# 4 Tips to Hold Anyone Accountable from Crucial Accountability 3rd Edition

## Метаданные

- **Канал:** Crucial Learning
- **YouTube:** https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cYZGeMFjEx0
- **Дата:** 02.03.2026
- **Длительность:** 1:58
- **Просмотры:** 239
- **Источник:** https://ekstraktznaniy.ru/video/45671

## Описание

Author Joseph Grenny shares four tips for holding anyone accountable from the new third edition of his bestseller, Crucial Accountability: Proven Skills to Build Trust, Address Disappointment, and Get Results. The new edition is now available everywhere books are sold.

In Crucial Accountability, you'll learn powerful skills to foster trust and collaboration in any environment. You’ll find actionable techniques for managing difficult accountability conversations and driving positive change, making the book essential for leaders, teams, and individuals seeking greater accountability in personal and professional settings.

You’ll discover:
• How to hold anyone accountable
• Proven strategies for dealing with disappointment at work or at home
• Insightful case studies and examples
• Why it’s important to address gaps in expectations quickly
• Access to a helpful “Where Do You Stand” self-assessment
• The latest research, findings, and much more

## Транскрипт

### Segment 1 (00:00 - 01:00) []

We've all been there. The moment the disappointment sets in after someone drops the ball, misses a deadline, or breaks a promise. Once the initial frustration fades, it's tempting to just let it slide. After all, no one likes to be the one to point out a slip up or call out a mistake. But every time we avoid those conversations, trust erodess and results suffer. In the crucial accountability book, you'll learn proven skills that show you how to turn those moments into opportunities for coaching and growth and feel confidence, not dread, to approach the other person. Here are a few quick accountability tips we teach you in the book that you can use right now. Tip one, start with heart. Before holding someone accountable, start with empathy. Ask yourself, what is it that you truly want for the person? not just from them. Connection builds trust and trust opens the door for real accountability. Tip two, clarify the gap. Not every problem is the same. Identify whether you're dealing with a single incident, a recurring pattern, or a relationship issue. Clarifying the real problem helps you address the root cause, not just the symptom. Tip three, reduce the load. When stress overflows, people can't perform. You can't fix every challenge, but you can remove smaller stressors, simplify expectations, or offer tools that help people get back on track. When you approach accountability this way, others feel respected. And you'll create a culture where people feel safe to try new things, hold each other accountable, and where feedback isn't a bad word. That's the power of crucial accountability.
