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    I write this blog. It does not represent anyone else's opinions or perspectives. Regardless of employers or clients or any other associations, this is my blog and it does not speak for anyone else. I have learned that perception is more powerful than reality. So, we get to experience the joys of claiming and disclaiming. Isn't that super!


    © Copyright 2004-2011
    Toby Getsch
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Knocking the exuberance out of employees

Ahhh… Yes!  Well said!  Now get all the hiring managers and fake leaders to learn this so they can get the heck out of the way and let the great people do great work!  (This is a copied post from Creating Passionate Users.  I did not write any of this.  I am not taking any of the credit.  I am just trying to amplify by blog.) 

Robotemployees

In an earlier post I said, “If you asked the head of a company which employee they’d prefer: the perfect team player who doesn’t rock the boat or the one who is brave enough to stand up and fight for something rather than accept the watered-down group think that maintains the status quo (or makes things worse), who would they SAY they’d choose? Who would they REALLY choose?

In his book Re-imagine”, Tom Peters says, “We will win this battle… and the larger war… only when our talent pool is both deep and broad. Only when our organizations are chock-a-block with obstreperous people who are determined to bend the rules at every turn…”

So yes, I’m thinking Mr. CEO of Very Large Company would say that their company should take the upstart whatever-it-takes person over the ever-compromising team player. “If that person shakes us up, gets us to rethink, creates a little tension, well that’s a Good Thing”, the CEO says. riiiiiiiiiight. While I believe most CEOs do think this way, wow, that attitude reverses itself quite dramatically the futher you reach down the org chart. There’s a canyon-sized gap between what company heads say they want (brave, bold, innovative) and what their own middle management seems to prefer (yes-men, worker bees, team players). “

I’m not done with my horse-training-as-universal-metaphor phase, so here’s another thing I learned from the Parelli Natural Horsemanship conference:

“Too many people fall into the my robot is better than your robot trap… and knock the exuberance out of their horse. What you’re left with is a well-trained robot, not a curious, playful, mentally and emotionally balanced living creature.”

“Hmmmm”, I thought, “that sounds an awful lot like some of the companies I’ve worked for.” Not that you’d ever in a million years get them to admit that. Possibly not even to themselves. But the proof is in their practices. Of course some argue that exuberance on the job is not necessarily a good thing. That too much passion leads to problems. I say BS on that one. Real passion means you love the profession, the craft, the domain you’re in. And that may or may not happen to coincide with a passion for your current employer. When some folks talk about too much passion for a job, they’re usually referring to something a little less healthy… the thing that lets your employer take advantage of you, having you work round the clock because of their bad scheduling, or because they refuse to say “no” to clients, or because you have a manager that wants to look good to his manager… and you’re the lucky one chosen to be the “hero.”

If you knock out exuberance, you knock out curiosity, and curiosity is the single most important attribute in a world that requires continuous learning and unlearning just to keep up. If we knock out their exuberance, we’ve also killed their desire to learn, grow, adapt, innovate, and care. So why do we do it?

Why Robots Are the Best Employees

1) They don’t challenge the status quo

2) They don’t ask those uncomfortable questions

3) They’re 100% obedient

4) They don’t need “personal” days.

5)… because they don’t have a personal life

6) They never make the boss look bad (e.g. stupid, incompetent, clueless, etc.)

7) They dress and talk the way you want them to

8 ) They have no strongly-held opinions

9) They have no passion, so they have nothing to “fight” for

10) They are always willing to do whatever it takes (insane hours, etc.)

11) They are the ultimate team players

12) They don’t complain when you micromanage (tip: micromanaging is in fact one of the best ways to create a robot)

13) They don’t care what their workspace is like, and don’t complain if they don’t have the equipment they need

14) They’ll never threaten your job

15) They make perfect scapegoats

16) They get on well with zombies
Zombiefunction_2

And while I’m here… parents do this as well. Admit it. We have all wished that our children (for whom we worked so hard to instill a fierce independence) would be strong-willed, exuberant, questioning–everywhere but at home. I’ve never really wanted Skyler to be a robot, but oh how I’ve wished for a robot mode… ; )

Source: Knocking the exuberance out of employees
Originally published on Fri, 06 Oct 2006 22:05:39 GMT by Kathy Sierra

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