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Name of author Rick Baker, P.Eng.

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Yearning for more at work

by Rick Baker
On Oct 23, 2014

Some people are happy performing the routine day-to-day things of life. Other people yearn for more.

About those who yearn for more…

Some people yearn for new things and more success and they continuously work away at achieving greater things.

Other people yearn for more and yet continue to do the same old things…over and over…including complaining about setbacks at every opportunity. 

These people are the ‘achievers’, some with good habits and some with not-so-good habits. Their habits 'dictate' whether or not they are acting in successful or unsuccessful ways.

About those who are happy performing the routine day-to-day things in life…

I have met a few. I marvelled at their enthusiasm as they described the enjoyment they experienced working on a Ford assembly line, serving diners in restaurants, and doing other work laced with repetition.

Most people who work in roles containing a heavy dose of routine tasks are not happy about their ‘predicament’. They either yearn for more from work or they seem to have accepted their unhappy lot in life. Many people exhibit this unhappiness, sharing it regularly with others. So, the few who are truly happy with routine work really stand out.

About the extremes…

People who are happy performing routine day-to-day work are at one extreme. People who yearn for more and continuously work away at achieving more are at the other extreme. These people at the extremes accomplish excellent things at work, albeit in very different ways. And they influence the people they work with in very different ways. 

Some people are happy performing the routine day-to-day work. Some are not.

by Rick Baker
On Oct 14, 2014

Some people are happy performing the routine day-to-day things in life, including routine work. Other people yearn for more variety in their work.

The people who yearn for more variety tend to talk about their desires. The people who are satisfied with the status tend to talk less. When desires are communicated, each type of person tends to discount or shrug off the desires of the other.

People who are happy performing routine day-to-day work tend to resist change and oppose innovation. People who seek more variety tend to be curious and inventive. When ideas are discussed, each type of person has difficulty understanding the views of the other.

And worse, these opposing views about the value of routine and not-routine work often generate never-ending problems. These problems can cause businesses to sputter, stall, and become entrenched in poor performance.

Perhaps, these fundamental differences are responsible for most business failures?

Certainly, these fundamental differences are the root cause of many interpersonal clashes. Interpersonal clashes eat up energy, demotivate, and in some cases lead to business failures.

About eating up energy…

People energize one another. One good example is the thing we call team spirit. Team spirit exists when people are like-minded and share a drive to succeed. When team spirit is present, ‘mutual-motivation’ leads to harmonious thought and action, which cause positive momentum to build and teams to do better.

People eat up one another’s energy. Examples range from co-workers who visit with interruptions to discourteous sales clerks to road rage. People are prone to mirror other’s behaviour: road rage is contagious. People are prone to react negatively when others behave negatively: fight and flight reactions are part of our genetic make-up.

We have 2 choices:

  1. We can eat up one another’s energy…leaving insufficient energy to do productive work.
  2. We can energize one another…building energy to expand productive work.

The choice is clear.

People need to understand their differences. People need to communicate about their differences. People need to buy into shared goals.

People need to help one another satisfy different needs.

Using better communication, people need to figure out ways to accomplish both routine and not-routine work. 

Some people just won't play fair

by Rick Baker
On Oct 8, 2014

Some people never learn. They disrespect others on an ongoing basis. They criticize others on an ongoing basis. They insult others on an ongoing basis.

Left unattended, these bullies just don't learn how to play fair.

As they do their negative things, these bullies destroy any chance for mutually-beneficial relationships. They distract other people. They demotivate other people. They stress other people.

And often, these bullies wreak havoc and then walk away [apparently] unscathed..leaving relationship-carnage in their wake.

For a variety of reasons, others often allow these bullies to deliver their assaulting and insulting communications with impunity.

All of this burns up energy and wastes everyone’s time.

We do better when we stand up to these workplace bullies…and put them in their place, which is not in our face.

Tags:

Personalities @ Work

About personality assessments

by Rick Baker
On Jun 5, 2014

Last week I received the results from a couple of personality assessments.

This got me thinking again about the value of personality and communication-style assessments.

Generally speaking I feel personality/character/communication-style assessments are of very limited value. I believe a person's personality is far too complex to define in four quadrants or even in multiples of four quadrants.

In addition to the sheer complexity of the human traits and personalities, the nuances of situations radically alter the way people behave in curious ways. We see this repeatedly, every day we spend time with others.

Spirited Leaders say Business Contains Only 3 Things: People, Processes, & Situations.

They say this because they know both Processes and Situations exert profound influence on people's behaviour. 

Before we try to boil people's personalities down into four quadrants we should take a time out and read some of the legacy left by Sigmund Freud. Before we opine on people's personalities we should consider the thoroughness of his observations and the depth of his thoughts about people's behaviour. Whether you agree with Freud or not, you must marvel at the scale of analysis he performed in an attempt to understand people, their personalities, and their behaviour. Freud understood the scope of the challenge. He performed his observations with diligence. He thought much. Then he rendered opinions.

When you have done that you will feel rather uncomfortable pegging people into 4 quadrants.

Tags:

Personalities @ Work

The Driven-Leader's Flaw

by Rick Baker
On May 28, 2014

Many entrepreneurs and business owners have aspirations and are driven to achieve. And many of these entrepreneurs and business owners do not understand that other people do not share their aspirations and their drive to achieve... at least not not to the same level. In other words, many entrepreneurs and business owners assume other people are like them...sharing their drives, sharing their goals, and sharing their persistence. Under this misconception these leaders have a communication disconnect with their followers.

These leaders believe communications such as delegation of work activity have been performed properly when in fact they have not.

This leader-follower communication disconnect problem is widespread... probably the most common problem between leaders and followers and probably the most common cause of failure to complete work-tasks and achieve business success.

The solutions to this problem are straightforward: first, the leader must understand his or her personality and communication style and, second, the leader must understand the personalities and communication styles of the followers. The goal under this solution is to identify differences and adjust communication accordingly. By adjusting his or her communication style and approach to followers the leader is in a position to fully communicate when delegation or other communications are happening...for example in the areas of problem-solving and decision-making.

In summary:

Businesses perform better when the leaders adjust their communication styles to fit the personalities and communication styles of their followers.

Of course businesses perform even better when followers return the favour.

Tags:

Communication: Improving Communication | Personalities @ Work

Bosses can easily be lured into the Parent Trap.

by Rick Baker
On May 26, 2014

Bosses can easily be lured into the Parent Trap...I mean the trap where they treat the people who report to them like Children. 

I have heard bosses say they are like parents and the people who report to them are like children. Recently, while listening to a self-help audio book I heard Brian Tracy recommend bosses behave like parents and treat their people like children. 

I disagree.

Sure, I get the importance of being considerate, caring, compassionate...and having a level of sensitivity, sympathy and empathy. I just do not see those qualities as the defining qualities or Parents. First and foremost, at a very early age the vast majority of us learn our parents are authority figures...in fact, figures of absolute authority. 

Many people, likely the majority of people, carry negative memories of parental-authority with them throughout their lives.

I favour the wisdom of Transactional Analysis

In the workplace, people are adults.

If bosses don't want people to act like Children, bosses have to act like Adults.

Tags:

Business Contains Only 3 Things | Family Business and CFFB | Personalities @ Work

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