|
A Personal Story from Bud
Haney
We all subscribe to the idea that our people are
among our greatest assets, recognizing that outstanding
organizations tend to have superior people policies and,
on the face of it, superior people. Accordingly, many of
us spend a huge amount of time chasing the rainbow,
convinced that we will find a pot full of those perfect
people at the end of it. Instead, we should be
focusing on identifying the potential of those who
already make up our teams. And therein lies the secret
of those organizations with a people-based competitive
advantage—it’s not just that they identify and recruit
great people (although that does help), but that they
work with the people they have to make them great, to
find their unique attributes that can be developed and
employed effectively within the organization, and to
build the sort of serious competitive advantage that
only good people can confer.
Find the pattern in this series of numbers: 8, 11,
15, 5, 14, 1, 7, 6, 10, 13, 3, 12, 2. If you’re stumped,
you’ll find the answer at the bottom of this chapter.
Once you’ve looked at it, read on.
So what? Well, the simple point is that looking at
the familiar in an entirely different way can sometimes
produce results that we scarcely expect. Your people are
like that—you assume that because you’ve worked with
them for awhile, you know what they are and what they’re
capable of. That’s true, but only to a point. Uncovering
genuine hidden potential requires a shift in the way you
evaluate your people.
Take the following actions to get started.
1. Uncover Your Team’s Career Goals,
Aspirations, Likes/Dislikes, and Strengths/Weaknesses
You can ’t begin this process without knowing a lot
about each member of your team. Start by talking with
them regularly. Find out what they like to do. Research
published in a 1999 Harvard Business Review
showed that people excel at jobs that interest them more
than they excel at jobs that seem to be a good fit for
their education, skills or experience. Find out what
your people enjoy doing, their career plans, and their
business and life aspirations. Don’t limit yourself to
informal chats. Use more formal means like the Profiles
Checkpoint Multi-Rater System, and psychometric
assessments like the ProfileXT, to determine the
particular strengths of your key assets. The authors of
the HBR research cited above put it perfectly: “…the
best way to keep your stars is to know them better than
they know themselves – and then use that information to
customize the career of their dreams.”
2. Make Better Use of
Strengths
When you feel like you have a good grasp of each team
member’s strengths, start looking for new ways to use
them. Brainstorm ways to apply these strengths in new
and imaginative ways that enhance the roles of each of
your people and that address problems that you haven’t
previously been able to address. In one successful
example we recently observed in the IT industry, a
talented project manager was put into the role of sales
manager, not because she knew an awful lot about sales
or had a gleaming sales record—quite the contrary—but
because she was particularly good at organizing
campaigns, marshalling resources, motivating her team to
action, and seeing initiatives through to the end. Take
off the blinders when it comes to applying strengths in
new ways.
3. Turn Weaknesses into Strengths
In the movie Enemy of the State, Gene
Hackman tells Will Smith, “…in guerrilla warfare you
gotta turn your strengths into weaknesses…if they’re big
and you’re small, then you’re fast and they’re
slow…you’ve got to work with what you’ve got.” You must
do the same with your people. Look at those
characteristics that you currently perceive as
shortcomings, and then look at situations where those
attributes might be utilized to your advantage. After
all, most weaknesses are just overused strengths. |
|
For example, a customer service representative who’s
just too assertive to “put up or shut up” with angry
customers may actually make a very successful
salesperson, capable of overcoming objections not easily
overcome by others. Consider the marketing executive who
comes up with killer campaigns but just can’t seem to
follow them through to the end. Focus that person solely
on developing the creative campaigns and assign project
management and completion to someone better suited. Look
at every shortcoming you currently perceive in your team
members, determine where a weakness might become a
strength, and figure out how you can capitalize upon it.
You’ll be amazed at the results.
4. Feedback, Feedback, Feedback
In a recent study, 25 percent of employees said that
one of their main reasons for changing jobs was lack of
feedback from management about their performance. Make
it a formal objective to provide positive feedback on a
job well done to every one of your people at least
weekly. This requires you and your management team to
actively seek opportunities to provide feedback. Not
only does this increase the interest level in the job
being done (we all like to be recognized), but it also
helps to reinforce positive behavior and performance at
the expense of negative alternatives. Also, experience
shows that when you provide feedback to the team,
they’ll provide feedback to you.
If you’ve been searching for a competitive advantage,
then the answer just might be under your nose. Before
you start exploring more exotic sources, look at the
people who are driving your company right now. You’ll
find untold treasure buried behind those familiar faces
you see every day.
Pattern
in the numbers?
If you are familiar with numbers and number-series
puzzles, you are probably naturally inclined to
calculate the mathematical relationship between 8 and
11, and then between 11 and 15, and so on until you can
speculate as to the mathematical progression – and there
is none! The numbers are arranged alphabetically!
Your people are so familiar to you, but
if you look at them a little differently, you can learn
an awful lot more about what can make them great for you
and your organization.
(Thanks to Donna Engelson of Profiles National Capital
for this teaser.)
*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.
"Those who are blessed with the most
talent don't necessarily outperform everyone else. It's
the people with follow-through who excel."
– Mary Kay Ash, founder of Mary Kay cosmetics company
“Efficiency is doing better what is already being
done."
– Peter Drucker, human organization expert
"Do a little more each day than you think you possibly
can." – Lowell Thomas, writer and broadcaster |