AffectiveAction

Because business has the heart to succeed

Menu

  • Home
  • Blog
  • General Management
  • Marketing
  • People Management
  • Innovation
  • Guest Bloggers
  • About
  • Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

  • Recent Posts

    • Renewable Fuel for a Brilliant Life
    • How to Manage Women: Tips #2 and 3
    • How to Manage Women Tip # 1
    • Compassionate Capitalism
    • Stop That Focus Group!
    • To really change people’s behavior: Use the right word.
    • Is This the Coolest Company Ever?
  • Archive

  • Tags

    Affective Action B2B business business model career development career management cause marketing collaborate commercialization Conflict corporate responsibility customer networks demand generation Design Duarte Communications early sales Ecomagination effective communication Empathy employee engagement employee retention GE generative green marketing high performance high touch/low cost hiring HR human resources innovation innovative thinking Institute for the Future investment Jeff Immelt leadership lead generation management managing women market development marketing marketing automation marketing metrics motivation negotiate nurturing prospects outperform passion personalized marketing philanthropy philosophy philosophy and business Presentations product introductions project management project portfolio analysis project selection prospecting regulatory expansion results sales Santa Clara University social-media social entrepreneur social venture Social Venture incubator Strategy sustainability TEDx Presidio the buying process the customer view The Onion time to market time to ramp use case venture program
    • RSS - Posts
    • RSS - Comments
  • Subscribe in a reader

Browsing Category People Management

Thanks A Million, Kumar!

May 6, 2012 · by Taia Ergueta

Hopefully you have gotten a surprise gift at some point. How about one that you didn’t recognize as a gift? Mine came wrapped like this:

“I’d like to set up a time to meet with you, Taia. I am not sure that you are aware of what experience I bring from what I did before I joined Hewlett Packard and I’d also like to share with you where I would like to take my career. ”

With words to this effect, Kumar, set up a meeting that made me a better manager to many many other people.

Kumar worked for a manager who worked for me.  He had joined HP about two years before and I understood from his direct manager that he was doing well.  I must admit that I was more aware of the accomplishments of the group he was a part of than I was of Kumar’s specific performance.  I was a relatively new middle manager and nobody a couple of levels down from me had requested a meeting like this one, but I was glad to have the discussion. Oh let’s be honest, I was a young middle manager; I was probably just planning on getting through it and on to something about me.

My intent aside, I remember being very positively surprised by the impact of that brief meeting:

  1. He was right: When he went through his background with me I learned that I had had no idea who he really was:  He had a rich set of previous jobs and skills well beyond those he was immediately using.  Result: I effectively had “more resources” in my group and in the company:  He was still one person, but I now knew what flexibility he possessed if we needed it.
  2. With respect to the future, I learned that he had high ambitions and his interests.  Result:   I had an understood candidate for when new development or future job openings. Obviously, I was much more likely to think of him as those opportunities came up.
  3. Just by virtue of the conversation…I felt a sense of personal responsibility for his development. Result:  Per the HP model, he was still the main owner of his career, but he had created an interested and equipped ally in that process.

OK, so those were good one-time outcomes for the company and for him. But the “gift” in this story is this:  What I learned from that experience made me a better manager in each job since then. It taught me that having that kind of conversation with my employees could make a huge difference in how fully the company used their talents and also in how well we could meet their career needs.

Two Ways to Use This Insight

1.  Increasingly I have made it a point to provoke this discussion with employees. Depending on the size of your group, you may not be able to do this with every person. Where should you start?

  • First Priority Targets: Your best performing/high potential people are clearly where you want to focus your people-management time since they will produce the highest results and will also be the toughest to replace if you lose them.
  • Next Target Cohort: Strong employees who are quiet or shy. This population is often underutilized in companies. They may not readily self-promote and may need encouragement to seek or take on new opportunities. Some people are shy by nature. Other people may be quiet, career-conservative, or avoid self-promotion as a result of certain cultural norms, personal values or socialization. In the U.S., Asian, Hispanic, Indian and female employees, among others, sometimes fit this description.  I’m not stereotyping.  We have all known highly ambitious and self-promoting people in each of those groups.  But being sensitive to some common socialization patterns brings benefits.   You can get a huge return from making a special effort to give strong, but quiet employees comfortable and encouraging opportunities to:
    • Make their capabilities and aspirations known.
    • Consider development or job opportunities that will stretch them.

2.  As a manager or mentor, I often advise employees to do exactly what Kumar did:

  • Seek out someone who can be influential in your career (i.e., people who may someday control or know of jobs /opportunities you might like) and make sure that they know what skills and experience you bring to the party.
    • Let them know where you are headed with your career
    • Ask for nothing more their time to understand that and any advice that they may have immediately or in the future.

I don’t think I ran into Kumar after I left that job. Poor guy. If his ears really did itch every time I talked about his meeting request and the resulting insights, I caused him a lot of annoyance. He is one of many employees who taught me critical management lessons. It feels good to have a forum in which to thank him.

Is there and employee or co-worker who taught you something valuable who you want to thank? Write in and tell us – and them –about it. I’ll be glad to start a “Thanks A Million” section for posting  these.

Source of Bicyclist Photo:

Image: arztsamui / FreeDigitalPhotos.net

Share this:

  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
Like Loading...

Artists & Activists

April 26, 2012 · by Taia Ergueta

Image: africa / FreeDigitalPhotos.net

View this document on Scribd

Share this:

  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
Like Loading...

Use The Force, Luke

April 2, 2012 · by Taia Ergueta

*

Businesses and the people in them share a tension:  They want to succeed and feel woefully short of the time and money to do so.  They are so wound up, they hesitate to even imagine what they could do if they had access to a deep well of additional resources.  That source exists, though it is regularly ignored, avoided and underestimated.  It is the emotional motivation and energy of employees.

There is an immense quantifiable opportunity to create healthier, more successful businesses through affective action: Winning by engaging the hearts and spirits of employees, not just their hands and heads.

 WHY EXECUTIVES SHOULD CARE – A LOT

The Carrot: Free Money

 No other opportunity that can match the return on this.

The growing body of studies on just the value of employee engagement shows staggering numbers*:

    • At the national level: More than $370B annually just in the US
    • At the company level: A 27% increase in profit
    • At the personal level: 2x the likelihood of being a top performer and 43% less illness time

 All that money is just sitting there or, more accurately, blowing away. And it costs nothing to harvest it. In fact you save money while doing so.

In addition, unlike technology-based growth and profit drivers, this one is accessible to every organization and industry.

The Stick: Industrial Age model crashes and burns in the Information Age.

It has probably been over 10 years ago that I heard Gary Hamel note that the prevailing management models are based all too closely on the control systems set up for factories in the Industrial Revolution.  At this point I know you are off checking Wikipedia, so I’ll wait.  …Oh good, you’re back.  As you now know, this means that we are using 200-year-old models in the Information Age.  This must stop.  Industrial workers were often treated as extensions of machines and that control-oriented management migrated to offices as well.  Business management theory progressed — and became an industry in itself; but even so it usually still bears hallmarks of the factories of the 19th century:

  • Direction from the top executed by the middle and bottom
  • A belief in devising the “right” plan and executing on it more and more comprehensively over time.

In the Information Age, a management system in which small numbers of people direct large numbers of people to perform repetitive tasks in an ever more solidified strategy/infrastructure will surely fail.  What we need are systems in which all employees actively regenerate parts of the business as needed or opportune.

WHY EMPLOYEES SHOULD CARE

You do what a friend of mine calls “your highest and best work” in a work environment where you:

  • Feel inspired and emotionally engaged
  • Understand, use and expand your particular talents
  • Are expected to be an influential change agent.

Anything short of this is underutilizing you and your time.  Happily, individuals can help create these conditions for themselves and others.

USING “THE FORCE” OF AFFECTIVE ACTION

Future posts will explore useful tactics that individuals and managers use to create inspiring, engaging and generative work environments.  By “generative” I mean naturally generating and exploiting a stream of innovations that propel the company forward successfully in the face of continuous change.

This topic is not entirely new or isolated.  As Figure 1 illustrates, it overlaps and complements several established management and individual development topics.  Many articles and books offer rich and valuable advice on those topics.

On this site I want to focus on going beyond improving within current norms.  We need to create and thrive with new models that match the possibilities of the 21st century.

Imagine what would be possible in a workplace if:

    • 100% of the employees were active and effective scouts for important opportunities for the company
    • Everyday communication created as much inspiration as information
    • Customers proactively shared all the information they have that is relevant to your decisions
    • Every initiative was executed with fervor, not just a sense of duty
    • Market uncertainty was a source of competitive advantage rather than a threat.

The dynamism demanded by the information age won’t come from extracting more bursts of brilliance and superhuman effort in the old model.  Luke Skywalker tapped into The Force.  We can tap into Affective Action, creating new, generative organizations by helping people find deep personal connections to their work and each other.

________________________________

* Source: These are extracts of statistics from ”99 Incredible Employee Engagement Statistics“, a very interesting document put together and made available by a company named Beyond Morale (beyondmorale.com).

Gallup poll:

  • The lost productivity of actively disengaged employees costs the US economy $370 BILLION annually.
  • Those business units in the top half of engagement scores had 27% higher profitability than those in the bottom half.

Watson Wyatt study:

  • Highly Engaged Employees are more than twice as likely to be top performers.
  • Highly engaged employees missed 43% fewer days of work due to illness.

Share this:

  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
Like Loading...
Page 3 of 3 « Previous 1 2 3
  • Blog at WordPress.com.
  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • AffectiveAction
    • Join 41 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • AffectiveAction
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...
 

    %d