In their ground-breaking book, First Break All the Rules, authors from The Gallup Organization report
the findings from their extensive research on what strong vibrant workplaces
look like and what the world’s greatest managers do to find, focus, and keep
talented employees. Interestingly, they
found that most managers follow incorrect assumptions about management,
including:
*All
behaviors can be learned
*The “best
in role” all get there the same way
*Weakness-fixing
leads to success
Gallup
says that managers must break these so-called “rules” if they are going to be great. These beliefs are pervasive. Think about how many times you have been
told, or you told someone else something like:
“If you try hard enough, you can do it” or “If you want it badly enough,
you can do it” or “If you dream it, you can achieve it.” Instead of these incorrect assumptions,
Gallup suggests that great managers need to adopt the following assumptions:
*Some
behaviors can be learned
*The “best
in role” get the same outcomes using different behaviors
*Weakness-fixing
prevents failure, while strength-building leads to success. (This does not mean that “weaknesses” can be
ignored)
The Gallup
approach advocates the identification and deployment of each individual’s
natural talents as the way for that person to achieve maximum performance. Instead of obsessing over every weakness that
a person may have, we need to provide them with opportunities to grow, develop,
and perform in the arenas where they have natural talent.
With this
in mind, imagine how things might have turned out for the great golfer Tiger
Woods, if someone had obsessed over some of his possible weaknesses. Imagine his junior high school physical
education teacher fretting over his grade book and calling young Tiger into his
office: “Tiger, I have been looking over
your grades on our different activities here in phys ed class. And son, let me tell you, you have that golfing
thing down perfectly. However, I am a
little concerned about your swimming.
You certainly swim well enough not to drown, but I would like to see
some improvement there. So, let’s take
you off the golf course three days per week and give you extra swimming
lessons. I am sure that in time you will
be as good a swimmer as you are a golfer.”
Fictional
story? Yes. For all I know, Tiger Woods was and is a
fabulous swimmer. But is this not what
we do to people in our performance reviews and development plans? Does the Tiger in my example need to learn
how to swim better? Maybe -- if he wants
to. But his golf talent is going to soar
if his teacher lets him out on the golf course as much as he wants to go.
So, while
we cannot ignore weaknesses and we need to make sure they do not let us fail --
or drown, for example -- it is focusing on our natural talents that leads to
high performance. And when individuals
perform in a superior fashion, so do their organizations.
Next blog
we’ll look at what four things Gallup research tells us that Great Managers do.
For more
ideas on how you can lead breakthroughs in your organization, follow this blog
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