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Measuring Your Compatibility
Quotient
Here's a word
of advice for managers who
have ever had an unpleasant
meeting with a key employee
and cannot fathom why
Give-and-Take turned into
Tug-of-War.
Get out your
employee manual and look
under troubleshooting for
Failure to Communicate.
Oh, wait. The
human resources department
is still working on that
part of the employee manual.
All right,
that's a fantasy. No
instructions exist for this
problem because people are
not machines. They are a
complex recipe of nature and
nurture, past experience,
current needs and desires,
and a number of other
foreign ingredients that a
manager might not even
recognize. To complicate
matters more, you as the
manager need to know how you
are alike and how you differ
in ways small or large from
those you supervise.
Being alike
or different from those who
work for you is neither good
nor bad. It's just life. But
unrecognized or ignored,
differences and even
similarities can create
serious problems for the
company, for supervisors,
and for those they direct.
The results can be
disastrous: too little
change, too much conflict,
reduced productivity, high
turnover.
The conundrum
is how to manage smoothly no
matter how different or
similar you are to your
employees – effecting the
changes the organization
needs without clenched
teeth, raised voices,
sharply closed doors and the
echo of stomping footsteps.
Must we deal with daily
frustration and communicate
through formal memos or
tense face-to-face meetings?
No. Other
ways exist to deal with the
problem. Unique new
assessments that reveal the
characteristics of managers
and people who work for them
can give us personalized
answers about where the
problems are likely to be in
each relationship, and what
we can do to work around
them.
Here are some
areas to explore:
1.
Know Thyself. For
example, what do you do to
begin your workday? If you
need quiet time before 8
a.m. and your employee
habitually greets you at
your door when you arrive,
how will you react? Or if
you expect to hear a
high-level overview in an
8:30 meeting and your
second-in-command wants to
go over every detail, how do
you handle it?
2.
Know Thy Employee and Do Not
Assume. A positive
and inviting attitude is a
great management tool, but
don't plaster on a smile,
open the door and decree
that all will be well. You
need to know the facts, and
none of your experience,
confidence, enthusiasm and
good habits will help you
manage successfully unless
you understand each of your
employees and how best to
work with them. Is this one
self-assured and quick, that
one thoughtful and slow to
speak up? Is conformity
equally important to you and
to your workers? Or do you
need someone who thrives on
the new and the different?
Knowing these things, not
assuming them, will help you
make necessary changes,
avoid obstacles and prevent
conflicts with people who
operate differently from
you.
3. Be
Flexible in Your Management
Style. You have
probably studied dozens of
management gurus and know
their styles well. You have
leadership qualities that
got you here. But do you
know how to adapt your own
style to create the
chemistry you need to work
well with those who work for
you? Can you summon this
chemistry around different
people, so that you know how
best to direct them and they
understand precisely what
you mean – despite the
differences between you?
How do
managers find the time to
understand themselves AND
each worker AND how to
interact? A better question
might be how do we NOT find
the time? People issues will
always take the greatest
chunk of the day, but
successful solutions to the
inevitable conflicts that
arise touch every other
aspect of the business
world. The trial-and-error
method is slow, even
counterproductive, in
resolving compatibility
issues. Unique new
assessments, as mentioned
above, can predict work
relationships by looking at
you and your employees and
telling you what is going to
happen when you get
together.
Think of
these assessments as radar
that can give you advance
knowledge about what could
cause a destructive
collision and show you how
to avoid it. It's not
exactly a troubleshooting
manual for each employee.
But it's the next best
thing.

Jim Sirbasku, CEO
Profiles International
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It All Adds Up to a Humming
Workplace
1. Fewer boss-employee
conflicts = better work
atmosphere for all
2. Better work atmosphere =
more productivity and less
stress
3. More productivity = teams
meshing well
4. More teamwork = goals met
5. Less work stress = more
satisfied employees
6. Happy employees = higher
retention rates
7. Keeping key employees =
less time and money spent on
recruiting and hiring
8. Lowered recruiting/hiring
needs = more time and money
for growth elsewhere
9. Growth + productive
workplace = company
stability
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BOOK REVIEW
Mr. and Ms.
Leader and their Eight IMPs
Forget Snow White and the
Seven Dwarfs and think
instead of Super Manager and
the Eight IMPs.
IMPs in this case are not
elves or other magical
creatures, although the
creator of the term likely
won't argue about the magic
they produce. These
particular IMPs are also
called Intrinsic Motivation
Points, and authors of the
book A-HA! PERFORMANCE:
BUILDING AND MANAGING A
SELF-MOTIVATED WORKFORCE,
believe these internal
motivators are the key to a
successful manager-employee
relationship. "Managers who
understand the eight
Intrinsic Motivation Points
that drive human performance
have an edge over managers
who don't," they note.
One important point the
authors want us to remember
is connected to one
important thing they hope we
will forget:
Carrot-and-stick motivation.
They point out that managers
do not get better results
simply because workers fear
them or worry about what
their boss will do if they
are not more productive (the
stick). Nor do employees
give excellent performance
just because they want more
rewards (the carrot). The
authors believe that workers
who perform well do so
because they like the
feeling it gives them.
So what are the eight IMPs?
There is no simple list.
Managers should think of the
IMPs as a process rather
than a one-two-three list of
steps they can take to a
higher-performing workforce.
Through the book, the
authors reveal their
insights for creating and
leading a self-motivated
workforce and managing
employees, peers, bosses,
and customers in ways that
encourage people to come
along with us.
Authors Douglas Walker and
Stephen Sorkin are
co-founders of A-HA!
Performance Solutions (www.ahaperformance.com).
Through the website, they
offer their expertise as
speakers and trainers.
Walker teaches at San Diego
State University and
University of California San
Diego, and served as senior
faculty at the William
Glasser Institute and as the
managing consultant of the
San Diego office of DBM, an
international leader in
transition services. Sorkin
focuses on business
development and marketing.
He creates and delivers many
of the products and services
for his company.
ABOUT THE BOOK
A-HA! Performance: Building
and Managing a
Self-Motivated Workforce
Authors: Douglas Walker,
Stephen Sorkin
304 pages
ISBN
978-0470116340
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CASE STUDY
PXT™ Quiets Squeaky
Wheel in Oilfield Service
Company
Employment is robust in the
oilfield industry and the
plants of today require many
hands. Workers generally
command good rates of pay,
but the work can be
physically and emotionally
difficult. Oilfield work
depends on a sense of
teamwork and commitment.
In 2002, looking at turnover
costs of almost two million
dollars, leaders at an
oilfield service company
knew they had to do
something to reverse the
trend. They turned to
Profiles, specifically
ProfileXT™ and its
job-matching pattern, to
assess where they were and
where they needed to be in
the specific high-turnover
positions of helper and
operator.
Job
Match Pattern
Since they wanted to
spotlight helpers and operators,
leaders build a success pattern
for these positions using
results from PXT™. Their models
were 13 top-performing helpers
and 15 operators. Hiring
managers gave greater
consideration to the job
applicants whose overall
percentage match to the
appropriate ProfileXT™ Job Match
Pattern was 75 percent or
greater.
Results
During the course of
the yearlong test period, the
company used the ProfileXT™
results to help make decisions
about potential employees in its
applicant pool, new hires,
employees they hired before
implementation of the
assessment, and workers who had
both separated from the company
and that the company had
terminated.
Summary
After using the
ProfileXT™ for one year,
managers reduced helper and
operator turnover from 34.5
percent to 25.3 percent. The
resultant money savings totaled
about $550,000.
Company leaders further
calculated that with a cost
of $24,550 to implement the
ProfileXT™, their return on
investment was more than 22
to1.
Participants
Before using the ProfileXT™,
the company tallied a
whopping 34.5 percent rate
of turnover. The high rate
of departure cost the
company about $1,910,000.
Managers calculated the
price of replacing each
helper or operator at
approximately $18,900. The
average tenure of terminated
employees was one year.
During a 12-month test
period, leaders used the PXT™
with 245 workers at various
plants in two states. They
hired 90 job applicants.
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PRODUCT FOCUS
Profiles
WorkForce Compatibility™:
A
Smooth Path Between Manager,
Worker
How many times have you longed
for a way to get inside an
employee's head to find out what
he or she was really
thinking? Often this desire
occurs after an unpleasant
encounter or a meeting that was
off-balance. You would pay to
know why a key worker suddenly
clammed up and another started
babbling nervously. More
importantly, you need to know
what to do differently the next
time.
But how do you do this without
more information? Some workers
might tell their managers what's
on their mind, but often
employees view speaking frankly
as a risk. So we slog along,
trying to do the best we can
with our assumptions.
That's no longer necessary. Now
managers have an assessment that
reveals exactly what we need to
know about working with
different kinds of people.
Profiles WorkForce
Compatibility™ can show us how
both manager and employee score
on the seven key characteristics
of:
-
Self-assurance
-
Self-reliance
-
Conformity
- Optimism
-
Decisiveness
-
Objectivity
- Approach
to Learning
The assessment takes less than
an hour to complete, and the
resulting report offers a wealth
of relevant information for both
employees and managers. The
Employee Report details the
similarities and differences
between the key players and
offers the employee specific
guidance on the best way to
communicate and work with their
managers.
For managers, the report
provides what we need to know to
grow in our jobs, from a
high-level overview to specific
ideas on management methods
based on the similarities and
differences of how people work.
For example, how do you deal
with a decisive employee if you,
the manager, are also decisive?
And what do you do with a more
methodical worker whose style
differs from yours but whose
work is stellar? No guesswork
here, as the assessment provides
the heavy lifting of showing
managers how to implement the
new information.
Noted stateswoman Indira Gandhi
spoke of the present and the
future when she said, "I suppose
that leadership at one time
meant muscle; but today it means
getting along with people."
Profiles WorkForce
Compatibility™ is all about
getting along with employees
effectively. Call us at (254)
751-1644.
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STRATEGIES FOR WINNING
Carrot,
Stick or What? *
To
Push or to Pull – That
is the Question!
How would you like
to have all of your team
chomping at the bit to
do what you need them to
do to make your business
successful? Everyone
wants that elusive
ingredient – motivation
– in the people to whom
they entrust the
development of their
business. Well, sorry to
turn the lights to dim
so quickly, but here's
the bad news: YOU CANNOT
MOTIVATE ANYONE TO DO
ANYTHING – people do
what they do because
they want to, not
because you want them
to. And they'll only
want to do what you want
them to do when the
outcome of doing so
appeals to them in some
way. It is all in their
hands, not yours.
A
Personal Story from Bud
Haney
In the late
1960s, I began operating
a franchise business,
built a sales
organization, and
established a very
successful operation in
a short period of time.
I did so well that the
company made me a
generous offer to become
a sales executive in its
home office. I joined a
staff of experienced
sales managers, so I was
eager to prove myself as
the new kid on the
block. About a month
after I joined the
staff, the opportunity
presented itself. The
vice president of our
division announced a
contest, the grand prize
being a TV set. Frankly,
the TV set didn't excite
me; I already had
several of them at home.
The opportunity to show
my peers what I could do
was my motivation.
I won the
contest. I accomplished
my goal by burning the
midnight oil and
motivating the members
of my sales team to
expand their efforts. I
got them emotionally
involved in the contest
by asking them to do me
a favor. I told them how
important it was for me
to gain the respect and
acceptance of my peers
and how much I would
appreciate it if they
would make an extra
effort to be especially
productive for 30 days.
They came through for
me, and everyone on the
staff sat up and took
notice of my arrival as
a player on the scene.
Incidentally,
the charitable
organization that
received the TV really
appreciated it!
For practical business
purposes, motivation is
getting people to do
what you want them to do
because they want to do
it.
Two types of motivators
make us act – intrinsic
and extrinsic. Extrinsic
motivation happens when
an outside factor causes
us to take action. For
example, "Work an extra
six hours and I'll pay
you double time." Most
management "motivation"
is purely extrinsic, and
amounts to little more
than manipulation –
enlisting promises,
bribes and flattery to
get things done.
The problem with
extrinsic motivation is
that it rarely has any
useful long-term effect.
Use extrinsic motivators
to energize your team
and you'll find yourself
trapped in a cycle where
those motivators must
get bigger and better to
repeat the same results.
How long does the
motivational effect of a
salary increase last?
Often only as long as it
takes to see the
post-tax figure!
Traditional extrinsic
approaches to motivation
are all but useless aids
to boosting long-term
employee morale and
productivity, or to
stemming employee
turnover.
How about intrinsic
motivation? This happens
when you take action
because of internal
reasons – for example,
when you work an extra
six hours because you
feel that the project
you're working on is so
worthwhile you want to
see it completed.
Everything we do is
ultimately determined by
the values we hold.
Values are what we truly
care about – the
qualities and standards
we value and aspire to
achieve. These values
determine our attitudes
and behaviors and
determine what will
motivate us to action.
When people take action
because the likely
outcome of that action
appeals directly to what
they value, you have
true motivation, and
time spent developing
that is an investment
with long-term returns.
The most successful
leaders and motivators
are those who (wittingly
or unwittingly) uncover
their followers'
intrinsic motivations
and take time to match
these with the extrinsic
motivators they have at
their disposal.
Easy? Not at all. People
are motivated by unmet
needs, which will vary
from person to person
according to their
particular
circumstances, values
and beliefs, education,
family background,
personality and work
experience. To figure
out what is important to
your people you must ask
them and then listen
carefully. Ask often
enough, and show your
willingness to take
action upon whatever you
uncover, and your people
will begin to let your
know what is important
to them – allowing you
to figure out how to
package the extrinsic
motivators you have at
your disposal in a
manner that will meet
their particular needs.
This dialogue can be
fostered with mechanisms
as simple as frequent
one-on-one discussions
or well-considered
surveys. There are no
quick fixes, and this is
not a one-time exercise;
to be successful, this
has to become an
integral part of the way
you do business.
While working upon
uncovering what your
people need to be
motivated, be aware that
recent research has
shown that what
motivated people as
recently as 10 years ago
is no longer necessarily
relevant today. For
example, modern
employees view it as a
right to have
market-level
remuneration in return
for their efforts, so
compensation is no
longer a true motivator.
In addition to a good
salary and benefits
package, you must now
also provide:
-
Development
opportunities. If
you don't develop your
people at the pace they
desire, they'll find
someone who can. People
want to grow.
-
Balance. New
research shows that the
modern workers'
priorities are leisure,
family and work, in that
order. Make number three
the priority at the
expense of one and two
and you may motivate
them to move elsewhere.
-
Input to decisions.
Today's employees feel
they deserve input into
any decisions that might
affect them. Ignore this
belief at your peril.
-
Communication with
management.
Modern employees are
educated and confident
and demand ongoing
dialogue with their
management.
-
Worthwhile goals.
To hold their attention,
people need the buzz of
worthwhile short-term
goals and lots of
feedback on their
success (or failure) in
achieving these goals.
-
Interesting work.
Much of the research on
employee satisfaction
over the past five years
has emphasized the
important role that
interesting, challenging
work plays in motivating
people.
Take these three
seemingly
straightforward steps to
build a highly motivated
team:
1. Right now: Honestly
review the checklist
above and if anything on
it is not a feature of
the way you interface
with your team, figure
out how you can make it
so in the shortest time
possible.
2. ASAP: Establish a
program to ensure that
you maintain a
frequently updated
profile of what
motivates each member of
your team. Use this
information to match the
extrinsic motivators you
have at your disposal to
best meet their
requirements.
3. Ongoing: Look
carefully at the
extrinsic motivators you
have at your disposal
and use your knowledge
of your people's values
and needs to match them
to their intrinsic
needs.
This will energize your
team and assure your
success. Now, is that a
carrot, or what?
*From the
book 40 STRATEGIES
FOR WINNING IN BUSINESS
by Bud Haney and Jim
Sirbasku. © S&H
Publishing Co., 5205
Lake Shore Drive, Waco,
Texas 76710-1732.
All rights reserved.
Contact S&H Publishing
Co., (254) 751-1644, for
reprint permission.
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SUCCESS/LEADERSHIP QUOTES
The toughest
decisions in organizations
are people decisions –
hiring, firing, promotion,
etc. These are the decisions
that receive the least
attention and are the
hardest to unmake.
– Peter Drucker, management
consultant
I suppose
leadership at one time meant
muscles; but today it means
getting along with people.
– Mohandas Gandhi, Indian
statesman
Practice Golden
Rule 1 of Management in
everything you do. Manage
others the way you would
like to be managed.
– Brian Tracy, author,
business consultant
Leadership is
based on inspiration, not
domination; on cooperation,
not intimidation.
- William Arthur Ward,
scholar, author, pastor
No employer
today is independent of
those about him. He cannot
succeed alone, no matter how
great his ability or
capital. Business today is
more than ever a question of
cooperation. –
Orison Swett Marden,
motivational author
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