[Editor's
Note: When my alarm goes off at 4:00am, I am usually up already,
getting coffee, and bounding into the opportunities of the day. That's
me... and while many people may think I am a little strange to be up at
4:00am, I can't wait to get started on each day. I came across this blog
post from Sally Helgesen
recently and it made me think that in this age of talent shortage, we
need to be spending more time on what engages and motivates people - the
positives. I hope you find this useful. -dpm]
It's Not What Keeps You Up at Night.... But What Gets You Up in the Morning?
What keeps you up at night?
It's a question we've heard posed in nearly every panel and senior
leader interview conducted in recent years, and as a result, it has
become tiresome and rote. But I believe the effect of this query is more
pernicious than simply boring - stay awake long enough to think it
through, and you'll recognize its essentially negative nature. The
question assumes that leaders are in the habit - indeed, that they have a
responsibility - to let worry pervade their every hour, even those precious few required to refresh, balance, and sustain human effort.
That's
why it was bracing to hear the chief economist of a global bank
describe how his CEO responded to this question at a recent meeting of
senior employees. "I'm sick of that question," the CEO had said.
"Besides, it misses the point. More important is: What makes me leap out of bed in the morning?"
The
CEO then told his listeners that "the terror of missing an opportunity"
impelled him to get up every day. Within 24 hours, the bank's shiny new
headquarters became known throughout the company as "the tower of
terror." That's hardly the most positive vision. But if we focus on the
invocation of opportunity rather than terror, we'll recognize that the
CEO made an important point: It is vastly more productive to spring out
of bed eager to spot new opportunities than it is to greet the day in a
defensive crouch brought on by post-midnight agony fests. And it is a
far more powerful way to lead an organization.
In
other words: In an economy in which the harnessing of human knowledge
offers the chief - and perhaps only - competitive advantage, the need to
engage human talent has become paramount. And just as leaders on the
lookout for opportunity can build and stimulate engagement, they also
can undermine engagement by exuding negative energy.
If you understand what motivates people to get out of bed, you understand what engages them.Beverly Kaye, founder of Career Systems International, an engagement and development consultancy, is coauthor of the engagement classic Love 'Em or Lose 'Em: Getting Good People to Stay,
now in its fifth edition (Berrett-Koehler, 2014). She has been
examining the sources and advocating for the importance of employee
engagement longer than anyone I know. "One of the first questions we
asked people when doing our original research on engagement in the 1990s
was what about their work motivated them to get out of bed in the
morning," she told me. "If you understand that, you can understand what
engages people."
People
want a few basic things in their work, Kaye pointed out: "They want to
feel valued, they want to be able to use their skill sets, and they want
to be challenged by new ways to exercise and build those skills." If
jobs don't give people the opportunity to fulfill these basic needs,
many employees will leave - and the best are often the first to go. "And
those who stay will often check out mentally and simply disengage,
which from an organizational point is probably worse," she said. If
jobs don't give people the opportunity to fulfill these basic needs,
many employees will leave - and the best are often the first to go.
Leaders who are optimistic inspire confidence throughout the organization.
Over the years, Kaye and her researchers have also asked thousands of
people why they left their organizations. "What we hear usually comes
down to some variation on their not being able to see any opportunities
in their job," she said, which is why a focus on opportunities is
critical in a leader. "People's experience at work is determined by
their manager, and the experience of managers is determined by those who
manage them, going all the way up to senior leaders....Leaders who are
optimistic about what their people can accomplish, and see challenge
through the lens of opportunity, inspire confidence throughout the
organization." Optimism cascades down.
By
contrast, leaders who worry excessively - the up-all-night types - can
set a cautious or even frightened tone that spreads discouragement. In
Kaye's experience, "worried leaders tend to fail their people in one of
two ways. They may be distracted and overlook signals people send about
what they are capable of. Or they micromanage, either because they don't
trust their people or as a way of managing their own anxiety." Both
approaches inhibit morale and make it impossible to build a culture of
engagement.
The CEO needs to prepare the company for the future, which is all about seeing the opportunities in the larger picture.
It's
interesting to note that the CEO who pushed back on the original
question - "What keeps you up?" - had been chief risk assessment officer
at another large financial institution. A former member of his
executive team who heard about the pushback observed that the answer
showed how much the CEO had grown as a leader. Worrying about what could
happen, Kaye observed, is practically a job description for risk
managers. "If you don't have a few sleepless nights, you may not be
doing your job," she said. "But a CEO has a different brief. He or she
needs to prepare the company for the future, which is all about seeing
the opportunities in the larger picture."
Jim Kouzes and Barry Posner, my gurus in all things leadership, note in their classic work, The Leadership Challenge: How to Make Extraordinary Things Happen in Organizations
(Wiley, 1987), that successful leaders always "challenge the process."
That is, they look for opportunities to go beyond the status quo and
innovative ways to improve the organization. Kouzes and Posner are clear
that doing so always requires some degree of experiment and risk, as
well as a willingness to accept the consequences when a risk does not
pan out.
In
a highly uncertain environment, that's a pretty good prescription for
what most of us can do. And recognizing it might bring us to a renewed
recognition that wakeful worry does not a good leader make.
What are your thoughts? Share your reactions.
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