Performance Management Blog

How Square Wheels drives Enablement
Celebrate implementing round wheels in a square wheel world has great impacts on innovation and the organizational culture

This post is about how Square Wheels® drives enablement, how the use of the images can facilitate changes in organizational behavior and performance. 

Let me first note that I have NEVER liked the words “empowerment” and “engagement” in workplace improvement initiatives or even discussions about workplace culture because you cannot do either of them. I’ve written a dozen blogs around the reality that only DIS-un-engagement is possible. These frameworks ARE real — engagement is a thing — but you cannot do things to generate it — both are the choices others make that you might only influence. And, go ahead, DO something to empower me. See if that works.

Enablement is where Square Wheels really shine. They turn abstract talking about “empowerment” and “engagement” into concrete conversations about work processes, roadblocks, and better ways of getting the wagon rolling.

Enablement is about doing things differently:

Celebrate implementing round wheels in a square wheel world has great impacts on innovation and the organizational culture

Celebrating the implementation of a round wheel is enabling the implementation of more round wheels and intrinsically motivating.

Why engagement and empowerment stalled

For 30+ years, “engagement” and “empowerment” have been framed as attitudes or feelings, not as the design of work. Research on employee engagement typically defines it as enthusiasm, commitment, and willingness to go the extra mile, and treats it as something you measure with surveys and try to influence through leadership behaviors, recognition, and communication.​ You CAN measure people’s attitudes but only a good performance feedback system with management support can improve their results.

“Empowerment” has often been treated as a declaration (“You are empowered!”) or a values statement, instead of actually changing decision rights, information flows, tools, and structure; as a result, many people have been called empowered while still pushing the same overloaded wagon with the same Square Wheels with nothing actually changing​.

“Empowered Supervisors” is an oxymoron.

The net effect is that engagement and empowerment have frequently become posters and pulse surveys—important for information about attitudes, but weak predictors of day‑to‑day performance when the work itself is badly designed.

Pride and Running Around are not useful performance improvement behaviors

Having “Pride” is good and shows engagement while “Running Around” demonstrates empowerment but neither influences productivity.

Is competition in the remote workplace giving organizations a hard time?

Competition is both engaging and empowering but does not influence performance in positive ways.

 

Enablement: shifting from feelings to friction

Enablement focuses on whether people can actually do great work: Do they have clear goals, usable tools, good processes, skills, information, and permission to act? Is the performance feedback they get helping them optimize their results? Definitions describe employee enablement as providing the resources, environment, and authority employees need to perform at their best.​

Studies that distinguish engagement from enablement show that organizations high on both can see dramatically better productivity and retention than those high on only one; employees who are engaged but not enabled become frustrated strivers, while those enabled but not engaged become efficient but indifferent.​ (study and study)

This makes enablement the missing half of the performance equation: engagement is “I want to,” enablement is “I can,” and performance only improves when both are present.

How Square Wheels® drive enablement

Square Wheels are highly effective visual metaphors for things that work, but do not work smoothly—processes, policies, practices, and habits that create drag.​

Download the FREE Square Wheels One image under Creative Commons licensing BY-ND 4.0

Click here to download the FREE Square Wheels One image under Creative Commons license

And everywhere, the Round Wheels are already in the wagon, representing the better ideas that people already have but are not yet using; the simple act of asking, “What are the Square Wheels we’re pushing—and what Round Wheels could we try?” forces a shift from attitudes to executable solutions.​

In practical terms, Square Wheels sessions:

  • Surface specific work blockers safely
    The cartoon detaches criticism from people and politics: calling something a “Square Wheel” is not an attack, it is a shared performance opportunity. That makes it safer to name bad processes, redundant approvals, missing tools, and conflicting priorities.​

  • Turn employees into co‑designers of better work
    Facilitators ask groups to identify Square Wheels and then generate at least three Round Wheels (improvement ideas) for each one, which pushes people beyond quick fixes into real process and system redesign.​ Because the ideas come from the people doing the work, implementation is tied to local reality and ownership is high. Scott’s “Nobody ever washes a rental car” becomes a design principle for the session and allows people the active involvement they need to want to implement changes.

  • Build an enablement mindset in supervisors
    Supervisors learn to see their jobs as helping to remove Square Wheels and implement round ones, rather than pushing harder; the image reminds them that their teams’ ideas for round wheel improvements are already there, and their role is to ask, listen, and clear the path for experimentation.​

Over time, the language becomes cultural shorthand (“That’s a Square Wheel; what are our Round Wheels?”), embedding continuous improvement into routine conversations about work design and workflow.​

Why this is better than chasing “more engagement”

Traditional engagement efforts often end with, “How do we get people to try harder?” Square Wheels reframes the question as, “How do we make it easier and smarter to do great work?”—which is pure enablement.​

Instead of telling people they are empowered, the process actually redistributes power: teams define the problems, propose Round Wheels, and often select implementation champions, while leaders commit to removing structural obstacles and aligning measures and feedback with the new way of working.​

In that sense, Square Wheels makes engagement and empowerment by‑products rather than goals and objectives. When people see their ideas driving visible changes in how the wagon is built and pulled, engagement shows up as pride and effort, and empowerment shows up as real decision latitude—but the main storyline is better wheels, smoother movement, and more reliable performance.

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For organizations with multiple stuck teams, book a short conversation to design a program using Square Wheels across your organization, We can easily build some really great tools and courses and support systems,

For the FUN of It!

Dr. Scott Simmerman, designer of The Search for The Lost Dutchman's Gold Mine teambuilding game.Dr. Scott Simmerman is a designer of team building games and organization improvement tools.
Managing Partner of Performance Management Company since 1984, he is an experienced presenter and consultant who is trying to retire!! He now lives in Cuenca, Ecuador.

You can reach Scott at scott@squarewheels.com
Learn more about Scott at his LinkedIn site.

Square Wheels® are a registered trademark of Simmulations, LLC
and images have been copyrighted since 1993,

© Simmulations, LLC 1993 – 2025

What I’m About:

My Square Wheels blog and website exist to help leaders, trainers, and facilitators make work smoother, more engaging, and more human. I focus on practical tools for process improvement, organizational change, and workplace collaboration that spark insight and deliver measurable results.

And I am convinced, after 30+ years of using Square Wheels, that it is the best facilitation toolset in the world. One can use it to involve and engage people in designing workplace improvements and building engagement and collaboration. It is a unique metaphorical approach to performance improvement.

By blending proven facilitation methods, creative problem-solving, and engaging team activities, my mission is to support organizations in building energized, sustainable cultures of involvement and innovation.

Through accessible — and often free — resources and virtual facilitation tools, I aim to help teams everywhere collaborate more effectively, innovate continuously, and take ownership of their improvement journey.

#SquareWheels  #InnovationAtWork  #TeamEngagement  #FacilitationTools  #WorkplaceImprovement  #EmployeeEngagement  #CreativeProblemSolving  #OrganizationalDevelopment  #LeadershipTools #collaboration #leadership #motivation #communcations #enablement #dis-un-engagement

Dr. Scott Simmerman

Dr. Scott Simmerman is a designer of the amazing Lost Dutchman's Gold Mine team building game and the Square Wheels facilitation and engagement tools. Managing Partner of Performance Management Company since 1984, he is an experienced global presenter. -- You can reach Scott at scott@squarewheels.com and a detailed profile is here: https://www.linkedin.com/in/scottsimmerman/ -- Scott is the original designer of The Search for The Lost Dutchman's Gold Mine teambuilding game and the Square Wheels® images for organizational development.

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