Employee Empowerment

I often hear managers lament that their teams are, “so lazy” or that their employees are “out the door at 5 pm.”  These managers are struggling with a common workplace problem, a lack of commitment.

When I ask more about the teams, I usually hear about micro-managing and a tightly controlled environment and then I have to share truth that is unsettling for many managers.  There is a correlation between commitment and the amount of control a person has in performing an activity.  For some of you, this will be the last thing you want to hear, because you like to hold the reins tight.  I’m not suggesting that you suddenly let your employees run free, but just begin to think about this commitment-control correlation.

Try it on for yourself a moment.  Have you ever been in an extreme situation where you had no say in the outcome and you were simply expected to complete a task by following some specific steps.  Memories of summer jobs may be coming to mind at this point and that’s a pretty good analogy.  How committed are most summer workers?  Alright, you can make the case that they are teenagers and therefore the very definition of uncommitted, but I’ve known some pretty diligent teenagers who were put-off not by the work, but how little control they had over it.  How many adults do you know that especially like being told what to do?

So, it’s important to keep in mind that the more control a person has over a task, the greater their investment in the outcome of that task.  You give them the opportunity to take ownership, to get invested in the outcome.  Take a look around your organization and notice those symptoms of lack-of-commitment.  Brainstorm for a bit about what you can do to give employees more ownership in these areas.  Also consider how you will monitor the situation after this change.  If your employees have been tightly corralled, it may take some time for both and you and them to adjust to the change.

Should You Try to Eliminate Presentation Anxiety?

From time-to-time I get approached with the question, “can I get rid of presentation anxiety?” The answer is, it depends and it really depends on your level of anxiety.

Some level of nervousness is not unusual before a presentation. This kind of nervousness resolves itself quickly as the presentation gets underway. And this isn’t necessarily a bad thing. The nervousness is a reminder that the presentation is important and it gives you a boost of energy right before going on stage.

Now if you have debilitating anxiety before a presentation, you’re going to want to work to dial that down.

The Worst Case of Public Speaking Anxiety I’ve Seen

While in graduate school I met a woman who suffered from some of the worst presentation anxiety I’ve ever seen. In fact she would get so nervous that her normally perfect vision would fail her and she couldn’t read her notes.

She tried to compensate by using notes in huge font, but that didn’t even work and she was in the habit of memorizing every speech, word-for-word before the big day.

She said it was like a black cloud would descend over her mind during the presentation blocking her ability to think clearly and erasing the speech from her memory. So it a race to the finish to give her speech before the black cloud covered up the words in her mind.  Needless to say, she was dreading an upcoming speech that we all had to give.

I offered to work with her to help her overcome her anxiety. She was skeptical, but desperate. We spent one afternoon working through her anxiety. The next day was the presentation.

She was also in the habit of arriving hours early before a presentation and practicing in the exact spot where she would be speaking.  She felt this helped her memorize the last details.

The morning of the presentation, she didn’t show up early. Her friends actually started to get worried about her and were relieved when she arrived about half an hour before the presentations started. She was calm and excited. By the way, excited is a nice substitute for anxious.

Her presentation was brilliant! She was poised and confident. She even made a couple of jokes and ventured “off-script” when appropriate. She then fielded a question and answer session without missing a beat. As an unscripted part of a presentation, this used to be what she dreaded the most.

Afterwards she received lots and praise and accolades. Everyone noticed the difference in her. I was so proud of her!

I asked her later how she felt about the presentation. She said it was exhilarating and that it was amazing to be able to think and see while up in front of a group of people.

The black cloud was gone. She said it was hard to remember what it used to be like before the change. I told her that was perfect and that she shouldn’t give it another thought.

Where Are You on The Presentation Anxiety Spectrum?

So how do you feel about giving presentations?

Are there some pre-speech jitters?

Some anxiety as you prepare and deliver the speech?

Are you in full-blown panic mode, counting the minutes before you have to step on stage and dreading every moment?

No matter where you fall on the presentation anxiety spectrum, there’s hope! Speaking is a skill that you can begin develop right away.

To get started, I’d like you to think about the nervousness and brainstorm how it can be a good thing. I know, you may have to dig deep to find some uses for it, but they exist. Then knowing what it can do for you, start to use it and make it work for you.

 

A Simple, But Effective Definition of Communication

The purpose of any communication falls into one of two categories: to inform or call to action. When people talk to each other, it’s either to share information or to ask someone to do something. When there is a call to action, it can either be through a direct request or it can be implied.

In case you’re wondering, an implied call to action is along the lines of, “I’m thirsty.” In this case the person may very well want you to get them something to drink or would at least be receptive if you offered them something to drink.

In business, communicating to inform and call to action are ongoing activities that are not always clearly separated. If an employee shares a story with you about a problem they are having, do they want you to be aware of the problem or do they want you to do something about it? It can be a tough call.

As you communicate with your employees, they are faced with the same challenge of determining what you want them to understand or do. The best way to clear up that ambiguity is to start by being clear about your own intentions.

When talking with an employee, what is your purpose? Is your goal to inform or call to action? Do you want them to understand something, do something, or both? Notifying someone of a policy change, for example, is likely to be driven by the need for them to be aware of the change (inform) as well as to incorporate that information into future behavior (call to action).

If they don’t comply with the policy change you may have an understanding issue or a buy-in issue. Start by making sure they understand what is expected. If they understand, but have chosen not to follow along, you have a buy-in issue. Now you’ve got your work cut-out for you, because for some reason they are not in agreement with you about the course of action they should take. Begin a discussion to help you bridge the gap between where you are and where they are.

 

3 Tips for Offering More Effective Positive Feedback

An important part of a leader’s job is empowering others.  Your goal is to have employees that are, for the most part, self-sufficient.  You are, of course, there to help them as needed, but the key to having great employees is having empowered employees.  Offering positive feedback is an important part of the process.

#1: Focus on behaviors, not accomplishments.  Instead of offering “Great job” accolades, focus on the behavior that you like, “I like your perseverance.”  This is a great way to ensure that you see more of this behavior from the employee in the future.

#2:  Be specific.  Let them know exactly what they did right so they get a clear picture of what you expect.  Instead of something vague “I like what you did in this report,” offer up the details on what you liked specifically, “I like how you how you used diagrams to visually support your findings.”

#3: Do it immediately.  If you see an employee doing something right, let them know this immediately.  Catching them in the moment allows you to be more specific and it gives the employee an immediate boost.  Why wait until your next scheduled meeting when you can catch them in the act of great behavior.

The power of influence

Many managers believe that it is their responsibility to exert as much control as possible over their employees to create the desired results.  In reality, is it truly possible to control another person?  Ever dealt with a toddler having a melt-down in a store?  How’d it go when you tried to control that situation?

The truth is that even when dealing with full grown adults, we can’t control other people.  They are free to melt-down, act out and think for themselves, even if we don’t want them to.  When it comes right down to it, the only person we can control is ourselves.  This is not always the easiest idea to accept, but I see it as an incredibly powerful position.  Here’s why.

First, when I get it that I can only control myself, I stop wasting time trying to control other people.  My father-in-law likes the phrase, “You can’t teach a pig to sing.  It wastes your time and it frustrates the pig.”  This is exactly the situation you are in when you try to control someone else, everybody ends up unhappy.

Second, now that I know I can’t control other people, I am free to think about what I can do to influence them.  Because that’s the real talent, isn’t it?  While we can’t directly control other people, we can, often very effectively, influence them.  Let’s go back to the toddler melting down in the store, the parent may not be able to force the child to stop making a scene, but they may have some pretty powerful ways to influence that situation and get things back on track quickly.

This is a great brainstorming opportunity.  Look around your organization and think about all those areas where people aren’t doing what you want them to do.  Consider all the things you’ve done to try to alter their behavior.  Then brainstorm ways that you might begin to influence this situation and get things moving in the right direction.

A simple truth about motivation

How motivated is your team?  And by this, I mean how inspired are they to do what you want them to do?  Top performers know that true leadership is about getting people to want to do what you need them to do.  In fact, if they think it’s their idea, you’re just fine with that.

Because this is a beautiful thing when you have created an environment where everyone is passionate and driven to deliver on the vision that you have created.  If this doesn’t sound like your team, you’re not alone.  And here’s the trick that so many managers miss, they think it is their job to motivate their team.

7 percenters understand this important point, they know that it is their job to provide the inspiration, the direction and the environment that gets people totally committed to following them.  Their team is then responsible for providing their own motivation.  And this become the easy part, because when you are inspired, you have direction and you’re in an environment that supports you, what is the natural by-product?  That’s right motivation.

So, if when you look at your team, you find them lacking motivation, guess what?  It’s time to look at the inspiration, direction and environment you are providing.  If you’re caught-up in the day-to-day stuff, remember to take time to do these important big picture things so your team stays motivating, effective and efficient.

Success is closer than you think…or is it?

We tend to think that the world is as we see it.  After all, that’s the way we see it.  But the truth is that we have a number of mental filters and distortions that happen unconsciously that prevent us from seeing the world as it is.  In fact, it is more accurate to say that we see the world as we are.

That’s an interesting notion that can be difficult to wrap your brain around, but think about the following example.  Two people go to a party.  Person A is in a great mood and has a great time.  Person B is not feeling well and doesn’t have fun.  Of course, they’re going to have completely different experiences even though it was the same party.

That clearly makes sense with two people.  Two different moods…two different experiences.  But the same phenomena occurs within one person as well.  Research by Dr. Emily Balcitis and Dr. David Dunning suggest that our desires impact our perception as well.

Through their research, they found that when you want something, your perception of its distance from you is judged to be closer than when it is something you don’t want.  It is our brain’s way of saying your almost there, if you try a little harder or go just a bit further you’ll have it.  Clearly, this illusion can be quite helpful.

Think about your goals.  But don’t just think about them, think about how you think about them.  Are they close, almost within your grasp?  If not, what would happen if you were to make them closer, would that make you more motivated?  If you’re like most people, it will.  Remember, the next time you hear yourself say, “I’m so close I can almost taste it,” understand that’s your brain’s way of getting you going.

Emotional development may be skewed by perceived injustice

I’ve always said that people will even things out when they think there has been an injustice.  For example, you lower someone’s pay, whether they admit to it or not, they will adjust something in the relationship with the orgranization to compensate.  This may take the form of slower work, more sick days, a bad attitude, you name it, but they will even things out, if you’re lucky.  I say if you’re lucky because they may punish you far beyond what you have done to them.

Research at the University of Chicago by Boaz Keysar reinforces this idea.  Participants in the study played a game where one was the dictator and the other the subject.  The dictator in some cases started with say $100 and could give some of that money to the subject.  In other cases the subject was given the $100 and the dictator could take however much they want

So, with a starting amount of $100, the dictator giving the subject $50 is the same thing the same as the dictator taking $50 away from the subject.  At least it’s the same financially.  It turns out that people are much more unhappy when you take stuff from them.  The researchers found that subjects rated the dictator more harshly if the dictator took $30 from them (the subject now has $70) than if the dictator gave them $50 (the subject now has $50).  Did you catch that?  The subjects were happier with less money simply because something was given to them, not taken from them.  Remind you of taxes? 

Plus, it gets even better.  When the roles of dictator and subject were switched, those who felt they had been treated unfairly when they were the subject, were even more selfish when it came time for them to be dictator.  This has some really interesting implications in management, don’t you think?  Framing is everything.

Get motivated with your personal mission statement

Creating a personal mission statement can be one of the most powerful and unifying activities that you can do for yourself, your business, and even your family.  The process of creating a mission statement can take as little as a few minutes or as long as a few months, depending on the number of people and the issues involved.  For our purposes here, we are going to be creating a personal mission statement just for you.  It certainly could fit into a larger family mission statement if you want it to, but for now we’re going to focus on you.

The impact a mission statement will have on your life is directly related to the degree that it reflects what you do, who you do it for, and how you do it.   The more accurate your mission statement is regarding those three elements, the more powerful a tool it will be in terms of managing your life.

The purpose of a mission statement is to summarize your primary purpose or life’s mission in a sentence or a group of sentences.   As stated earlier, in these statements, we would describe what we do, who we do it for, and how we do it.  For example, using an airline metaphor, we would want to identify precisely what our primary purpose is for being in business.   We might decide that as an airline, our mission is: To help vacationers create the vacation of their dreams by being friendly, helpful, clean, and timely.

Notice how the mission clearly identifies what we do, “create the vacation of their dreams”, who we do it for, “vacationers”, and how we do it, “by being friendly, helpful, clean, and timely.”   Most importantly, it does not limit behavior but rather liberates behavior as you explore the endless ways of fulfilling that mission.  It does not state how the mission will be carried out, but allows the supporters to tap into their creativity to consistently identify ways to further their mission.

The same is true for a personal mission statement.   Your mission should be written with specific enough language to guide and direct your behavior but it should not be so specific that it details how you are to fulfill the mission.  It’s a great process, get started and find your passion.

How can I not help you?

You arrive at your hotel.  You walk up to the check-in desk and get a blank stare from the employee behind the desk.  You tell them that you want to check-in.  Your may or may not get a verbal response as the employee busily starts working on the computer.  Is this a great way to start an interaction with a customer?

As much as I’d like to say that this doesn’t happen a lot, the truth is that this is a pretty common situation.  And these are the folks who shape your first impression of the hotel and they are where you tend to go first when you have a problem.  I am often disappointed by the responses I get from these crucial customer service representatives.  That’s right, if you’re interacting with customers, you are part of customer service.  You have an impact on the customer each and every time you work with them.

Look at your responsibilities and take note of the impact that you have on customers?  What can you do to enhance their experience?  As you look around your organization look for areas where you can improve the service that you and your team provide to your customers.  They’ll thank you for it!