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Name of author Rick Baker, P.Eng.

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Thought Tweet #854

by Rick Baker
On Oct 24, 2013

Thought Tweet #854 If you don't know you influence people then chances are good you're observing negatives and confused why.

 

The Thinking  Behind The Tweet

We can know ourselves.

We can know we influence other people.

We can know we can influence the way we influence other people.

So, we can choose how we want to influence other people.

If we do not so choose then we must accept the consequences of our influence on others...no matter how negative and confusing they will be.

Tags:

Influencing | Thought Tweets

Thought Tweet #853.5

by Rick Baker
On Oct 23, 2013

Thought Tweet #853.5 If you cannot be interested at least be interesting.

 

The Thinking Behind The Tweet

Seek first to be interested and to understand. If you cannot handle that maybe you can compensate by being entertaining...or, at least, interesting.

Stephen Covey - Seek First To Understand.

Perhaps people will warm up to you and remember you if you seek first to understand them?

That's consistent with Dale Carnegie's teaching.

If you cannot bring yourself to be truly interested in understanding other people then your opportunities for influencing them drop significantly. You may be able to squeeze in some opportunities by:

  • being interesting...attention-getting, magnetic...those sorts of things
  • being entertaining...like a motivational speaker or a magician or a clown act

Tags:

Communication: Improving Communication | Influencing | Thought Tweets

Thought Tweet #853

by Rick Baker
On Oct 23, 2013

Thought Tweet #853 Using talent and venting strengths...that’s self-expression at its best.


The Thinking Behind The Tweet

Talents + Opportunities + Specialized Knowledge + Practiced Skills = Personal Strengths

Venting our Personal Strengths - that's 'people-excellence'.

 

Tags:

STRENGTHS: People-Focused for Success | Thought Tweets

Thought Tweet #852.5

by Rick Baker
On Oct 22, 2013

Thought Tweet #852.5 People criticize themselves sparingly. They expect no more from you. 

 

The Thinking Behind The Tweet

I love double entendre.

I'm not so keen on criticism.

Tags:

Criticism: Constructive Criticism is an Oxymoron | Thought Tweets

Thought Tweet #852

by Rick Baker
On Oct 22, 2013

Thought Tweet #852 For one reason or another we human beings were born with egos...so be it...don't fight it...live & learn with it.


The Thinking Behind The Tweet

Egos - Can't live with them; can't live without them.

Egos - life's biggest challenges.

 

Tags:

Beyond Business | Thought Tweets

Desires

by Rick Baker
On Oct 22, 2013

I have noticed in people 4 dominant desires. These desires apply to people in business and to people in general:

  1. The desire to vent one’s strength.
  2. The desire to feel important.
  3. The desire to control.
  4. The desire to create things of value.

 

The Desire to Vent One’s Strength

At the philosophical level - Nietzsche considered this to be the #1 human desire, greater than the drive to procreate.

At the day-to-day business level – People who are enthusiastic about their work are working at things that align with their personal talents & strengths; people who are worn down by their work are working at things that do not align with their talents & strengths. Both consciously and subconsciously, people know when their actions are not aligned with their strengths…it tends to bother them and it tends to eat away at their spirit. Their ambition shrinks. Their performance dulls. Their minds wander and their energies shrink.

 

The Desire to Feel Important

At the philosophical level – Dale Carnegie, the self-help pioneer, viewed this as the leading desire. In his lessons and his classic ‘How to Win Friends and Influence People’ he taught how to influence people by (1) appealing to this basic human desire and (2) not conflicting with this basic human desire…in summary: be hearty in approbation, be lavish with praise, and do not criticize.

At the day-to-day business level – “Constructive Criticism is an Oxymoron”. Criticism can cause behavioural changes; however, those changes are achieved at a cost. “Criticism finds few friends”. Criticism finds people who already recognize their errors. Some of these people have already given themselves a dose of self-criticism…so they don’t benefit and may hold a grudge against the extra dose of outside criticism. Others do not care about their errors and are predisposed to resist external criticism. Criticism finds people who do not recognize they have made an error. There are kinder ways than the use of criticism to educate them about their shortfalls.

 

The Desire to Control

At the psychological level – much has been written about locus of control. Some people believe they have within them an internal ability to control their lives while other people believe their lives are controlled by external factors.

At the day-to-day business level – People with an internal locus of control can be driven and extremely self-motivated. Or they can be more passive. They can appear strong-willed and opinionated…even maverick or renegade. Some react very poorly to authority and rules. They are self-energized. For some reason these people have withstood the criticisms of others and their spirits have survived. People with an external locus of control may be content or they may be discontented...living the life of a victim. Some will be comfortable with authority and rules; some will be subversive. Few, if any, successful business leaders have an external locus of control. Unhappy followers may be displaying the impact of throttled internal locus of control or external locus of control discontent.

 

The Desire to Create Things of Value

I think people are born with natural desire and drive to innovate and create. Psychological studies confirm this and the fact that over time most people become less creative and less willing to try new things.

That’s why entrepreneurs stand out in business. Entrepreneurs have an internal drive to create things of value and that drive survives the beatings placed on it by other people, the bureaucracies, the cruelty of the markets, etc. This desire to create things of value is not isolated to business. We see it in art, we see it in music, and we see it in philanthropy and charitable endeavours.

 

PS: People's actions provide clues to their desires. However, we cannot jump to conclusions. For example, a resistance to authority or a resistance to change will signal certain possibilities. More work is required to uncover which one of the possibilities is most-accurate. People's words provide clues to people's desires...but, watch what they do at least as much as you listen to what they say.

Tags:

Leaders' Thoughts | Personalities @ Work

Copyright © 2012. W.F.C (Rick) Baker. All Rights Reserved.