August 27, 2007
Bosses: Start With
What’s Good and Focus on Strengths
Imagine that you
arrive home after a long day at work. Your spouse is waiting for you. He
asks you to grab a cup of coffee and to meet him in the home office. You
do what he asks, and you find him sitting across the desk waiting for
you to take your seat. You sit down and he says, “I’ve been thinking
about your performance over the last six months and I’ve come up with a
list of things you need to improve. Let me run down the list and let’s
come up with a development plan.”
And what would be
your response? “What the - #?@! Are you kidding me?! After all I do
around here, this is how you show your appreciation! You have a ‘list’
for me?!” If you’re like anyone I know, you wouldn’t be happy.
The question is,
“Would this ever really happen?” The answer: It happens in companies
every day. Most managers focus on what’s bad about employees, not what’s
good about them. For many managers, it’s not all their fault. This is
what they have been taught: Focus on the weaknesses and an employee will
get better.
Well, they’ve been
taught wrong. Why would this strategy succeed at work and fail miserably
at home? It won’t. We resent unbalanced feedback, and we feel
shortchanged and unappreciated when our managers or loved ones put the
spotlight only on our faults.
This is a serious
issue in business. Do you know why most employees leave companies? If
you answered money, try again. Money consistently comes in third place
or lower. Research shows that this is the number one answer: “I left
because of my boss.”
The late Don
Clifton, former CEO of the Gallup Organization, and Jim Harter, Gallup’s
chief scientist, discovered in their research that “the greatest gains
in human development are based on investment in what people do best.”
Martin Seligman, co-founder of the science of Positive Psychology, has
found in his studies that people who engage their strengths are more
successful – and they are happier.
Consider the Miami
Heat, the 2006 champions of the NBA. Shaquille O’Neill is one of the
worst free-throw shooters in the history of the NBA, yet he led the Heat
to their first championship ever. Did Miami win by O’Neill increasing
his free-throw shooting percentage by just under 1 percent (he went from
46.1 percent to 46.9 percent), or did they do it by leveraging his
talent and letting other players, like Dwayne Wade, bring out their best
game?
We know the answers.
Success comes when people do what they do best. If you don’t get this,
you’ll be the reason your employees leave your company. You’ll be the
reason your children don’t want to be around you. Focusing only on
weaknesses leads to bad results.
So what can you do
right now if you’re a manager or a parent? Start by looking for what
your employees, or your children do well. What do they love to do? When
do they succeed? What strengths do they use most? Then give them more
opportunities to use these strengths. Look for ways they can apply them.
Partner them with people who can help them do their best even better,
and work around their lesser strengths. And don’t forget to tell them,
“I know what you do around here and I appreciate it.”
Imagine what your
company would be like, and what your family would be like, if everyone
focused first on what’s good.
Focus on strengths.
David J. Pollay is
an expert in the cutting-edge field of Positive Psychology. He is
president of The Momentum Project. Mr. Pollay holds a Master’s Degree in
Applied Positive Psychology from the University of Pennsylvania, and an
Economics Degree from Yale University. Email him your thoughts and
stories at
david@themomentumproject.com, or call
561.265.1165.
© 2007 David J. Pollay.
Distributed by North Star Writers Group. May not be republished without permission.
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