3 Attributes of a Championship Employee To build winning performance in any environment, leaders need to evaluate team members for these key attributes.

By Skip Weisman

This story originally appeared on Personal Branding Blog

To build championship performance in any environment, whether it be on the athletic field or in business, organizational leaders need to evaluate team members (athletes or employees) for three key attributes:

  • Ability
  • Attitude
  • Aptitude

Now, if you read the article two weeks ago Creating Championship Performance in Small Business Workplaces that offered 5 C.H.A.M.P.traits of a championship culture, you may be wondering how these three attributes relate. You may be thinking I'm just adding more traits to the list.

Here's the difference.

The 5 C.H.A.M.P. traits are culture driven by the organization's leadership and how performance and behavior expectations are communicated and managed.

Related: How to Keep Your Employees Motivated

These "A" attributes are driven by what the individual team member brings to the organization.

Let's take a look at each:

  1. Ability - This is the skills an individual brings to their role. What does their present level of ability allow them to do for the organization within the role for which they are hired? How can their ability contribute to the success of the team and organization?
  2. Attitude - This will determine how well the individual will apply their ability to their role and how they will interact with other members of the team to create collaborative results at the highest level. It will also determine how they will integrate the 5 C.H.A.M.P. traits that are the expectation for a championship caliber team member.
  3. Aptitude – This attribute speaks to individual team members' capability to learn and grow within their role, or other roles that will allow them to grow and develop even further. All team members should strive to continually develop, get better in their role and present abilities, while also building new skills and abilities. A team with individuals with high levels of aptitude provide greater flexibility throughout the organization.

Assessing one's ability and attitude is easier than assessing aptitude when looking to bring in team members into the fold.

Related: Strive to Be the 'Old Faithful' of Your Company

To assess an individual's aptitude should start with their attitude towards learning new skills. Often attitude is 80% of it.

Then, a look at the individual's past history regarding how they have evolved in their previous roles and how quickly. If there is a history of positive growth and career acceleration you can delve deeper into the factors that led to development, which would speak to both their attitude and aptitude to learn and grow to become an even more valuable team member.

The attributes of ability, attitude, aptitude combined with the 5 C.H.A.M.P. traits will create a team capable of performing at a championship level, however that may be defined, which we'll address next week.

Related: How to Stay Calm in a Job Interview

Skip Weisman, The Leadership & Workplace Communication Expert works with small business owners to help them lead their employees from drama & defensiveness to ownership & initiative. Skip just published a new white paper report How to Transform Your Workplace from Drama & Defensiveness to Initiative & Ownership. Download a free copy of this report at How to Transform Your Workplace from Drama & Defensiveness to Initiative & Ownership. During a 20-year career in professional baseball management, Skip served as CEO for five different franchises. That experience gave Skip tremendous insight and skill for building high-performing teams in the workplace.

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