessment (PIOSA). I immediately realized that they would help us do an even deeper dive into how our team works together.

The PIOSA kicked us in our collective behinds. It focused our discourse and consideration in a way that:

  • Disrupts complacency by forcing a deep dive inward — and a thoughtful look outside to the marketplace
  • Requires personal as well as professional learning
  • Unifies departments by challenging us to make this happen throughout the program — with admins, teachers, parents, and students
  • Requires us to use the data in marketing and branding.

My take away: The first bullet alone is worth the time and effort we’re investing in the PIOSA.

Prioritizing our use of data and communication cuts across every operation in the school. It starts with how we serve the students and requires us to discern how we know we are successful. But it quickly moves to operations, finance, outreach, branding, personnel, training — so everyone gets wet when this data thing splashes down.

Read the full article about the Performance Imperative Organizational Self-Assessment by Lou Salza at Leap Ambassadors Community.