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суббота, 24 февраля 2024 г.

How to Make Yourself More Valuable to Your Boss

 


Excerpted from The New Psychology for Managing People
By Mortimer R. Feinberg et al


  • Be a source of good current information. — Industrial psychologists have noted that the higher a man goes in an organization, the more insulated he may become from what is going on.  Partly this is a matter of choice; he does not want to involve himself in everything. Partly it is an inevitable result of the broad nature of his responsibility, and partly it is because people tend not to tell the top man what is going on. You can be a source of pertinent information to your boss, but make sure it is information, not gossip. And make sure it does not in any way reflect upon the performance of others. Sometimes, just a brief anecdote about something that occurred at a departmental meeting can give your boss a valuable feel for what is happening in an area that has become increasingly remote from him.
  • Cover his area of least interest. — Your boss is not equally skilled at all facets of his responsibility—no man is. Nor is he equally interested in all facets of it. As you get to know him, you can come to a pretty accurate determination of certain areas that, while important, do not intrigue him. To the extent that you can handle these areas for him, he will welcome your help, come to rely more heavily upon your judgment, and recognize the fact that your efforts are increasing the overall effectiveness of the operation.
  • Anticipate. — Routine subordinates wait for the boss to give them instructions or direction, and then react. This wastes time and places a great burden on the boss. As you come to know your boss and the operation, try to develop the ability to anticipate what the boss is going to want and need. At first, make a few “dry runs”; anticipate and then see how well your anticipations work out in practice. Then, when you are able to, anticipate and move. When you conclude that the boss is going to want to move in a certain direction, begin to pull together materials that will assist him in his decisions. Prepare the ground for him. He will recognize it and appreciate it.
  • Exercise Tact. — There may be times when you have every reason to be justified in raising hell with a colleague. You may go ahead and do it, and a fair-minded superior will have to agree that you are right. But agreeing that you are right does not necessarily mean that he appreciates what you are doing. Use your judgment in difficult situations. It may be best to hold back from “rocking the boat” for the simple reason that if you do, you will just be making a boss’s already tough job immeasurably more complicated and difficult.
  • Be Willing to take on the Dirty Jobs. — Status is important to all of us. As a manager moves higher in the organization, he may well feel that he is no longer to involve himself in some of the more unpleasant tasks that were incumbent upon him at a lower level. And he is probably quite right in feeling this way. Nevertheless, “dirty jobs” do come up, and they have to be handled. The manager who is willing to step in and handle them, even when his status does not require it, is a manager who will be particularly valued by his boss.
https://bitly.ws/3e4U2

четверг, 31 августа 2023 г.

Telling Them the Truth – the Keys to Sound Criticism

 


Back in the days when the hairbrush was a favorite tool of discipline, Dad was wont to remark, somewhere on the way to the woodshed, “This is going to hurt me more than it hurts you.” No self-respecting child ever believed that one – as a child. Discipline does hurt. And it may very well hurt the supervisor more than it does the subordinate. But it’s a last-stand measure anyway, often avoidable, if the supervisor were willing to criticize at the appropriate time.

Criticizing is not easy – don’t ever expect it to be. However, it is necessary, more than ever in the current profit squeeze, and it is a responsibility that no supervisor can hope to avoid. Consequently, the better part of wisdom would be to learn to do it with a minimum of pain and a maximum of effectiveness. The price of avoiding or mishandling criticism is a high one.

The Need for Criticism

Few things are more disrupting to the morale of your employees than uncertainty over where they stand. One thing that can be said in favor of the oldfashioned system is that the child on the way back from the woodshed knew just what the score was! You don’t have to go to such lengths to provide your employees with the answer to the question, «Where do I stand?” But many supervisors, in swinging away from tough-fisted discipline, have assumed that criticism too must be outlawed.

Many people have misinterpreted the new emphasis on human relations in industry. They think the atmosphere must always be “friendly” and that disagreement must be avoided at all cost. This is a misconception. The sound human relations theory is based on the idea that you have to respect the uniqueness of each individual. But that’s not the same as saying the employee is always right. Each person, in his own unique way, may often be wrong. And it’s then your duty and responsibility as his supervisor to get the message across in a way that will prevent a repetition of the error in the future.

In theory, supervisors tend to accept the importance of “leveling” with their people. Yet, in practice, they find it easier to praise than to criticize. In fact, many supervisors think they must balance the two. As a result, they so water down their criticism with praise that the employee is left in the dark as to their real feeling.

If supervisors find this the most unpleasant part of their job, it is because they are stymied by one or more of these facts:

  • past attempts have backfired because of their own discomfort in the situation;
  • over-concern with “being liked” makes them postpone criticizing until the situation assumes emergency proportions;
  • lack of a well-thought-out set of standards makes it difficult to assess errors or to communicate correction;
  • confusion over the difference between complaining and criticizing causes a holding back;
  • misunderstanding of the purpose of criticism hides its real character- correction, not punishment.

Out in the dark

All of us feel discomfort in the unknown, and find reassurance in “knowing”. Passengers in a plane that has developed engine trouble have been kept calm and reassured by honest reporting over the loudspeaker system. Even so simple a bulletin as, “We are now passing over the city of Chicago,” gives a sense of security in «knowing where we are.”

This need for bearings is equally important in less dramatic situations, such as the everyday work scene.

Experiments in the laboratory and in industry have dramatically demonstrated the importance of bearings with regard to performance.

In one instance, a control group was being trained to handle pursuit-rotor apparatus.

Ordinarily, a man knows pretty well when his stylus is on the target, because he can watch it going around. But, when an audible click was used to signal the fact that he had successfully remained on target for a while, the operator improved more rapidly.

And when errors were also signaled and specific details were given about the size and direction of the errors, improvement was speeded even more. Obviously, it’s no favor to withhold any information about a poor performance if you want the person to improve.

Psychologists stress that immediate knowledge of results is one of the best aids in learning. In fact, sound teaching methods are based on the principle of reinforcing learning by providing quick knowledge of results.

Ambiguity of Silence

The supervisor can’t afford to ignore the fact that silence itself may be misleading. The optimistic employee is inclined to believe that “no news is good news” and the pessimistic one is left free to believe the worst. The supervisor who thinks that so long as he says nothing he can’t be wrong, more likely can’t be right. His very silence can create ambiguity.

A mechanic expressed this feeling to us this way: “Whenever our foreman gets called down on the carpet to explain a department goof to the plant man- 1ager, he comes back on the floor in bad shape. It’s like waiting for the other shoe to drop, just wondering when he’ll have his say and get it over with.”

Yet, another employee in the same department, less sensitive to his foreman’s tensions, had an entirely different interpretation of things. According to him, “I always feel that if the foreman has any complaint about the job I’m doing, he’ll just say so. If he leaves me alone, I guess I’m doing okay.”

Setting the Boundaries

If you’ve ever been suddenly trapped in the dark, you’ve probably experienced a feeling of panic until you were able to reach out and touch a familiar object that gave you some clue again to your whereabouts. Driving through a dense fog, or making your way through a darkened hall, you feel secure so long as you can see the edge of the road or the wall of the room. These boundary lines establish “where you are.”

A clearly articulated, consistent set of standards by which you judge performance gives the employee the same sort of boundaries. Psychologically, he knows where he’s at if your standards of performance are clear-cut.

Both praise and criticism are means by which the employee can get to know and understand your standards. But, of the two criticism is more often mishandled, and without it, the employee is on his own to decide where to draw the line.

Pushing the Line

Obviously, there’s a strong tendency toward laxity where criticism is absent.

If you don’t indicate that it matters either way, the employee who conscientiously toes the mark may be considered a “sucker” by his co-workers. In fact, once you allow lapses of behavior or errors of work to pass without comment, employees often unconsciously assume that you have closed the door on criticism.

The plant superintendent in a luggage factory had been fuming silently for months about the flagrant disregard for lateness. When he finally took the bu!I by the horns and tried to insist on punctuality, the attitude of the operators was, “What’s wrong with him, all of a sudden?”

Because he had failed to insist on his own standards earlier, his criticism now was perceived as an unreasonable complaint.

Cost of Compromise

In discussing this subject with our Member companies, we were astonished by the number who mentioned the failure of their merit rating programs because supervisors shied away from being objective and critical. The vice-president of one company put it this way:

“One of our most difficult problems in developing our front-line supervision as well as the middle management group is to teach the ability to talk frankly with their people in merit-rating their work.”

Further discussion indicated that the supervisors and executives have no difficulty discussing progress reports “so long as they are favorable and a pay increase for the individual is anticipated. But if the rating is mediocre or poor it means no increase, and explaining the reasons involves criticism. So rather than rate a person below average, they give an unw realistic merit rating. The result is that in some instances, because they’re afraid to go through a session of criticism, they wind up by giving good ratings and then we have to grant raises to people for very bad performance.”

Facing the Facts

The role of the critic is a difficult one. No one wants to be considered tough to work for. Many a supervisor is particularly sensitive to the possibility that no matter what he does he will be considered an S.O.B. by his employees.

But you only increase your burdens if you try to dodge your responsibility. You have to point out the need for improvement, wherever it exists.

When you have a tough job to do, the best course is to face it honestly, without minimizing the difficulties. Concentrating on it can help to make it less painful.

  1. To improve the ease with which you criticize you have to face the facts in four separate areas:
  2. The facts about yourself: your past mistakes, your personality, the kind of situations in which you find criticizing distasteful;
  3. The facts. about your people: how they react, their expectations and their individual attitudes;
  4. The facts about your objectives: the real purpose you hope to accomplish by your criticism;
  5. The facts about your standards: the norms by which you assess the performance of your subordinates.

Facts About Yourself

Only you can really uncover the specific factors that make criticism one of your more difficult responsibilities. These common errors that supervisors are inclined to make may help you examine your own attitude:

  • Blowing up as soon as an error is revealed.
  • Soft-pedaling or sweetening their criticism beyond recognition.
  • Hoarding grievances until they become magnified beyond control.
  • Passing judgment without investigation or “on the run.”
  • Focusing on the person instead of the act.
  • Exaggerating the error – for example, “You always … ” or “You never … “
  • Generalizing, instead of being specific. (“The whole job is botched up” offers no clue to where the mistake was made or how to correct it.)

As this list indicates, it’s just as possible to show your distaste for criticism by overdoing it as by avoiding it. It depends on your own personality.

It’s usually possible to criticize effectively in more ways than one. One supervisor may be soft-spoken. and courteous whenever he criticizes. His people art intensely loyal to him.

Another is hardboiled. He shoots his criticism straight from the shoulder. And his people love it! This is not a paradox. The fact is that effective, well-received criticism is not a matter of toughness or politeness, not a matter of following someone else’s formula.

What really counts is that your behavior must be consistent with your own personality and your people must believe that the purpose of your criticism is constructive.

Facts About Your Employees

If your people know that your criticism is intended to help them, they will accept it in almost any form. From the employee’s point of view, the important thing is the feeling that you are for him and not against him.

It’s perfectly human to dislike criticism. Anyone can say, “I want to know how I’m doing; I know I’m not perfect.” But it takes courage to listen patiently to harsh or unfeeling criticism.

You can’t expect your employees to be overjoyed when they hear your critical comments. But you can reduce the unnecessary discom£ort if you give adequate thought to the way you deliver your criticism.

Obviously, there’s no easy mix-and-match formula by which you can select the exact words for criticizing each type of personality. Some people welcome firm and tough treatment. Others shrivel under this approach.

But here are some general rules of thumb for various types of employees that can be used as a starting point in thinking about how to talk to a specific person:

Older employees. The oldtimer is particularly sensitive to criticism. He is also bound to be the most reluctant to change. Soft-pedaling may be called for here. In any event, respect for his years must be retained.

New employees. The newcomer on the job may be particularly tense and over-anxious to please. Any sign of displeasure from you will be perceived as a hint that he is not filling the bilL Your criticism will have to take this sensitivity into account. You must not overlook his need for learning each phase of his work thoroughly. His training needs must be a primary factor in your consideration.

Women. Women are universally assumed to be more sensitive to criticism than men. Perhaps it would be more accurate to say that they are more sensitive to anything that seems like a personal attack. Be particularly cautious to make it clear that you are discussing a specific detail of the performance and not the employee herself.

Reliable performers.  An occasional lapse on the part of an outstanding employee should be treated in a; manner consistent with his over-all total performance. On the other hand, your best people may be your strongest. They may be the ones who prefer unembellished straight-from-the-shoulder criticism.

Repeaters. It’s tempting to use the blunt approach with people who are constantly getting into trouble. But it pays to stop first to examine the reasons for the repeated lapses.

  • Are you certain you have communicated your expectations clearly?
  • Have you been guilty of overlooking past performance that was below par? Be certain of your facts before you go overboard here. On the other hand, firmness is certainly in order.

Facts About Objectives

You are more likely to ste.y on the track, as a critic, if you remember that the primary purpose of criticism is to let people know where they stand, Too many supervisors unwittingly create the impression that criticism is a method of discipline or punishment. If your tone of voice or manner makes your criticism seem like an attack, its effectiveness will be questionable.

The ultimate purpose of knowing where you stand includes knowing where you’re going. Therefore your criticism should always have a threefold aim:

  1. To communicate your standards;
  2. To point out deviations or errors that make the performance below par;
  3. To indicate the remedy, the correction, the possibilities for improvement.

Above all, criticism should never be considered a method of “keeping people on their toes in general.” Used this negative way, it often produces unconscious reactions that hurt rather than help performance. Used positively, it can produce affirmative results: motivating people to rectify specific faults, to improve performance in concrete ways, or to achieve their own full potential.

Facts About Standards

The heart of criticism is the conveying of a clear set of standards. However, the situation is complicated for the supervisor by the fact that standards are not always constant.

To be sure, in some matters there are absolute standards. On a production job, norms can be set for quality and quantity. But even there, the shifting emphasis of management’s immediate interest fuzzes criteria.

At one time, the most serious fault may be noticeable losses of output; or deadline failures; or cost failures; or loss of goodwill with customers, employees or other departments. The scales of judgment are never permanently fixed in dealing with human beings or with company objectives.

In effect, then, you must keep revising your standards of criticism. But even within the framework of these shifting pressures, you can set a pattern of consistency by taking the background into account Most important, you can be a stabilizing influence by developing a consistent attitude toward criticism. This involves keeping in mind …

The worst offense against good criticism is to form a judgment without regard to the conditions you yourself create. For example-

  • Do your deadlines interfere with quality?
  • How many other, simultaneous assignments must also be completed?
  • Were you forced to make assignments without adequate specifications?
  • Did the assignment have to be completed, even though speci£cations were changed?
  • Do company policies impose restraints on how the job can be done?

Once you have satisfied yourself that criticism is in order, you owe it to your people to communicate your point of view.

The Guides to Sound Criticism

To communicate your criticism effectively, certain standards or guides are needed, You’ve probably seen them set out in one form or another. For instance, Research Institute studies of criticism have listed these:

  1. Keep it impersonal. It’s a situation that you want to correct, not a personality.
  2. Stick to the facts, Exaggerations serve only to divert the individual from the part that’s true, to concentrate on what he thinks he can refute, Then he and the critic end up with widely separated views of the objective situation, to the detriment of both, Similarly, general statements about a person’s work leave him in the dark as to exactly what’s wrong, This lack of specific knowledge blocks any improvement the critic might expect.
  3. Spell out a clear-cut remedy, Since a prima1y goal of good criticism is to help a person do better, you should give as much attention to a specific remedy as to the details of the error, This not only increases the possibility of improvement but also shows that one of your purposes is to benefit the employee.
  4. Choose time and location carefully, The wrong timing or a poor location can obscure the benefits and magnify the inherent distastefulness of criticism, so that more harm than good results.

The most-widely-recognized admonition here is that criticism should be made privately, Yet, there’s an exception: if an employee is in the midst of committing an irreparable and serious error, you may have to correct him promptly despite the presence of others.

Criticism should never be squeezed into odd moments, casual meetings, chance conversations. It should not be interspersed among longer items of business. In that case, the supervisor may be satisfying his own conscience (“Well, I did tell him!”) but is actually fleeing from any real discussion.

If the deficiency is worth talking about at all, then it is worth the time needed to convey just how serious you consider it and what can be done about it Similarly, you must be willing to face up to the responsibility of defending your contentions if the subordinate wants to dispute the accuracy of your facts.

  1. Avoid wisecracks, Two dangers spring from the injection of a humorous note into criticism:
  • Some supervisors who really don’t like to criticize try a light approach that undercuts the seriousness of the situation, It’s not surprising then that employees “laugh it off.”
  • With the best of intentions, a supervisor may use humorous words that fall on the ears of his listener like sarcasm, The burt to an employee who feels he’s the butt of hostile wit closes his mind to any sound aspects of the criticism.  Unless you know from past reactions that humor serves your purpose well, better save it for the noncritical exchanges.
  1. Tie up loose ends, The net result of effective criticism should be a strengthening of your relationship with your people. In the process of discussing their weaknesses objectively, and planning the corrections and improvements, you remove the anxiety of uncertainty for them.

But this positive advantage can be lost if you fail to follow through and tie up any loose ends.

Your follow-up should be planned with these considerations in mind:

  • Your purpose is not to rehash the substance of your criticism.
  • You don’t want to drum your instructions into the employee once more.
  • You want to give the individual a chance to ask any questions he may have about the right way you showed him.
  • You want to let him know that the incident is water under the bridge. (Sometimes you can do this by avoiding mention of it and using some other item as the subject of your contact. But non-reference to the criticism is useful only if the two of you have already had a full discussion.)

Why the Rules Are So Often Ignored

The above guides, though fairly well known, are frequently ignored. Studying possible reasons for this anomaly, our staff has reached this conclusion:

Criticism goes astray because of failure to recognize that all the rules are offshoots of two basic principles:

A. Keep your criticism responsible; and,

B. Keep a proper balance.

Usually, behind the failure to observe either or both of these principles is the critic’s lack of certainty about his own judgment.

Responsibility

It’s responsibility that forces a supervisor to criticize an employee in the first place. That’s part of his job, and to neglect it is to be remiss. But responsibility also requires that the supervisor be accurate and certain in his appraisal.

Particularly, the critic should avoid the natural tendency to dwell on end-results to the exclusion of causes. An adequate investigation would encompass the why and the who, as well as the what, when, where and how.

Responsibility in criticism also demands that you be specific about the details of the error and the remedy. It also provides a reason for following up later on.

Because of uncertainty about his responsibility as a critic, many a supervisor uses evasive, self-defeating tactics. Our researchers in the field have collected numerous case histories which reveal how criticism goes sour:

  1. Silent criticism. There are occasions when silence can be expressive and clear. But more often than not it is misunderstood and interpreted variously as:
  • lack of knowledge;
  • a feeling that the matter is too trivial;
  • a postponement of criticism.

Each of these injure the critic or his victim, or both. A supervisor who doesn’t want to discuss a matter ought to say so and close the incident once and for all.

  1. Second-hand criticism. Here the critic evades responsibility and professes to speak for others without clearly indicating whether he agrees or disagrees with the judgments he is passing along.

This creates doubt as to where he stands. The only thing worse than that is to suggest that he really doesn’t agree with the criticism but that the subordinate should act on it just as if it were valid.

Second-hand communication of criticism serves only to frustrate the recipient. He is in the position of a defendant who is not allowed to confront the witnesses against him.

  1. Chain-reaction criticism. This happens when the target is not really the person responsible for the error, and the critic is trying to get him to exert pressure on a third party.

For example, the head of a shipping department is late in making shipments because of delays on the production line. Instead of confronting the production head, the general manager rebukes the shipping department on the assumption that Production will hear about it, or that Shipping will speak up in turn.

Chain-reaction criticism is bad for several reasons. For one thing, it’s often recognized by the man in the middle as a weakness on the part of the supervisor – the latter is either afraid of his real target or doubtful that he can influence him. Also, it involves more people than rightly belong in the situation, multiplying bad feeling and confusion. Frequently the only effect is to unite the second and third party in mutual resistance to the critic.

Balanced Criticism

The principle that criticism must be balanced has been so distorted that many supervisors have been persuaded to leaven every portion of criticism with an equal amount of praise.

The true meaning of this basically sound principle involves a long-range angle too often overlooked. The test is whether, over a long period, you indicate to your people that you can praise when it’s earned, as well as criticize when that’s necessary.

Balance does not require that the volume of praise and criticism be the same in any given critical situation, or even in a series of them. What it does demand, however, in each case is that you bear in mind these three ideas:

  1. Truth must be respected whenever you use facesaving praise. If you are misrepresenting the facts, your subordinate will know it and will discount both your praise and your criticism.
  2. Keep the fault in perspective. Don’t treat all mistakes alike. Some are important; some are hot. In dealing with an unimportant matter, explain why you’re commenting on it. For example: “‘No great harm was done by it, Joe, but under other circumstances, it might prove very expensive to us.”
  3. Keep an eye on the way the scales balance out over the long run. Whenever you acknowledge good performance, you are laying the foundation for tomorrow: you are making it possible for criticism, even of the toughest kind, to gain a hearing in the future.


https://sliwainsights.com/

вторник, 29 октября 2019 г.

Dr. Robert Cialdini's 6 Principles of Persuasion

Over the past few weeks, we’ve explored the 6 principles of persuasion by Dr. Robert Cialdini, with more than 50 real-life marketing examples.

Here’s a recap of how these 6 principles work, and how to use them in your own marketing strategy:


Reciprocity

In many social situations, we pay back what we received from others.

When you offer something first, people will feel a sense of indebtedness, which will make them more likely to comply with your subsequent requests. We’re deeply wired to be reciprocal.
There are three factors that will make this principle more effective:
  • Offer something first – allow them to feel indebted to you
  • Offer something exclusive – allow them to feel special
  • Personalize the offer – make sure they know it’s from you
_____
commitment&consistency

We tend to stick with whatever we’ve already chosen.

We are bombarded with hundreds of choices to make every single day. For convenience, we simply make a single decision and then stick to it for all subsequent related choices.
The way to earn customer loyalty using this principle is to make them commit to something (a statement/stand/identity). They will then feel an automatic compulsion to stick with it.
Follow these three ways to leverage off this principle:
  • Ask your customers to start from small actions – so they’ll have to stick to it.
  • Encourage public commitments – they’ll be less likely to back out.
  • Reward your customers for investing time and effort in your brand.
_____
socialproof

We tend to have more trust in things that are popular or endorsed by people that we like.

How to work it:
  • Experts – Approval from credible experts in the relevant field
  • Celebrities – Approval or endorsements from celebrities (paid or unpaid)
  • Users – Approval from current/past users (ratings, reviews and testimonials)
  • ‘Wisdom of crowds’ – Approval from large groups of other people
  • Peers – Approval from friends and people you know
_____

liking

We are more likely to comply with requests made by people we like.

That can range from our closest friends to complete strangers that we are attracted to.
This explains why we trust word-of-mouth recommendations from our peers, as well as stuff endorsed by our favorite singers.
Follow these factors to make the Liking principle work:
  • Physical attractiveness – [Make your website] well-designed, function and suit what you’re selling.
  • Similarity – Behave like a friend, not a brand. Show them that you can relate to, and understand them.
  • Compliments – Have a voice; use social media platforms not to broadcast, but hold intimate conversations and form relationships with your customers.
  • Contact and Cooperation – Fight for the same causes as your customers. Nothing builds rapport and closeness like good old-fashioned teamwork.
  • Conditioning and Association – Associate your brands with the same values that you want to communicate and possess.
 _____
authority

We follow people who look like they know what they’re doing.

This hold especially true in fields where we aren’t experts. Most headlines utilize this principle by including phrases like “scientists say”, “experts say”, “research shows”.
You can give off the air of authority if you pay attention of these factors:
  • Titles – Positions of power/experience
  • Clothes – Superficial cues that signal authority
  • Trappings – Accessories/indirect cues that accompany authoritative roles
_____
scarcity

We are always drawn to things that are exclusive and hard to come by.

We assume that things that are difficult to obtain are usually better than those that are easily available. We link availability to quality.
You can learn to trigger your customers’ sense of urgency with these methods:
  • Limited-number – Item is in short supply and won’t be available once it runs out.
  • Limited-time – Item is only available during that time period.
  • One-of-a-kind Specials – Sometimes utilize one or both of the above techniques. Also from one-off events (e.g. collaborations, anniversaries)
  • Utilising Competitions – Our inclination to want things more because other people also want them is often utilized in auctions or bids.

Conclusion: Use these principles to your advantage, but remember to get the fundamentals right.

These principles are powerful because they bypass our rational minds, appealing to our subconscious instincts. They elicit what Dr. Cialdini terms the “click, whirr” automatic response in all of us.
However, do note that while these principles can help bring more awareness for your brand, the biggest factor that ultimately drives customer satisfaction, loyalty and sales is a great product.
All marketing efforts will only work when they’re supporting a product that brings true value to customers.

Full list of links:

понедельник, 7 мая 2018 г.

Power Dynamics – Sitting Strategically at the Conference Table

Alpha or Beta? Which seat you choose in the meeting reveals a lot about your character and your role in the Company.

Have you ever heard of “strategic sitting”? This surprisingly important phenomenon can help you find the best place for yourself in meetings, and the most efficient place for those in the office. 

In the course of your life you will sit often and in many different places: on the couch, at the dinner table, at the movie theater, etc. Have you ever stopped to think about the impact of the seat you choose? Perhaps in these situations it doesn’t matter much, but in the conference room and even on a plane for a business trip, these seemingly small decisions speak volumes about your character, reputation and perceived level of power.

In the conference room

Imagine the following: you walk into the conference room for a meeting, and are greeted by a rectangular table. The managing director sits either at the head of the table or in the middle of the table facing the door. In both cases he can observe who is arriving late and who is leaving early – clearly this is a position of power. On the left and right of the boss are his most trusted colleagues.
One might initially think this arrangement is mere coincidence, or habit-motivated, however American psychologist Sharon Livingston would say this is no coincidence. Livingston has surveyed more than 40,000 bosses and employees in their “conference seat behavior”, and found that there was a clear, though unspoken, order to the seats chosen in meetings. “This is a meaningful picture of the respective power structure”, says Livingston, “that every employee should keep in mind.” Executive and professional coach, Dr. Richard Winters, breaks down the best place to sit for how you’d like to be perceived in a given meeting.

On a business trip

Seating arrangements are not only important in the office, but also during business travel. Where, for example, should you sit as a power-conscious executive on a plane? Naturally as far forward as possible, states Livingston, “near the pilot, the head of the plane”. And it doesn’t stop there, what is the optimal place of power in a taxi? According to Livingston the optimal position is on the right hand side in the rear of the car. At this position, you can fully enjoy more space while still commanding authority.

Seating arrangements in large offices


n recent years more and more offices are moving to an open floor plan, with management moving out of their “corner offices” and having constant interaction with subordinates. Some companies are even taking it a step further – determining who sits next to whom in an effort to get the most from their employees.
A study by Cornerstone OnDemand¹ claims that there are three groups sitting in any particular room: quality workers, who tend to work slower but have better quality, generalists, who are mid-range producers, and productive workers, who tend to produce more at a lower quality. According to the study, the best results are achieved when the generalists are grouped together, since they operate on a similar wavelength, and the quality and productive workers sit together. Though the quality and productive workers think and produce differently, their talents are complementary and they can influence and rely on one another
The result: In a study taking place over a two-year period, and in a company of 2,000 workers, this type of arrangement resulted in a 13% increase in productivity, and a 17% increase in effectiveness.

Sitting – Standing – Sitting – Standing

As important as where you sit is how you sit. Prolonged sitting is not healthy, however neither is prolonged standing. What’s the solution? A mixture of the two. Experts at the Federal Institute for the Occupational Safety and Health recommend a “standing-sitting dynamism”. In other words, a mixture of sitting and standing throughout the workday is the ideal. Convertible standing desks can certainly ensure that you are making the transition from sitting to standing often enough. Maintaining optimal health in the workplace will ensure that you keep your positon of power for many years to come.
¹https://www.cornerstoneondemand.com/rework/rearrange-desks-increase-revenue-study-finds-seating-charts-impact-performance



пятница, 1 декабря 2017 г.

Cognitive Bias and the Entrepreneurial Spirit

Entrepreneurs have chosen to function daily in conditions that would make less risk-tolerant humans queasy. There’s a lot of rewiring that goes into successful entrepreneurship, but our brains are tricksy and spend a lot of time looking for patterns and then feeding us flawed info.
A cognitive bias is usually built out of our minds’ desire to find processing shortcuts and influences from our environment. In everyday situations these kinds of hot key shortcuts can help us. We don’t have to figure out how to drive from scratch every morning, we have little trouble recognizing a dog for a dog, and we can pretty successfully get our pants on and choose dinner.
The problem is that these shortcuts masquerade as rationality, logic, and inspired thinking. They aren’t any of those things. They serve an adaptive purpose, allowing us to respond to threatening situations quickly, but they also open us to errors of judgement.

Like the infographic above shows, there are dozens of specific cognitive biases. There are a few that entrepreneurs fall prey to frequently, though, and it’s a worthwhile exercise to see if you’re using any of them.
Today, let’s talk about the Self-Attribution Bias. Are you great? Of course you’re great! You’ve built a company and even when you’re worried or times are hard you’re steering a course toward success. You are the reason all the good things happen, right? Well, no. You’re up in front, so it’s easy to think that when a deal goes well or a windfall of clients appears you’ve done something very right. That stuff feels like it’s all because of your actions. However, it’s easy to forget market trends, the choices made by your competitors, the support of your team, or blind luck. When things go wrong, though, it’s both comforting and simple to blame forces outside your person.
You’re suffering from the Self-Attribution Bias if you’re responsible for all the good and none of the bad. The truth is much more nuanced than that and it’s your job to go looking for it. Self-confidence is good, self-attribution is blind.


среда, 12 июля 2017 г.

The Anatomy Of Determination

Determination, according to Paul Graham’s essay, is the best predictor of startup success. Determined people, he says, have three qualities: discipline, ambition, and willfulness.


The Anatomy Of Determination In Startups

Successful startups are extremely rare compared to the number of startups ever started. It means that at least one of these three qualities is rare in people. Which one? Let’s look at them one by one.

Discipline

Discipline is simply doing what you’ve planned to do. It requires a plan, any plan, and your execution of it. Discipline is straightforward. So why would it ever be a problem? It is not difficult to make a plan. Most people get that far. But the doing part is more difficult – it requires something less than what we normally do – doing without reconsidering. You need to follow the plan without doubting the plan, at least for some time.
There are many reasons you could doubt your plan. It might be laziness in disguise, or you may genuinely doubt your ability to carry out the plan.
Another reason may be psychological – whatever you plan is is not what your body actually does. This last one is easy to see when you set several alarms to wake you up in the morning, still somehow your arms reach across the room to silence all the alarms so you can keep sleeping. Your body seems to have a mind of its own. Your feet don’t carry you to the gym when your head wants to go there.
The good news is that all of these are fixable.

Doubt

If the problem is doubt, dig deeper and find exactly what kind of doubt this is. Do you doubt that you can get anything at all? If so, doing and finishing a quick-and-dirty prototype of anything takes care of that doubt.
Do you doubt that you can do anything well? Then start by doing something small but exceptionally well.

Lazy

Laziness is unwillingness to work or use energy. Unwillingness is just a lack of desire. So if you have no desire to work and you don’t work, you can’t survive. Most likely this is not your case because you are still alive. You are working on something. Your laziness does not stop you.
Whatever the mental barriers to discipline may be, if you just want to be disciplined, you can simply be, like a robot executing instructions. You can write instructions for yourself and follow them each day. You can be disciplined on autopilot. In fact, it is easier to be disciplined when you turn off the analysis running in the background of your mind. Analyzing triggers doubts, but for discipline we want pure and unhindered execution.

Ambition

Ambition is the grandness of what you want to achieve. Generation Y is famously ambitious. Being ambitious is relatively easy – just imagine the most you could achieve in a lifetime. Becoming the POTUS? Think bigger. It’s easy to become delusional about your potential grandeur. But you never get more than you ask for in life. Ambition is the ask. Asking is easier than doing. So for most us ambition is easier than discipline.

Too Realistic

For people who are disciplined already the opposite may happen. They may be in a habit of assessing themselves all too realistically. The remedy for that is getting to know people who are above and beyond your current ambition level. Once you get to know them personally, you will see that they are no smarter than you. You will start thinking that you can achieve as much, or even more.

Willfulness

Willfulness is the desire to do something regardless of consequences. An unstoppable desire. There are two parts to willfulness: one is an extreme desire, and the other is fearlessness about facing the consequences. If you lack willfulness, you either don’t have an extreme desire or you fear the consequences of your desire so much that the fear stops you.
How can you make someone desire something? Marketers do this. They make things look better than they really are. Best of all, as a car dealer would do, they let you test drive your dream. Pretend it’s already yours.
In case of startups this is a problem. Who has the incentive to make startups sound better than they really are? Maybe some investors or incubators? No, they wouldn’t because they don’t want weak startups.
And who would let you test drive being the founder of a successful startup? You could work for one but it’s not the same as being the founder. No one would let you bear the load of responsibility a founder carries. Still, you could be a co-founder of one, and if you are, it will take years of your life to see it through. Dustin Moskovitz co-founded Facebook, but after 4 years he founded his own startup. He saw what it’s like to be a startup founder before he ventured out on his own. Still, that is a time consuming way to learn.

Intense

How can you get that extreme desire now? If a startup were a Mercedes then some people would desire to buy one after simply seeing one drive by, others would be talked into buying one by a car dealer, yet others would buy one because their father drives one. In other words desires come from experiences of different lengths and intensity. Are you the person who intensifies your own experience in life? Then probably just seeing a Mercedes drive by is enough for you.
But startups are not like a Mercedes because no startup is the same. A very successful one is unlike any that existed before. So your desire to build one would be similar to seeing a Mercedes drive by and visualizing how you will one day create a McLaren F1.
Last, you have to have fearlessness about the consequences of your desires. It is rational to fear the consequences of startup life. It is painful. But so is the alternative. Is it more painful to run a startup than to have a boss? Do you fear working 16-hour days more than feeling useless at your job? Fear is relative. The lesser of the fears wins.
Out of discipline, ambition, and willfulness the latter is probably the most difficult to acquire. It takes intensity of experience to want something to an extreme. People might call you “intense.” It takes courage to think even for a second that you can create what you want. It may take time to realize that whatever you fear about startups is more frightening if you don’t start one.

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