Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Four Motivation Mistakes Most Leaders Make

via HBR.org by Carolyn Dewar and Scott Keller on 10/17/11

Irrationality is a basic part of being human. A classic example is buying something we would never otherwise have spent money on — and will never use — simply because it's a great deal. So when it comes to motivating employees to change, it should be no surprise that leaders who rely on rationality typically spend time and energy on the wrong things, send messages that miss the mark, and create frustrating unintended consequences. Yet most do it anyhow. As part of the research for Beyond Performance, we've come to understand how leaders can leverage social-science research about decision making to motivate employees more effectively.

Employees don't care as much about the company as you think they do. Leaders, rationally enough, appeal to the company's circumstances when making a case for change. But social science points to five sources of meaning for humans at work: the impact of the work on society, the customer, the company, the team, and "me." Most people are motivated by one of these more than others, and in large groups there are more or less equal shares of people motivated by each. So rational leaders don't tap into the primary motivators of up to 80% of their workforce. To do so, they need to communicate in ways that powerfully touch on all five sources of meaning. It's not as hard as it sounds. Take a cost reduction program at a mortgage company, for example. It is of course about ensuring expenses don't outpace revenue growth (company), but it can also be about helping put more people in homes (society), improving quality and service by reducing errors and streamlining operations (customer), achieving far more working together than any individual could alone (team), and as delegating more and creating more attractive jobs (me).

Less can be more when it comes to incentives. Money is the most expensive way to motivate employees, but it's still many leaders' first choice. Our experience and numerous studies, however, show that big bonuses are less effective than smaller, unexpected gestures, because gifts create a relationship while bonuses are purely transactional. Consider how pleased you are when a friend brings a bottle of wine to your house for dinner and how different you'd feel if he offered to pay you for the meal. In the office, small gestures create a similar friendly feeling. When Gordon M. Bethune was leading a turnaround at Continental Airlines, for example, he sent an unexpected $65 check to every employee when Continental made it to the top five for on-time flights. John McFarlane of ANZ Bank sent a bottle of champagne to every employee one Christmas with a card thanking them for their work on the company's change program. In both cases, employees ended up feeling far more connected to the company than the relatively small financial investment would otherwise have implied.

Listen more, talk less. When people choose for themselves what to do instead of just being told, social-science research shows, they are more committed to the outcome by a factor of almost five to one. So although as a leader you likely feel a responsibility to explain your views, you'll do better by asking people questions that will help them reach their own conclusions about how to improve. David Farr, CEO of Emerson Electric, is noted for asking every employee a short list of questions such as "How do you make a difference?" "What improvement idea are you working on?" and "When did you last get coaching from your boss?" Together, the answers help employees discover how their role links to the overall company direction, puts a sharp focus on continuous improvement, and highlights how much coaching and development is valued by the organization — all crucial in times of change.

Don't forget the good stuff. Focusing on problems tends to create fatigue and resistance, many studies have shown, whereas looking for opportunities to build on strengths leads to inspiration and motivation. This doesn't mean ignoring problems. But it does mean that the rational idea of pointing out to employees just how bad things are doesn't work. Instead, focus on how your organization's, or individuals', strengths can be used to overcome your challenges. Consider one U.S. financial services company that traditionally eschewed creating close relations with regulators. The new normal, however, made having such relationships a requirement for success. How did the CEO motivate other senior leaders to spend time in Washington? By asking them to bring their already strong capability for creating deep relationships with customers to this new set of relationships.

The corporate poet David Whyte once wrote, "Work, paradoxically, does not ask enough of us, yet exhausts the narrow part we bring to the door." Simple steps like those above will help you at least partly resolve this paradox by reaching employees as human beings.

The Jedi Masters of Today’s Business World!

via War Room Contributors by Small Business Trends on 10/17/11

“You stay in the game, play it right and don’t give up.”

I find so much inspiration from people who are going through great personal or professional challenges and difficulties with grace, poise and perseverance.

They are today’s Jedi Masters to me. They put one foot in front of the other, stay in the day, stay in the game and don’t go too far out. The times are choppy and stormy, but not impossible to navigate. It just requires different skill sets and a  flexible mindset.

There are three areas that have been impacted by great external change that has forced us to go through great internal change. Slowly people are shifting, getting into motion and accepting reality.

1. Being in Business
Consumerism is consistently changing and being shaped by demographic shifts, culture trends and technology. Boomers are still consumers but their prime time has passed. Generation X is 11 percent smaller than Boomers and they are bogged down with raising families and debt. Generation Y is looming and aging up but they don’t have the the jobs yet to give them more income clout. Regardless of these dynamics, people continue to buy, spend and create trends. Businesses need to be fluid, innovative and fun today.

2. Careers and Jobs
Unemployment of 9.1 percent and 14 million people out of work may not seem like all that much, but it is having a much greater impact because even the people who are working are making less and spending less. The idea of having a career has changed dramatically. Having a career now means having a job, regardless of what your expertise is or what you studied in college. Work of any kind where you can use your key skills, learn new ones and make a difference is better than no work.

3. Family and Community
We live in a multicultural, extended family world today. What families and community looks like now is diverse, open and nontraditional. People are finding new ways to connect to each other. Traditional families, single parents, no kids, extended families, and families of friends are all unique and working.

People who go with the flow, find ways to get through and make the best of each day with what they are given are today’s Jedi Masters to me.

Here are 10 commonalities I see in the mindset and approach they take to their lives and businesses:

1) They see the silver lining and focus on the lesson.
2) They are proactive and take thoughtful actions.
3) They surround themselves with a support system that they use and tap into.
4) They serve others and get outside themselves.
5) They allow themselves to embrace and go through the uncomfortable emotions.
6) They see how their experience can benefit others.
7) They take actions they may not yet believe in.
They have faith and spirituality.
9) They focus on what they can control.
10)They exude an intangible energy that impacts others and attracts people to them.

Thank you to all of the  Jedi Masters of life and business who continue to inspire me daily.


Image from AlexeyRumyantsev/Shutterstock

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The Jedi Masters of Today’s Business World!

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Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Dubstep Block Plaid Navy Hoodie

Dubstep Block Plaid Navy Hoodie
by LaTonya Shaw

Keep warm and filthy with a fashion statement that says it all. I like plaid for some reason and this hoodie is all class. Maybe not class but it's definitely a taker. Found this on dubstep-clothing.com. Check it out and leave a comment on what you think.