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April 26, 2013

Untapped Talent: Unleashing the Power of the Hidden Workforce

Filed under: Book Reviews,General Management,Human Resources/Organizational Development,New Releases,Uncategorized — Tags: Monroe, Organizational Development, Talent, Untapped — Sally @ 10:04 am
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Kudos to the author and publisher for coming up with such an intriguing title. It’s impossible not to wonder just who this “hidden workforce” is, and surprisingly, organizational development expert Dani Monroe reveals that an untapped source of talent is right under our noses: our current underutilized employees.

Over the course of my career, I saw hundreds of extremely intelligent, well-credentialed men and women with master’s degrees in business, degrees in engineering, math, technology, and liberal arts. They all had a strong desire to succeed in their work, but they all faced unique organizational obstacles. For a variety of reasons, many of which it took me years to uncover and understand, these professionals represented silenced voices in their workplaces. They represented what I’ve now come to define as “untapped talent”–professionals with relevant skills and abilities who aren’t making the most of them.

Before we look at the “variety of reasons” that causes a person to languish in an organization never realizing his or her potential, let’s define just who these folks are in context of Monroe’s Untapped Talent. “Untapped” doesn’t necessarily mean “unsuccessful,” at least in the way we recognize. “Ironically, the people who fall short of their potential often appear as if they have achieved the upper-middle-class American dream,” Monroe writes, explaining that despite outward appearances, these employees are often just going through the motions, no longer able to engage, not able to move forward. “They aren’t just hidden. They are, in a word, unhappy.” So this book isn’t so much geared toward finding diamonds in the rough; instead, it’s about polishing the slowly-tarnishing silver.

The author is careful to acknowledge that it is the responsibility of both the organization and the employee to solve this problem, and emphasizes that both the person and the organization will benefit from solving said problem. “When you find yourself in the hidden workforce,” Monroe warns, “…you lose. When that happens with the people on your team, your team and you lose. And your organization loses. And your customers and clients lose. And your community loses.” In other words, everyone wins by recognizing untapped talent–even if that person is yourself.

Monroe explains that there are a number of factors that contribute to losing good people within an organization: restricted access to the right people/mentors/resources/feedback, indoctrination or unification, seeing talent as nontransferable to other tasks/projects, promoting without training, assumptions about which people are appropriate for certain roles, exclusion from decision-making, and general passivity. At play here, she says, is an “unconscious bias” that limits our ability to be creative and progressive thinkers.

So how can organizations change? First, address the culture. “[A] culture of talent stewardship begins with the informal practices of its leaders. These leaders take the time to get to know people throughout their organizations, not just those within their immediate sphere of influence.” Then, appreciate the importance of soft skills (in addition to intelligence and technical skills.) “The nontangible nature of the skills makes it difficult for some people to recognize their importance in daily operations.”
And how can the employees change? Monroe tells us to become “personally sound” which includes self-awareness, confidence, just sort of settled with ourselves, so that we can clearly see what we bring to the table.

Getting to these untapped talents begins with a simple, but often difficult, three-step process. It starts with identifying our crucible moments. Then we must reflect on how those moments shaped us and where they are taking us. Finally we recognize ourselves with who we were, who we are, and who we want to become.

Circling around to how this concentration on the self can help change an organization, Monroe says that after we have achieved a sense of personal soundness that (re)sparks our own engagement, it is important to mentor others. How do you recognize untapped talent in your organization? Typically, Monroe says, these people, no matter what work they currently do, display the 3 R’s “resourcefulness, resilience, and resolve” and she closes the book with chapters on each.

Untapped Talent is an efficient book and Monroe doesn’t spend a lot of time offering anecdotes or case studies. Instead, she relies on her expertise to lay out this common conundrum and offer pragmatic fixes. But that’s not to say the book lacks passion. Clearly Monroe is a champion of the underappreciated and/or the underperforming, and it is clear that helping people find fulfillment and achieve their potential motivates her work. Both leaders and employees can benefit greatly from reading Untapped Talent, in order to recognize that untapped talent within yourself or your organization.

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April 29, 2010

The High Cost of Mistrust by Judy Bardwick

Filed under: Book Awards,General Management,Human Resources/Organizational Development — dylan @ 1:16 pm
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Judy Bardwick is the author of One Foot Out the Door, the winner of the first 800-CEO-READ Business Book Award in the Human Resources category in 2007. She coined the term “Psychological Recession” to describe “why your people don’t seem all that excited about coming to work these days,” and how that can affect your company’s financial health. You can read more about in an article she wrote for The Conference Board Review. In the post below, she discusses the true—very high—cost of mistrust.

The High Cost of Mistrust

Some of my very favorite examples of what to do come from examples of what not to do. Here are some of the worst I’ve encountered.

I well remember flying into Phoenix to meet with the CEO of a Fortune 500 company for the first time. After the usual pleasantries we sat down at a table, he grabbed my right forearm tightly, shoved his face close to mine and hissed, I want to kill them. I want to kill them all and I want you to deliver that message.

He was talking about his employees.

I looked him straight in the eye and said, That is your message and only you can deliver it. To my relief, I was swiftly removed from the building. What a sweetheart he was. I’m sure his employees were filled with feelings of trust and thrilled to be working for him.

When I was an undergraduate, I returned home for the summer and landed a job as a clerk at a manufacturer of women’s undergarments. To say I was underemployed barely touches the surface, but I didn’t care because my sole ambition was to earn the maximum I could while my father could still claim me as a tax deduction.

The management of our little unit was comical in its passionate lunacy of never letting us clerks out of their sight. We were monitored for the time we spent in the bathroom; we were required to clock in and out for lunch; we were monitored for break time. We were measured and noted and disciplined for time, while no one ever measured what we actually accomplished.

In this Alice in Wonderland setting the message was, your work doesn’t mean anything. And neither do you. You’re all so untrustworthy that without us, who knows what you’d do!

And we clerks reciprocated. As we were neither respected nor trusted, we returned the sentiment. In today’s vocabulary, we had become Actively Disengaged. Instead of concentrating on our work which, in any event, we could all do in our sleep, we spent hours thinking up ways to get our two managers in trouble. And we succeeded. We managed to get the attention of our managers’ bosses whenever our managers did anything unusually ridiculous. We did that so well that when a new operating system was introduced by corporate, one of us unworthy and untrustworthy clerks was put in charge of the new process and ultimately, of the office. What crocodile tears we shed!

United Airlines is consistently near the bottom rank among U.S. airlines in customer satisfaction. That may explain why it ranked higher in financial losses than American, Continental and Delta combined in 2008.

The United CEO won the Gold for Worst Management when, in addition to lousy service in a competitive industry where customers really do have choices, United decided on an adversarial relationship with their pilots—their pilots! Mechanics will likely be next. You can fly United, but count me out.

But United has a serious competitor for that medal: In March, 2007, Circuit City announced its plans to layoff 3400 employees. These days, that’s not news. The fact that the layoffs were of their more experienced and successful sales people who not only sold the most but were also a primary source of training for new hires did not make it the stuff of headlines. It was still not media material when the reason they were laid off turned out to be the fact that they earned $14-15 an hour and new hires got about $8. It wasn’t making the evening news, although it was getting closer because Circuit City’s competitive advantage in a very competitive industry was their experienced and knowledgeable salespeople.

The really newsworthy part of Circuit City’s plan, and the twist that put them in contention for the Gold for Inept Management, was they were willing to rehire their laid-off senior salespeople at the lower wage of a new hire. That literally guarantees a huge percentage of employees became Actively Disengaged, really motivated to do the company harm.

How might successful people who’ve been discarded and then rehired at an entry level wage feel about the company? We can guarantee that they would no longer be filled with the Milk of Human Kindness and gratitude to CC. How would they behave? Let me count the ways: they might steal merchandise or ignore thefts by others; they might bait and switch or just lie to customers, saying they had completely run out of an item the customer really wanted. They could recommend competitor’s stores to frustrated buyers; they could hard sell inferior but expensive products; they could work to the clock. When trust is replaced by mistrust, employees become Actively Disengaged from their work and the organization, and the ways in which they sabotage the business is limited only by their lack of imagination.

Trust is Always Critical

These examples have all come from the world of business. But the reasons why trust never develops, or mistrust replaces trust, are the same in every aspect of life. The dynamics of trust are the same in your personal life or your political judgments as they are in relationships at work.

Where there is mutual trust, there is mutual commitment and immense amounts of psychological energy brought to the mission or the relationship. This is called being Actively Engaged and it’s the condition in which the mission, the organization, and the relationship have the very best chance of flourishing.

Where the level of trust is borderline, so is commitment. This condition is called Engaged and when that’s the dominant feeling, commitment is weak and fragile. The Engaged state allows people to stay in a relationship or a job until either mistrust replaces trust or a better relationship or job comes along.

Where mistrust and Active Disengagement permeates most relationships, there is no commitment to the organization or any relationships. Instead, most of the time, the largest number of people are looking for ways to harm the organization or the person that has injured them.

When people’s behavior reflects their egotism, narcissism, greed, and especially hubris, we don’t trust them. When their need for power obliterates any possible mutual respect and takes the form of steel bonds of control, barked orders and micro-managing, they are never trusted. When they break their word and lie, either flagrantly by acts of commission, or more subtly by omission, they will not be trusted. When people show us no respect or trust in us, we will not trust them.

The absence of trust is not simply passive—that something is missing. Instead, in the vacuum of trust, mistrust rushes in and fills the void. Mistrust is dangerous and expensive. It means people expect the worst and behave in line with that. Rules to control behavior proliferate, but they are inevitably ineffective because only shared values and trust can really govern behavior. In the face of mistrust, cooperation and teamwork are merely slogans shouted out by executives in the face of increasing narcissism and territoriality. Mistrust means everyone watches their back and not anyone else’s.

Trust may be the single most critical building block underlying effectiveness. Without trust, “leaders” are impotent because they do not have followers. And without followers, nothing gets accomplished. No matter how great the insights and seminal ideas of the leader, without followers nothing will happen.

In every relationship, whether it’s a boss, or a politician, or a friend, partner or spouse, trust resides in the belief that there is no duplicity, no manipulation, and no narcissistic ego in the relationship. Like many profound things, this is really simple: trust rests on the belief that the other person and every act are transparent: This literally means, What you see is all there is.

And once there is no trust and mistrust is the norm, it is almost impossible to create or recreate trust. But “almost impossible” is not the same as absolutely impossible.

The only way anyone can recreate trust and a mutual, grounded relationship, is to be open, especially spontaneously open about how they feel and what they intend to do—and then follow through and do it. This is always an easy prescription to understand, but extremely difficult to do. The poisons of pride and mistrust, of guilt and remorse, of resentment of the past and desperate hopes for a better future makes it very, very hard to suspend disbelief and accept things at face value.

But doing the hard work of recreating trust is well worth doing because when mistrust prevails, believe me, the piper will be paid. And rest assured, no matter how many acquiescent smiles may appear on the face of those still feeling betrayed, the payback interest they will demand will be beyond money and can never be paid off. That’s why mistrust really costs.

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September 15, 2009

Strategic Thinking Month

Filed under: Blog,General Management,Human Resources/Organizational Development,Leadership — Jon @ 3:59 pm
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Headed by Josh Leibner, Gershon Mader, and Alan Weiss, authors of The Power of Strategic Commitment, September marks a time to re-evaluate strategy. In their book, the authors detail a variety of ways to align people around a mission, idea, or business.

Commitment is the reason systems like SixSigma, the HP Way, etc. have become benchmarks for corporate culture. A thorough and engaging book, focusing on fact and research over pure emotion, the book is a compelling read for managers and leadership well beyond the month of September. Here’s a great quote from the book that will give you a sense of the direction of the text:

“There is an enormous power in galvanizing people around a bold, compelling future; and that desired future state cannot be achieved by operating with yesterday’s mind-set, practices, and processes. There are two ways out of this inertia: One is an externally imposed “shock to the system,” such as a market or industry meltdown, a takeover by another organization, the loss of a major customer, or some other exogenous occurrence. The second is an internally generated desire to take the organization somewhere it has never been; a desire to build something extraordinary. The best leaders do the latter, because it is proactive and controllable, not reactive and random.”

Many people experienced the first scenario described above this year. For those of us who didn’t, these words alone provide a great reason to pick this book up and start developing an incredible organization from the inside out.

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March 10, 2009

Rebound by Martha Finney

Filed under: Human Resources/Organizational Development,Jack Covert Selects — dylan @ 9:00 am
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Finding a great new book that we love around here usually brings us nothing but joy… and ideas, and answers, and motivation, and positive reinforcement. A recent book by Martha Finney, however, has been somewhat bittersweet. It has everything we love in a book–it’s wonderfully written, timely and helpful. But, alas, in the current economic climate, “timely” and “helpful” does not necessarily mean pleasant. The book I’m referring to is Rebound: A Proven Plan for Starting Over After Job Loss.
With our sister company, Harry W. Schwartz Bookshops, closing it’s doors at the end of the month and the recent thinning in our own ranks here at 8cr, this book has been passed around our company more than the pigskin on a winter Sunday. (And if you ask me, having your book passed around amongst booksellers is the ultimate form of flattery an author can receive.) It has also received quite a bit of press, and rightfully so. Time magazine recently interviewed Finney on how to handle a layoff, covering everything from what you should do with your files to what you should tell your kids. That interview begins:

TIME: What if someone tells you that you’re being let go? What do you do and say at that awful moment?
Finney: Keep your mouth shut. Keep your hand away from the pen. Sign nothing. Keep your thoughts to yourself. Ask questions. At the risk of sounding adversarial–and I don’t like to do that because I’m a huge booster of the HR profession–these people have a script.

She’s been asked her opinion on everything from blogging, from the Christian Science Monitor:

It’s an excellent way for job seekers to demonstrate their passion, smarts, and dedication to their profession over time, regardless of what their immediate job status is. If hiring managers find their material fascinating to read, perhaps even educational or groundbreaking, they’re going to want to bring these people in for interviews.

to volunteering, from the Tribune Media Services:

Self-esteem, role in the community, personal value, all those pieces are still in place. If there is one thing that our generation can teach the next, [it's that] intrinsic value survives any job. I think that volunteering should always be part of life’s activities. But if you find yourself flat out of work, it’s far better to use that time to benefit someone else than to sit there shoveling chocolate in your mouth.

Her book, Rebound was a Jack Covert Selects last month. I’ve reposted that review below for easy reading.
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Rebound: A Proven Plan for Starting Over After Job Loss by Martha I. Finney, FT Press, 208 pages, $16.99, Paperback, February 2009, ISBN 9780137021147
The current economic climate carries with it certain unpleasant realities that we are now all too well aware of. We have felt it hit especially hard in our little corner of the world, where our sister company is closing its four bookshops, succumbing to both the economic downturn and massive shifts in the publishing industry. Regrettably, for many people, the changes in their employer’s fortunes ends in job loss. Martha I. Finney’s Rebound: A Proven Plan for Starting Over After Job Loss is an invaluable resource that the newly unemployed worker can use to make sense of his or her situation, confront the mixed feelings that come along with it, and understand the new rules of careers so that he or she will be well-equipped to develop a plan of action and find a new job.
Finney, a workplace consultant and expert in employee engagement and leadership communications, offers readers relevant, immediately applicable advice on how to deal with a job loss, from understanding your rights, to protecting your reputation, to determining how to talk about the loss in your next interview, and even to knowing what to tell family and friends. Each chapter ends with a three-part summary: “The best thing you can do,” “The worst thing you can do,” and “The first thing you should do.” Readers are encouraged to take proactive steps in anticipating and managing this difficult change, such as controlling spending, using social networking to find a new job, and guarding against future unemployment.
Finney’s tone is personal and sympathetic. For instance, she writes: “You’ve been laid off. And your career is the accordioned wreckage joining the heaps of thousands of other careers piled up at this very same wall. Your job may have come to an unexpected, abrupt halt. But your heart and mind continue to surge forward at the same rate of speed as before, and you’re in for some internal damage” (4). Her words don’t sugarcoat, but all is not hopeless; in fact, Finney acknowledges that her stories intentionally end on a positive note because “your own laid-off saga can also end on an up note” (xx). It is unfortunate that the times necessitate such a thing, but Rebound is an excellent companion to have during these uncertain, difficult times.
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Keep up with Martha at her blog, Rebound Your Career.

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December 22, 2008

Excerpt from Boreout by Philippe Rothlin and Peter R. Werder

Filed under: Careers,Human Resources/Organizational Development — 800-CEO-READ @ 11:37 am
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The following short excerpt is taken from Chapter 10 of Boreout: Overcoming Workplace Demotivation by Philippe Rothlin and Peter R. Werder. In Boreout, Rothlin and Werder describe the chronic boredom and demotivation that exists in an estimated 15% of office staff, employees who are “underchallenged, uninterested, and spend hours each day simulating work. These employees have given up and become resigned to their situation, suffering what is effectively the opposite of office burnout.”

Chapter 10 challenges readers to think about what is personally meaningful to them when it comes to their work lives.
CHAPTER 10
WE SEEK MEANING

Why exactly do we work? The off-the-cuff answer tends to be: because we have to, because we need money to live. It is primarily about purely ensuring one’s existence and basic material needs.
Because we have to live, and because our standard of living is directly connected with money, we often ascribe too much weight to it. If the money is right, the job is right. We will put up with a lot in exchange for a good salary. Hence we often take on jobs that we don’t in the least want to do. Not a very original conclusion, to be sure, but it is the truth nonetheless. Yet ask yourself: would the many employees in such situations stop working if they no longer had to because their basic needs were met — because they are simply rich? With respect, this is barely conceivable. In such a case, what would they do all day? Sit by the pool, go on a trip to the mountains or the Caribbean every so often and fill their stomachs like the lotus-eaters? Perhaps that would work for a short while, in the same way that a bit of boredom in the workplace for a short time has its attraction.
But, and this goes for the lotus-eaters too, you can have too much of a good thing. If we won the lottery, it would probably not be long before we were looking for something to do: maybe helping the couple next door to renovate their house, or maybe working for a charity or going back to college to develop our own ideas about some area of interest.
It is in cases of catastrophe that we see most starkly just how meaningful work can be: people help each other out in times of floods, landslides and earthquakes. Lives are saved, the sick cared for, emergency supplies shared out, money donated. Boreout is unthinkable in such situations. Or can you imagine people from the fire brigade or health workers turning their backs on the crisis and just lazing around?
So if we did not have to work because our material needs were covered, we would do so nonetheless. Our criteria for choosing what to do would, however, be different in this case: we could choose freely without having to consider the financial aspect. We would do what seems meaningful to us: what we like doing, what we find fun, something that we feel at ease with and identify with. The criteria would be the meanings we find in the work.
It is therefore not about having no work at all instead of an unloved job, but rather about meaningful work: something that provides us with satisfaction and recognition. It is through recognition that we find the meaning of what we do, because recognition gives us the feeling that we are real and that what we do is valued. When people praise us in our work, they recognize us. Whether in catastrophic situations or in everyday life, that gives us a meaning that is tangible and can be experienced.
The first element of qualitative pay is therefore meaning, for we must find it in our activities. If you do that you will find it easier to identify with your work, perhaps even find it fun. It is a question of looking for the meaning in what you do, or changing the basic conditions so that the meaning becomes clearer. This meaning is not simply present in the work; it exists in the relationship between work and worker. It must be discovered: by the bank clerk who develops strategies to make the business more profitable; by the police officer who wants to protect society from criminals; and by the doctor who helps the sick.
The point is this: what is meaningful for one person can be absolutely meaningless for another.
Think about whether your job at the moment is personally meaningful for you, about whether your work really interests you. First we must look at this idea we call ‘interest’. Interest enables us to recognize the meaning of our activity very quickly for ourselves. The question ‘Does my job really interest me?’ is often suppressed, wrongly. For if interest in work is not present, then in all probability working days will become torment. Qualitative pay turns out to be higher if you are working at something that really interests you. For then you will spend your working time in satisfying ways.

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September 24, 2008

Got a meeting this morning?

Filed under: General Management,Human Resources/Organizational Development — 800-CEO-READ @ 8:57 am
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Quick Meeting Openers for Busy Managers: More than 50 Icebreakers, Energizers, and Other Creative Activities That Get Results by Brian Cole Miller is an easy book to consult when you want to kick off a group meeting in a fun way.
Here are a few creative activities to get the group started:


Quotes

This is…
> A meeting starter in which participants share their favorite quotes with the group.
Use it to…
> Help the group warm up as well as get to know each other better.
Best group size…
> Up to about 20.
Materials you’ll need…
> No materials are necessary for this activity.
Here’s how…
1. Before the meeting, tell participants to bring their favorite quote (either written down or memorized).
2. In the meeting, have participants share their quote and then explain why it is important to them.
For example…
> “‘To thine own self be true’ is my favorite quote. When I was in my early 20s I realized that I was trying to be what others expected or wanted of me. I wasn’t happy. When I came to terms with who I am, and then lived true to that, I found great joy as well as inner peace.”
Tips for success…
> You go first to demonstrate how much detail you want them to go into. It doesn’t have to be an actual quote, it could be a “saying” or “words to live by.”
Try these variations…
> Make this more difficult by not giving participants advance warning. Allow them to paraphrase their favorite quote if they can’t remember it word for word.
> Rather than a quote, have participants share their favorite saying or lesson learned from their parents while growing up.
> Divide larger groups up into smaller teams of 8 to 20 members to use this activity.

Map It

This is…
> An activity in which participants form a human map based on where they live.
Use it to…
> Help groups visualize their proximity to each other outside of work.
Best group size…
> Unlimited.
Materials you’ll need…
> No materials are necessary for this activity.
Here’s how…
1. Gather the group in a larger, open space.
2. Have participants create a map by standing relative to one another based on where their homes are.
Tips for success…
> Place something in the middle of the space to represent where they are now. All points should be relative to that point.
> Beyond that, don’t help or guide anyone; let the group figure it all out. Don’t be surprised if someone else steps up and starts to lead, though.
Try these variations…
> Have participants map where they were born, where they last went on vacation, where they plan to retire, or where their favorite restaurant is.
> Have participants map where their work locations are. Afterward, discuss what impact geographic diversity has on the work they are about to do, if any.

Find more lively activities in Quick Meeting Openers for Busy Managers: More than 50 Icebreakers, Energizers, and Other Creative Activities That Get Result.

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September 15, 2008

Article from Jim Champy, author of Outsmart!

Filed under: General Business,General Management,Human Resources/Organizational Development,Leadership — 800-CEO-READ @ 9:05 am
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Thanks to Jim Champy, author of Outsmart!: How to Do What Your Competitors Can’t. The article below describes some shared characteristics of great companies.
WHERE ARE THE GREAT COMPANIES?
By Jim Champy
For years I have been searching for great companies. What I have found is that there are none. Greatness is an aspiration – a very honorable one. But no company is perfect, even if it performs well year after year.
Greatness, like, many objectives, is in the eye of the beholder. One simple test for greatness is how a company is experienced by its constituents – its customers, its associates, its owners, and business partners. In my most recent research, I looked at over a thousand high-growth companies and found many companies that are very good. They treat all of their constituents well and, in their own unique ways, aspire to greatness.
My search was driven by a desire to find companies that have new business models, delivering new products and services to customers and executing in new ways. I have written about my discoveries in OUTSMART!, my latest book. Although I could find no single formula for what creates a good – or great – company, I did find some shared characteristics.
Ambition: The leadership team of every good company has a great ambition for the company – usually one that addresses an unmet customer need. The ambition is not one of personal greed; it’s about building a company that delivers on its promise and does it with a unique quality. My experience over the years is that it takes a great ambition to create even a good company. I was inspired in my research by a company called Minute Clinic, whose ambition is to change how healthcare is delivered, for the benefit of everyone involved in the healthcare system.
Customer: Every good company begins by meeting a customer need. That need is often deeply understood by the company’s founder because they, themselves, experienced the need – and saw how that need was not being well met. Sometimes the founder hands off the leadership of the company to someone else who operationalizes the idea. But that wasn’t the case in the example of Sonicbids, a company that saw the unmet needs of thousands of independent musicians and performers and whose founder has led the company to a unique position in the music business. This music business for independent performers is a 13 billion dollar a year market, that no one saw or had the appetite to organize until Sonic bids came along.
Focus: Good companies stay focused on what they know and can do well. When companies search for new ideas, they often drift into unknown territory and get in trouble. Good companies just keep growing and expanding into familiar territory. Shutterfly is a wonderful example of a company that’s growing, but it grows by expanding within the social expressions business, helping communities of people share photographs in hundreds of ways. Niches can be very large markets.
Execution: Satisfying a customer requires relentless attention to execution. Building a company’s capability to deliver makes the difference between turning a great idea into a business or failure. But execution is not just about delivering a product. It’s also about service. Over the years, I have observed that technology companies are particularly bad at recognizing and responding to the service needs of their customers. Counter intuitively, high-tech requires a lot of high-touch. Partsearch is a company that knows what it’s doing with customer service, helping customers find what they need in an ocean of millions of parts and accessories for consumer electronic products. Partsearch has tamed chaos in its industry.
Inspiration: Smart companies engage all of their associates in building the business, from idea creation though delivery. Ideas don’t just come tops-down; they also come bottoms-up and from every other direction. Everyone in the company feels that they own a piece of the action and are accountable for how the company performs. The inspiration for a company starts at the top, but good leadership drives that inspiration deep into the company by engaging people broadly in decision-making. People are more than mechanical parts of the enterprise, and the more they are allowed to see customers, the better their business sensibilities.
These are some of the behaviors that I have found in the good companies I have studied. My ultimate test of the quality of a company is whether I would like to work there. The good news: I see many high growth companies where I would work. They are smart companies, in multiple industries, that are operating quite brilliantly.
Author Bio
Jim Champy is one of the leading thinkers in business. His first book, Reengineering the Corporation: A Manifesto for Business Revolution, helped transform the corporate world. For more information, please visit www.jimchampy.com.
Check out Outsmart!: How to Do What Your Competitors Can’t!

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August 15, 2008

Divide or Conquer video

Filed under: Human Resources/Organizational Development — Jon8cr @ 11:02 am
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Diana McLain Smith has a nice new video overview of her book, Divide or Conquer. The book, which we’ve written about in other posts, talks about how personality differences, conflicting interests, and other working relationship scenarios, can drastically affect the success or failure of an organization. As she states, in successful relationships, the focus on those relationships is as strong as the focus on the company mission.
Much more insight into her perspective and approach can be seen in the video below:

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July 31, 2008

5 ways to deal with negativity and foster positivity at work

Filed under: Book Reviews,Human Resources/Organizational Development,Personal Development,Safety, Health, and Wellness — 800-CEO-READ @ 8:00 am
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Thanks to Jon Gordon, author of The No Complaining Rule and The Energy Bus, for contributing this article on positivity.
Positive Ways to Deal with Negativity
With the mortgage meltdown, floods in the Midwest, $4 a gallon for gas, food prices, the economy, famine, war in Iraq, etc., many would agree that there is a lot of negativity in the world and certainly a lot to complain about. And yet, while traveling the country this past month, ironically for the No Complaining Rule Tour, I met a number of people who inspired me with the positive ways they were dealing with the negativity in their life. In spite of their circumstances they chose to view their situation with a positive perspective… which so often makes all the difference. Since we all could benefit from their example, here are 5 positive ways to deal with negativity.

  1. Find the Gift – Richard Bach said every problem has a gift for you in its hands. One woman came up to me and said that because of the cost of gas her family is driving less and as a result they are spending more time at home and having dinner together more often. She said this “negative” situation has been very “positive” for her family. Another person said he is taking the bus to work instead of driving and as a result he has met a lot of interesting people.
  2. Look at the Bright Side – One gentlemen joked that because of the cost of gas he now has a great excuse to not drive and see his negative relatives.
  3. Zoom Focus – It doesn’t matter what the pundits say on television. It doesn’t matter what Joe and Sally in your office are doing. It doesn’t matter who is playing office politics. All that matters is what you do every day to grow yourself and your business. Focus on being positive and taking positive action every day. Be like the real estate agent who told me that he doesn’t focus on what the news and newspapers say. He focuses on what he can do every day to be successful. He focuses on marketing his business, taking care of his clients, and building loyal relationships. What things do you need to Zoom Focus on?
  4. Focus on the Opportunity Not the Challenge – Behind every innovation and solution is a story about someone who said there has to be a better way. I bet Henry Ford was walking behind a horse when he had the idea for his automobile. History shows us that a lot of people and a lot of companies make a lot of money during recessions. The key is to find the opportunity. Where is the market heading? What do people want and need? What will they want in the future? Now is a great time to build a positive team with great talent. Now is the time to gain market share while so many give up. Now is a great time to determine who is on your bus and who is off your bus. Now is the time to be indispensable to your company and demonstrate how valuable you are.
  5. Be a Positive Influence on Others – I received an email from Ruthanne in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. She wrote:

    “As you are probably aware, we were recently hit with a 500 year flood. My neighborhood was impacted the worst and most of our homes, mine included, are a total loss. People tell me I have been the most positive person they know who was directly impacted by the flood. I don’t have a lot of time today (first day back at work in 2 wks) to tell you all the positive things that have been going on in our city and in my life, but I will be writing an article when this is all over with. I did want to say though that I have not complained throughout all the devastating catastrophe because of the knowledge I learned both from your seminar, books and newsletters.”

    Ruthanne could have chosen to wallow in self pity and negativity but instead she chose to deal with her negative situation by being a positive influence on others. Think about how many people she is positively impacting in her community. Now think about the positive influence you can have on people at work, in your community and at home.

Every day simply ask yourself “How can I be a positive influence where I am, right now?”
Stay Positive!
-Jon
Author Bio
Jon Gordon is a speaker, consultant, and author of the international bestseller The Energy Bus: 10 Rules to Fuel Your Lift, Work, and Team with Positive Energy, which has inspired readers the world over. He and his books have been featured on CNN and on NBC’s Today show, and in Forbes, Fast Company, O: The Oprah Magazine, the Wall Street Journal, and the New York Times. Clients such as the Jacksonville Jaguars. the PGA Tour, Northwestern Mutual, JPMorgan Chase, and Publix Supermarkets also call all Jon to get their team “on the bus” and moving in the right direction. Jon also impacts thousands of teachers and students each year through his work with schools, universities, and nonprofit organizations. He is a graduate of Cornell University and holds a master’s degree in teaching from Emory University. He lives in northeast Florida with his wife and two high-energy children.
For more information about Jon, please visit www.JonGordon.com or www.NoComplainingRule.com.

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July 9, 2008

The No Complaining Rule

Filed under: Human Resources/Organizational Development,Personal Development — 800-CEO-READ @ 10:54 am
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When I first saw the title “The No Complaining Rule” I had flashbacks to family road trips to “up north” Wisconsin, full of truly Ollie Hopnoodle-esque moments. But the title refers to a new business book about positivity: The No Complaining Rule: Positive Ways to Deal with Negativity at Work by Jon Gordon, who also wrote The Energy Bus.
The No Complaining Rule is constructed like a parable, with anecdotes that build to a point at which the fictional workplace develops “an actionable plan to win the battle against individual and organizational negativity.”

The characters sprinkle in insights and hard facts to support their case for a no complaining rule. For instance, the Cost of Negativity:

  • Negativity costs the U.S. economy between $250 to $300 billion every year in lost productivity, according to the Gallup Organization. And this number is conservative since it doesn’t take into account the ripple effect of complaining and negativity.
  • Ninety percent of doctor visits are stress related, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the #1 cause of office stress is coworkers and their complaining, according to Truejobs.com.
  • A study found that negative employees can scare off every customer they speak with–for good (How Full Is Your Bucket? by Tom Rath)
  • Too many negative interactions compared to positive reactions at work can decrease the productivity of a team, according to Barbara Fredrickson’s research at the University of Michigan.
  • Negativity affects the morale, performance, and productivity of our teams.
  • One negative person can create a miserable office environment for everyone else.
  • Negative emotions are associated with the following:
    • Decreased life span and longevity
    • Increased risk of heart attack
    • Increased risk of stroke
    • Greater stress
    • Less energy
    • More pain
    • Fewer friends
    • Less success

Check it out. You might find the right approach to dealing with negativity in your work life.

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