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You are here: Home / Archives for 3 - Leadership / e Motivation

Maintaining Motivation While Remote

April 8, 2020 by Matt Perman

Any chance you’ve been struggling with motivation after going remote? You might be helped by the interview I did on motivation with King’s 101 for students of The King’s College. The principles are relevant for everyone.

And they are even relevant for any mode of work — both now when many are working remotely, and once we are through this and people who don’t usually work remotely are able to go back to their workplaces.

 

Filed Under: e Motivation

Five Questions on Motivation with Daniel Pink

November 11, 2019 by Matt Perman

Daniel Pink is one of the leading business thinkers of our era. One of his best books is Drive: The Surprising Truth About What Motivates Us. In it, he presents the case for managing people from intrinsic motivation rather than chiefly extrinsic motivation. It is a life-changing paradigm.

I remember learning about the difference between intrinsic motivation and extrinsic motivation way back in middle school, so I still find it astonishing that so many companies do not manage this way. As Pink points out, much business practice has not caught up with what science has known for decades. But there are many businesses that do understand these things, and as a result they are thriving.

In a recent interview, Pink talks more about what factors that lead to motivation in our work. Here is a short description:

In the years since publishing Drive, a handful of forward-thinking companies have built cultures that hinge on intrinsic motivation. And, spoiler alert, those companies tend to thrive. But why is this approach not yet the norm? Sarah Goff-Dupont of Atlassian sat down with Mr. Pink to learn more about the role intrinsic motivation plays in our own success and in the future of work.

Read the whole thing.

Filed Under: e Motivation

The Drive Video: If You Want Engagement, Self-Direction is Better

September 26, 2014 by Matt Perman

This is a very helpful video animation summary of Daniel Pink’s superb book Drive: The Surprising Truth About What Motivates Us.

Many have probably seen this, but this is worth bringing out again. The concepts of intrinsic motivation that Pink outlines need to permeate the way every manager thinks.

Filed Under: e Motivation

The Drive Workshop

November 6, 2013 by Matt Perman

Dan Pink, bestselling author of Drive: The Surprising Truth About What Motivates Us and several other business books, has recently launched: The Drive Workshop: Using Autonomy, Mastery, and Purpose to Transform Your Business and Yourself.

It’s a training workshop for organizations on how to move more effectively from the old methods of motivation (carrots and sticks), which typically create mere compliance, to more human forms of motivation that create engagement and develop employees — and organizations — more effectively.

It’s worth checking out.

Filed Under: e Motivation

How to Encourage your Ministry Team in the Bleak Midwinter

January 13, 2012 by Matt Perman

This is a guest post by Dr. Paul White, business consultant, psychologist, and coauthor of The 5 Languages of Appreciation in the Workplace with Dr. Gary Chapman

Now that we are fully into the New Year and venturing into the dreary days of January and February filled with cold weather and few days off from work, ministry leaders need to take a hard look at how we are going to support and encourage our team members.  This is the time of year (especially for those who like sunlight) for people to just drag themselves through the day.

As a psychologist who trains leaders and colleagues how to effectively communicate appreciation in the workplace, let me offer some suggestions.

Understand the nature of discouragement and burnout

Discouragement and burnout, over the long haul, come from a combination of weariness and lack of hope.  We have just emerged from the holiday season with many extra activities, and now we face the daily grind of doing our normal work.  A lot of people are emotionally tired.  Add to this a potential lack of vision (“Remind me again, why are we doing this?”) and a lack of hope (“My contribution really isn’t going to make a difference…”) and you have the perfect recipe for team members either going through the motions or giving up completely.

Give your team what they need:  vision, hope, appreciation and encouragement

This is where leaders can make a tremendous difference with their team members – by providing vision (where you are going and how doing x, y, and z fits into the overall plan), communicating hope (helping them see how what they are doing does matter), and communicating appreciation and encouragement along the way.

Communicate your appreciation in ways that work

One challenge in effectively encouraging your team members is that not everyone’s “language of appreciation” is the same.  Therefore, some attempts at appreciation may not really impact them.  Most people think of appreciation as being verbal—saying “thanks” or writing a note —but in reality, studies show at least 40% of people really don’t  value words in terms of feeling affirmed and appreciated.  For another 25%, a gift card to the local Christian bookstore will not convey the intended appreciation.  Some people feel appreciated when you spend personal time with them; others just want help getting tasks done.

In our research for appreciation in work and ministry contexts, Dr. Gary Chapman and I have found that for people to truly feel valued, four conditions need to be present.  Appreciation needs to be communicated:

a)  individually (rather than a blanket thank-you to all involved),

b) in the language that the individual values (see our online inventory to identify each person’s preferred appreciation language),

c) regularly (not just at their annual review or at the end of a big project); and

d) in a manner that the individual perceives as being genuine (versus forced or contrived).

To be honest, it takes some time and effort to communicate appreciation effectively. But it is worth it when you “hit the mark” with a team member, and you watch as they start to glow (or become teary-eyed) and their commitment to you and the ministry deepens dramatically. And you will be able to help them endure the long, dark days of winter – they may even smile occasionally and report enjoying their work!

 

* * * * *

Author Bio: Dr. Paul White is a business consultant and psychologist, and is the coauthor of The 5 Languages of Appreciation in the Workplace with Dr. Gary Chapman. For more information, go to www.appreciationatwork.com .

About the Book: The 5 Languages of Appreciation in the Workplace applies the “love language” concept of New York Times bestseller, The 5 Love Languages, to the workplace. This book helps supervisors and managers effectively communicate appreciation and encouragement to their employees, resulting in higher levels of job satisfaction, healthier relationships between managers and employees, and decreased cases of burnout. Ideal for both the profit and non-profit sectors, the principles presented in this book have a proven history of success in businesses, schools, medical offices, churches, and industry. Each book contains an access code for the reader to take a comprehensive online MBA Inventory (Motivating By Appreciation) – a $20 value.

 

Filed Under: b Church & Ministry, e Motivation

What View of Motivation Do You Have?

November 15, 2011 by Matt Perman

This is an interesting, quick survey on motivation at Dan Pink’s website.

Dan Pink is the author of the excellent book Drive: The Surprising Truth About What Motivates Us. This survey reveals if you primarily hold to a Type I or Type X view of human motivation:

Type I behavior: A way of thinking and an approach to life built around intrinsic, rather than extrinsic, motivators. It is powered by our innate need to direct our own lives, to learn and create new things, and to do better by ourselves and our world.

Type X behavior: Behavior that is fueled more by extrinsic desires than intrinsic ones and that concerns itself less with the inherent satisfaction of an activity and more with the external rewards to which that activity leads.

One interesting observation: When most people think of productivity, they almost immediately tend to think in terms of Type X. Ironically, Type X is horribly detrimental to productivity in most cases. We are most productive (and, more important, enjoy what we are doing most) when we operate according to Type I.

Filed Under: e Motivation

If You Don’t Like Your Work, Here’s What the Problem Might Be

September 24, 2010 by Matt Perman

Daniel Pink makes the case very well in his book Drive: The Surprising Truth About What Motivates Us that there are three components to motivation: autonomy, mastery, and purpose.

If you find your work unfulfilling or draining, it may be because it is lacking one of those components.

Autonomy
If you don’t have control over how you go about your work, or input in setting your overall objectives, you might be lacking the freedom necessary to feel ownership (and interest) in your work. People don’t like to be (or need to be) controlled. In general, when freedom diminishes, motivation contracts as well. When freedom increases (supported by helpful structure and systems), motivation tends to increase.

Mastery
If your work is either too challenging or not challenging enough, it is likely to become miserable for you. We like to be good at things. This isn’t some bonus luxury; it’s how we are designed. If you aren’t good at what you are doing — or if it is too easy to be a challenge — you will likely be unfulfilled.

If you feel like you don’t have mastery in your work, don’t automatically conclude that you are somehow innately incapable of achieving competence. Often, the issue is simply a lack of training or feedback. It’s unfortunate that many organizations are not proactive in offering helpful training (especially training targeted to the real needs of today’s knowledge worker, who often operates in highly ambiguous environments with very few structured and routine tasks). So you may have to get creative here in figuring this out. But the point is: don’t automatically blame yourself. More than likely, you can improve and accomplish mastery.

They key is to have work that hits you in the sweet spot — not too easy, not too hard. It should be a challenge for sure, but not so challenging that you are lost and spinning your wheels. The challenge should in fact be continually increasing, but only as you organically gain expertise and mastery so that you are up for the increased challenge.

Purpose
Last of all, you might not see or value the purpose in your work. Lots could be said here. Ultimately, you’ll want to find work where the purpose jibes with what you feel you were made for. But even if you are not in such a role, the doctrine of vocation can be helpful here.

The doctrine of vocation means that everything we do (that is not illegal or immoral!) is valuable to God and accepted by him if done in faith. The arena for serving God is not the fortressed life of the monk, but the everyday real world of work, home, and society. If we do our work as unto the Lord (Ephesians 6:7) it is valuable and accepted by him. This infuses even the most mundane, everyday activities with meaning.

Filed Under: e Motivation, Job Design

Notes on Motivation

May 26, 2010 by Matt Perman

Stephen Covey writes: “Whether they realize it or not, business leaders are practicing psychologists in the sense that their attempts to motivate people are based on their assumptions of human nature.”[1]

Some of the prior dominant approaches to management were based on faulty views of human nature. Thus, they may have resulted in great efficiency, but at the expense of people.[2] Ultimately, of course, this also hindered productivity because when people are less engaged, they are less effective. But worse, these approaches were against the purpose of management, which is not simply to get things done through others, but to develop people in the accomplishment of tasks.

Thus, Covey suggests, following Lee Iacocca, that “maybe we should study motivation before we set up structure.”[3]

This document brings together some of my notes on motivation. It is not intended as a full article, but just a collection of notes. We will first discuss motivation, and then some suggested practices for motivating on the basis of strengths.

On Motivation

Foundational Realities

What Motivation Is

Motivation is first of all not getting people to do what you want with minimum trouble. That is authority. Our aim is motivation, not control.

It is getting people to act willingly. Because it is in their interest and the organization’s interest.

Things to Recognize

The only motivation that really works is self-motivation. Put people in the position where they will be self-motivated, and remove things that hinder them. Collins stuff here also.

Must know how different people respond. Different people are motivated by different things. Factors of intrinsic motivation: autonomy, mastery, purpose.

If you label someone a loser, they will act like one. If you hold people to high expectations, they will achieve them. “When teachers held high expectations of their students, that alone was enough to cause an increase of 25 points in the students’ IQ scores.”

Must allow for and take advantage of the more emotional side of human nature.

Positive reinforcement from Peters.

Important Theories on Motivation

Maslow

Hierarchy of needs. They are sequential: higher level need doesn’t motivate until levels beneath it satisfied. Satisfied needs don’t motivate. Self-actualization never satisfied, and revised hierarchy later in life to have sixth level: self-transcendence.

  • Level 1: Physiological. Food, water, air, sex etc.
  • Level 2: Safety. Security of body, employment, resources, morality, family, health, property.
  • Level 3: Love/belonging. Friendship, family, sexual intimacy.
  • Level 4: Esteem. Self-esteem, confidence, achievement, respect of others, respect by others.
  • Level 5: Self actualization: Performing at your peak potential. Morality, creativity, spontaneity, problem solving.

Herzberg

Motivators and satisfiers. Satisfiers (hygiene factors) prevent dissatisfaction but do not motivate. Motivators are intrinsic to the work itself: challenge, enjoyment, etc.

McGregor

Theory X and Theory Y. People naturally want to do good work and grow in responsibility.

That Management Seminar

Talked about people as primarily motivated by one of three things: relationships, order, and opportunity to rise.

Christian Hedonism

The ultimate aim everyone has is to maximize their happiness.

Daniel Pink

The three components: Autonomy, mastery, purpose. Bake into job design and culture. Autonomy, primarily from job design and principle of trusting people. Mastery, need to train and direct people towards their strengths. Purpose, from culture—our beliefs, mission, and values. The rest of this document is on the second, mastery, by focusing on strengths.

Buckingham

Motivate by focusing on strengths. As Buckingham points out: Find out what motivates your employees, and try to create an environment that will help them become self-motivated. One of the primary responsibilities of manager is to change the feelings of team members from “have to” to “want to.”

Other Points

Six Reasons Focusing on Weaknesses Doesn’t Motivate

The problems with focusing on weakness, and thinking that anyone can become anything they want if they just fix their areas of non-talent:

  1. It eliminates individuality. If we all can be anything we want to be, then we all have the same potential. And if we all have the same potential, we lose our individuality. “We are not uniquely talented, expressing ourselves through unique goals, unique capabilities, and unique accomplishments. We are all the same. We have no distinct identity, no distinct destiny. We are all blank sheets of canvas, ready, waiting, and willing, but featureless.”
  2. It can’t work. Since our talents are given and we cannot create new ones (we can create new strengths by building on talent, but not new talents—recurring patterns of thought, feeling, and behavior), focusing on turning our nontalents into talents is doomed to failure and will result in a “crushingly frustrating life.” Persistence directed primarily to your nontalents is self-destructive.
  3. The person ends up being characterized by those few areas where he struggles. The person ends up being and feeling defined by those things they don’t do well rather than things they can do well.
  4. This, in turn, harms the relationship. When we know someone else well and try to change them, we imply that we wish they weren’t the way they were. This feels awful and makes the relationship just as demotivating as the focus on our nontalents is weakening. This often proves the undoing of the relationship. Who likes being around people that are always pointing out what they do wrong? “Most often, a bad relationship is one where your partner came to know you very well indeed…and wished you weren’t that way.”
  5. It is demotivating. Working on your nontalents is demotivating because nontalents deplete rather than energize. Talents, on the other hand, are energizing and self-reinforcing. This creates an upward virtuous cycle, whereas focusing on your weaknesses creates a downward vicious cycle, which can in turn spread to other areas by undermining your self-efficacy.
  6. It implies that the person is to blame. Failing to know the difference between talents, knowledge, and skills, and that while skills and knowledge can be acquired, talents cannot, the manager relentlessly points out each employee’s nontalents in the belief that he can fix them and become well-rounded. “You just need to work at it.” The implicit message is that the employee can control the outcome if they just work hard. The responsibility is theirs. And therefore when this doesn’t work, when their nontalents fail to turn in to talents, the finger of blame is pointing at them. “By telling you that you can transform nontalents into talents, these less effective managers are not only setting you up to fail, they are intrinsically blaming you for your inevitable failure. This is perverse.”

Individualize

Individualizing things. Thus, you must individualize autonomy.

Motivate Through Values

Tap the inherent worth of the task and mission of the organization to build intrinsic motivation.

“So much of excellence in performance has to do with people’s being motivated by compelling, simple—even beautiful—values.”[4]

Why contingent rewards reduce motivation

Contingent rewards can destroy intrinsic motivation because they reduce autonomy, which is one of the three core components of motivation.[5] (Note, however, that unexpected, non-contingent rewards do not.)

For the short term, you might increase performance through if-then extrinsic motivators. But in the long-term, you kill it. “Try to encourage a kid to learn  math by paying her for each workbook page she completes—and she’ll almost certainly become more diligent in the short term and lose interest in math in the long term.”[6]

Why traditional management undermines motivation

This has implications not only for rewards, but also our management theory—it is additional evidence that a command-and-control approach to management is bad, for it also reduces autonomy and thus motivation. Consequently, it will tend to result in lower performance in most cases.

It is Not that There is No Place for Extrinsic Rewards

Note that Pink is not arguing for the “basic evil of extrinsic incentives.” He states clearly “that’s just not empirically true.” His point is that “mixing rewards with inherently interesting, creative, or noble tasks—deploying them without understanding the peculiar science of motivation—is a very dangerous game. When used in these situations, ‘if-then’ rewards usually do more harm than good. By neglecting the ingredients of genuine motivation—autonomy, master, and purpose—they limit what each of us can achieve.”[7]

Baseline rewards must be in place:

Of course the starting point for any discussion of motivation in the workplace is a simple fact of life: People have to earn a living. Salary, contract payments, some benefits, a few perks are what I call “baseline rewards.” If someone’s baseline rewards aren’t adequate or equitable, her focus will be on the unfairness of her situation and the anxiety of her circumstance. You’ll get neither the predictability of extrinsic motivation nor the weirdness of intrinsic motivation. You’ll get very little motivation at all.

But once we’re past that threshold, carrots and sticks can achieve precisely the opposite effect of their intended aims. Mechanisms designed to increase motivation can dampen it. Tactics aimed at boosting creativity can reduce it. Programs to promote good deeds can make them disappear. Meanwhile, instead of restraining negative behavior, rewards and punishments can often set it loose—and give rise to cheating, addiction, and dangerously myopic thinking.[8]

Natural Rewards are Not Necessarily Extrinsic Rewards

Lewis’ point on natural connections. Christian hedonism is about motivation. The reward is to be the activity itself and the natural completions of it—deepened learning as the reward of study, satisfied customers as the reward of excellent customer service, or Lewis’ example of marriage as the reward for love.

We should not confuse the natural completions of an activity with extrinsic motivators.

Covey’s four levels

See document on the history of management.

Scientific Management and Motivation

Different management theories assume different theories of motivation. For example, scientific management ran on the assumption that humans are primarily economically motivated. But this of necessity fails to treat us as whole people, because biological and economic urges do not fully account for who we are. As a result, the principles and practice of scientific management are contrary to what it means to be a fully functioning, mature adult. Mature adults operate according to autonomy, for example—that’s part of what it means to be mature. But scientific management operated on a principle of control, which was primarily wielded through extrinsic motivation—rewarding the behavior the managers wanted, and punishing that which they didn’t.

The key point is that people are more than economic beings. They also seek purpose. If people were merely economic beings who dislike work and do so only to put food on the table, then you would need to coax them to work with extrinsic motivation and closely monitor them to make sure it got done. But people aren’t that way. They also seek purpose. We are “intrinsically motivated profit maximizers, not only extrinsically motivated profit maximizers.” And we need to recognize that in the way we manage and structure work. When work is creative and engaging and aligned with a person’s strengths, they don’t need to be directed; they are self-directed. You don’t need to figure out how to motivate people; you just need to ensure that the conditions exist where people are able to do what they are naturally motivated to do, and remove the obstacles that would interfere with this.

Why get paid at all?

Because the economic dimension and need is real. It must be met. It’s just that we are more than that.  

Aren’t Some People Motivated Extrinsically?

Some people are motivated by money and extrinsic factors. This reflects that people are different. But, Pink argues, this facet of people can change—you can move from being primarily extrinsically motivated to being primarily intrinsically motivated. And, being intrinsically motivated is most in line with what it means to be human.

Success Motivates

Believing that you are succeeding is a large cause of continuing success. Peters notes: “The old adage is ‘nothing success like success.’ It turns out to have a sound scientific basis. Researchers studying motivation find that the prime factor is simply the self-perception among motivated subjects that they are in fact doing well.” (58). And he quotes Warren Bennis, who mentions that in one study of teachers, “it turned out that when they held high expectations of their students, that alone was enough to cause an increase of 25% in the students’ IQ scores.” (59).

The Key is Self-Motivation

But the secret is to get people that are already motivated, that are self motivated, to do the things the organization wants. Then make sure that their goals and the organization’s overlap. Then ultimately motivate from principles, values, and meaning.

Remember Maslow here as well. The hierarchy. Self actualization and then self transcendence are the ultimate motivators. Create environments that tap into those levels, then give people the conditions for managing themselves. The manager then becomes a source of help and a coach.

Creating a Culture Where Self-Motivation Can Flourish

Plus Collins four points on creating a culture where self-motivation can flourish, from GTG. Summarized in Drive, 198.

Collins: “Expending energy trying to motivate people is largely a waste of time. If you have the right people on the bus, they will be self-motivated. The real question becomes: How do you manage in such a way as not to de-motivate people?” He gives four practices:

  1. Lead with questions, not answers.
  2. Engage in dialogue and debate, not coercion.
  3. Conduct autopsies, without blame.
  4. Build ‘red flag’ mechanisms. Make it easy for employees and customers to speak up when there is a problem.

Suggested Practices

Casting People

Excellent performance comes when the person’s talents are matched with the role. Hence, “if you want to turn talent into performance, you have to position each person so that you are paying her to do what she is naturally wired to do. You have to cast her in the right role.” (Buckingham, 148).

Excellent managers are deliberate in discovering the strengths of their people. This comes in part through the strengths-based performance planning approach. But they also talk with each individual, “asking about strengths, weaknesses, goals, and dreams.” And they notice things, “taking note of the choices each makes, the way they all interact, who supports who, and why.”

In doing this, it often becomes apparent that some individuals are miscast—they have valuable talents but are not in a position to use them. “By repositioning each in a redesigned role, great manager are able to focus on each person’s strengths and turn talent into performance.”

Managing by Exception

Since everyone is different, it also follows that you need to treat everyone differently. Fairness does not mean treating everyone the same. It means treating everyone in accord with their own unique individuality. Treating everyone the same runs over our uniqueness, and thus fails to honor each person as an individual. That is one of the basic fallacies of the over-standardized, overly detached approach to HR and management that can be so common.

This means that a manager has to learn about each employee’s uniqueness. Know how your people are different, and then treat them as they would like to be treated. The Golden Rule—“do unto others as you would have them do unto you”—doesn’t mean that you assume everyone is like you. Rather, the way that we want people to treat us is to first understand us, and then treat us according to who we are. That is, likewise, how we ought to treat others and how managers ought to treat employees—understand them, and treat them according to their individuality.

Spend the Most Time with the Best People

By default, we tend to spend most of our time with the least productive and less of our time with the most productive. This seems safe and logical—the less productive need help, right? And the most productive are able to handle it on their own, right?

But this is actually contrary to the purpose of management. It assumes that the purpose of management is “to control or to instruct.” If that is at the core of management, then this does make sense—the least productive need more control and instruction.

But, as we’ve seen, the core of the management role is to turn talent into performance. This doesn’t happen primarily by controlling or instructing. It happens by positioning the person in the role such that they can call on their strengths most of the time, crafting a unique set of expectations that aligns with those strengths, and helping each employee understand his or her own unique style so that they can understand better why it works for them and how they can perfect it. And it happens by running interference for each employee so that their talents aren’t covered over by red tap and bureaucracy.

So when a manager spends time with his or her people, he is not primarily coaching and controlling, but rather “setting unique expectations, highlighting and perfecting individual styles, and running interference.” As a result, most time needs to be focused on the employees whose talent is showing the most potential, because talent is the multiplier. “The more energy and attention you invest in it, the greater the yield” (154).

Not Focusing on Your Best Can be Destructive

In fact, by paying the most attention to those who are struggling, you can actually end up altering the behavior of your stars. This is because things that receive less attention tend to die out, and things that receive more attention tend to increase. Thus, your stars may end up “doing less of what made them stars in the first place and more of other kinds of behaviors that might net some kind of reaction from you, good or bad.”

In other words, “no news is never good news. No news kills the very behaviors you want to multiply.” “In practical terms, then, great managers invest in their best because it is extremely productive to do so and actively destructive to do otherwise.”

Investing in Your Best is the Fairest Thing to Do

Buckingham notes:

Each individual might value different kinds of attention, but, to a person, we all hate to be ignored. If love is no the opposite of hate, then surely indifference is the opposite of both. If you spend the most time with your worst performers, then the message you are sending to your employees is that “the better your performance becomes, the less time and attention you will receive from me, your manager.” From any angle, this is an odd message.

Investing in Your Best is the Best Way to Learn

The way to learn about what makes for excellent performance in a role is to watch those who are excellent in that role.

Our default thinking is sometimes that we can learn just as much by looking at those who are underperforming, identify what they are doing that hinders them, and then conclude that excellence means doing the opposite. But that is actually not the case.

Excellence is often not the opposite of bad. It turns out that those who are excellent in a role often share many traits with those who achieve poor performance in a role. The difference is often that those who are excellent in a role do something else that neutralizes those things.

For example, Gallup discovered that poor sales people suffered from call reluctance. So one might think that excellent sales people do not. And that would make a lot of sense. But it turns out that they do. The difference is that the excellent sales people also had the talent of confrontation, which enabled them to overcome their reluctance.

You cannot learn about the distinguishing features of excellence in a role, therefore, by simply studying poor performance and inverting it. Good is not the opposite of bad. The way to learn about excellence is to study excellence.

Investing in Your Best is the Only Way to Reach Excellence

It can be easy to fixate on what is “average” and gauge our expectations by it. The temptation is to compare each employee’s performance to what is average, and then help strugglers to get closer to average and leaving those who are above average to their own devices.

But this will be inherently limiting. Average should not be the bar against we measure performance. Excellence should be. Average is often far, far below what is possible. If we make it the measure, we often sell people short.

In fact, the greatest room for growth is usually in the employees who are already performing above average. And this is another reason why a manager should spend the most time with his best people. “If a manager is preoccupied by the burden of transforming strugglers into survivors by helping them squeak above ‘average,’ he will have little time left for the truly difficult work of guiding the good toward the great.”

Managing Around Weaknesses

Nonperformance will inevitably happen in some roles, and so we need to know how to deal with it. Here is how to handle nonperformance.

Nonperformance is not always the result of a non-talent. There are many factors other than lack of talent in an area where the role needs talent that can lead to nonperformance. These include mechanical causes, personal causes, lack of training, and the manager tripping the wrong trigger. Look to these causes first.

First, there are mechanical causes. This would be when, for example, the employee does not have the right equipment or information to do his job. If an employee is underperforming, first make sure that they have the tools they need.

Second, there are personal causes. They may be struggling with a difficult issue in their personal lives, such as a death in the family or health issues. There isn’t much you can do help solve these, other than being available to listen, but at least you will have an accurate understanding of what is causing the performance problem.

Third, the poor performance may be coming from a lack of training. Remember that strength is the combination of talent, skills, and knowledge. Talent is unchangeable, but skills and knowledge are not. If a person has a talent in an area but insufficient knowledge and skills, helping them get the training that they need can often remedy the situation.

Fourth, poor performance may be coming from the manager tripping the wrong triggers. This stems from the fact that people are motivated differently. So if a manager forgets this, he can easily be tripping the triggers that don’t sync with what actually motivates a person.

So not every performance issue is a talent issue, and the manager’s first responsibility is to investigate external causes such as the above. But if these factors do not seem to be the issue, it may be a talent issue.

Here it is important to distinguish between a nontalent and a weakness. Buckingham writes “A nontalent is a mental wasteland. It is a behavior that always seems to be a struggle. It is a thrill that is never felt. It is an insight recurrently missed.” Most nontalents are harmless. For example, if you have a nontalent for remembering names, but are not in a role that requires you to remember names, the nontalent is not an issue for your performance. All of us have a multitude of nontalents; we are fallen, we are imperfect, and most of all God simply created each of us differently and with different gifts. That is OK, and an eye should not wish it were a hand, and so forth.

A nontalent by itself, then, is not a weakness. “A nontalent becomes a weakness when you find yourself in a role where success depends on your excelling in an area that is a nontalent.” For example, for a server in a restaurant, a nontalent for remembering names is a weakness.

Nontalents by themselves can often be ignored; weaknesses should not be ignored. But what do you do about them? When the weakness is the result of a nontalent, you can’t just fix it—the talent cannot be magically added to the person’s personality. So instead, you have to work around the weakness. There are four main ways.

First, you can devise a support system. Spell check is one of the clearest examples of such a support system. Because of spell check, you don’t have to be great at spelling or proofreading. By using spell check, you can capture most (though not all) of the spelling errors in your document.

Second, you can find a complementary partner. This is the silent secret of some of the most successful, including Bill Gates (who found Paul Allen), Walt Disney (who found his brother, Roy), and Bill Hewlett and David Packard. “Each partnership was effective precisely because where one partner was blunt, the other was sharp. The partnerships were well-rounded, not the individuals.”

The partnering does not have to be formal. For example, if one person in a department is really energized with running reports, and another is not, it makes sense to shift that responsibility from the person that is depleted by it to the person that is energized by it.

“Since few people are a perfect fit for their role, the great manager will always be looking for ways to match up one person’s valleys with another person’s peaks” (171).

Third, you can tweak the role to make it fit the employee’s strengths more effectively. Roles are not rigid and inflexible things. Often, companies value standardized roles. The problem here is that this can easily run over each person’s individuality. It is often easier to change the role than the person. Obviously most roles cannot be changed in simply any way, so there is a limit to how much a role should be changed. But within those parameters, managers and employees should actively seek to tweak roles to call upon the strengths of people in them.

Tying it All Together In a Management Approach

Covey:

To motivate people to peak performance, we first must find the areas where organizational needs and goals overlap individual needs, goals, and capabilities. We can then set up win-win agreements. Once these are established, people could govern or supervise themselves in terms of that agreement. We would then serve as sources of help and establish helpful organizational systems within which self-directing, self-controlling individuals could work toward fulfilling the terms of the agreement. Employees would periodically give an accountability for their responsibilities by evaluating themselves against the criteria specified in the win-win agreement.[9]

Notes

[1] Stephen Covey, Principle-Centered Leadership, p. 190.

[2] See, for example, our discussion of scientific management in the document “Job Design: Every Job Meaningful.”

[3] Principle-Centered Leadership, 191.

[4] In Search of Excellence, 37.

[5] This is based upon analysis of 128 studies; Pink details some of the research behind this in chapter 2.

[6] Pink, 39. Extrinsic rewards can increase performance for algorithmic tasks—“those that depend on following an existing formula to its logical conclusion.” But they decrease performance for tasks that involve creating something new and managing ambiguity, which “demand flexible problem-solving, inventiveness, or conceptual understanding” (46). This is because of how rewards tend to narrow one’s focus. “Rewarded subjects often have a harder time seeing the periphery and crafting original solutions.”

[7] Pink, 49.

[8] Pink, 35.

[9] Principle-Centered Leadership, pp. 191-192.

Filed Under: e Motivation, Job Design

The Seven Deadly Flaws of Carrots and Sticks

April 12, 2010 by Matt Perman

Daniel Pink’s book Drive: The Surprising Truth About What Motivates Us is fantastic and I will be blogging on it if I get the chance. One of his points is that extrinsic motivators often back-fire and decrease commitment to a task. We shouldn’t dismiss extrinsic motivation altogether, but it needs to be very secondary and used right. The primary way to motivate is create the conditions that foster intrinsic motivation–that tap the inherent worth of the task. Which usually means simply making sure not to get in the way of how people are naturally motivated.

Extrinsic motivation is most relevant when a task is routine. But when it comes to creative tasks and the typical nonroutine tasks of the knowledge worker, extrinsic motivation can decrease not only commitment to the task, but also the original and creative thought that is necessary to finding your way.

Here are the seven deadly flaws of the “carrot and stick” approach (extrinsic motivation) that he discusses in chapter 2:

  1. They can extinguish intrinsic motivation
  2. They can diminish performance
  3. They can crush creativity
  4. They can crowd out good behavior
  5. They can encourage cheating, shortcuts, and unethical behavior
  6. They can become addictive
  7. They can foster short-term thinking

Again, his point is not that extrinsic motivation is always bad, but that it can be.

Filed Under: e Motivation

HBR On What Really Motivates Workers

January 18, 2010 by Matt Perman

Daniel Pink summarizes an insightful article in the latest HBR on what really motivates workers.

Here is the main idea, which is interesting because it goes beyond simply saying that intrinsic motivation surpasses external motivation:

Amabile tracked the day-to-day activities and motivations of several hundred workers over a few years and found that their greatest motivation isn’t external incentives, but something different: Making progress (or what Drive calls “mastery” — the urge to get better and better at something that matters.)

So a key motivator is making progress. Good insight. Pink gives some more helpful quotes from the article in his post as well.

The article is a part of HBR’s “10 Breakthrough Ideas for 2010,” and I think you can obtain (purchase–sorry) it here.

Filed Under: e Motivation

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