You can’t force accountability—but you can make it easier for people to choose it. When pressure rises, your instinct may be to tighten control. Instead, focus on creating conditions where ownership becomes the natural response. 

Emphasize authorship. Involve your leaders in defining what accountability actually looks like in their day-to-day work. Ask them to reflect on current behaviors, identify where blame or avoidance shows up, and co-create clear standards for ownership. When people help define the expectations, they’re more likely to act on them. 

Practice it consistently. Turn accountability into a habit, not a one-time conversation. Build simple, repeatable behaviors into daily work—ask for feedback, name ownership early, and acknowledge mistakes without defensiveness. Create regular moments for reflection so people can share where they chose accountability and what changed as a result. 

Translate it into results. Reinforce the impact. Encourage teams to come prepared, speak candidly about challenges, and focus on what matters most. Shift conversations from defensiveness to problem-solving. When people see that accountability improves clarity, prioritization, and follow-through, they’re more likely to keep choosing it.

Adapted from Accountability Must Be Chosen, Not Mandated by Kendra Okposo

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