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Beyond Manipulating and Motivating to Leading
and Inspiring
By Jim Clemmer
"People do work for money – but they work even more for meaning
in their lives. In fact, they work to have fun. Companies that ignore
this fact are essentially bribing their employees and will pay the price
in a lack of loyalty and commitment." - Jeffrey Pfeffer, "Six
Dangerous Myths About Pay," Harvard Business Review
We've known for decades that money doesn't motivate most people
to higher levels of performance. In his seminal 1959 book, The Motivation
to Work, Frederick Herzberg identified money as a "hygiene factor."
If we feel we're not fairly compensated, lack of money can de-motivate.
But once we feel we're treated fairly, the promise of more money doesn't
sustain higher energy and mobilize inspired performance.
Numerous studies over the last few decades have shown that when it comes
to understanding what really energizes and mobilizes, there's a huge we/they
gap between managers and frontline people. For example, in an article
entitled "Mastering the ABCs of Organizations," John R. Throop
cites a study of computer programmers who were asked to identify the top
10 factors that provided the highest degree of motivation in their jobs.
The programmers' top three were: full appreciation for work done; feeling
that they were in on things; and, sympathetic help with personnel problems.
The programmers' managers, when asked what these factors would be, predicted
rather different priorities: wages, working conditions, and fair discipline.
When confronting morale problems, managers will often succumb to the Victimitis
virus and blame the declining work ethic, attitudes of entitlement, softening
values, the welfare state, or any number of societal factors. But these
factors – which are mostly about doing the least work for the most
money – are more imagined than real. Studies show that people's
real needs are much less mercenary than most managers believe. People
want to take pride in their work, belong to a winning team, and be part
of an organization they can believe in.
In fact, the morale crisis so prevalent in organizations today is primarily
the result of disappointment in these needs not being met. Ultimately,
the problem is a leadership vacuum. The hand-wringing, teeth-gnashing
managers, frustrated by their organizational energy crisis, often ask
"why don't people want to work any more?" But that's the wrong
question, based on the wrong assumptions. The question to ask –
with a long gaze in the leadership mirror – is, "why don't
people want to work here?"
Managers try to motivate. Leaders inspire. Managers try to understand
how to motivate people. Leaders try to understand why people aren't feeling
motivated. Managers try to add more drivers to increase mobilization and
energy. Leaders try to identify, prioritize, and remove the biggest resistors.
Most managers recognize that one of their key roles is "motivating"
others. They also recognize that a key to motivation is empowerment. But
it's too often a lot of empty "leaderspeak." For all that the
popular "E" word has been bandied about in the last few years,
not much has changed in many organizations.
There are many reasons why empty empowerment rhetoric is so widespread
today. One of the most common is confusion about (or misapplication of)
intrinsic or internal motivation (leadership) versus extrinsic or external
motivators (management). In his article "Empowerment: The Emperor's
New Clothes," Harvard professor Chris Argyris outlines this difference:
"If management wants employees to take more responsibility for their
own destiny, it must encourage the development of internal commitment.
As the name implies, internal commitment comes largely from within...by
definition, internal commitment is participatory and very closely allied
with empowerment. The more that management wants internal commitment from
its employees, the more it must try to involve employees in defining work
objectives, specifying how to achieve them, and setting stretch targets."
The power of using employee involvement to build internal commitment is
both measurable and impressive. One organization made a massive effort
to involve everyone in their planning process. (In our consulting work,
there's an old adage that we frequently quote to clients: "If they
help plan the battle, they won't battle the plan.") A year later,
the company's absenteeism dropped by 300% – and saved millions of
dollars!
Excerpted from Jim's bestseller, The
Leader's Digest: Timeless Principles for Team and Organization Success.
View the book's unique format and content, Introduction and Chapter
One, and feedback at www.theleadersdigest.com.
This book is a companion book to Growing
the Distance: Timeless Principles for Personal, Career, and Family
Success. Jim Clemmer is an internationally acclaimed keynote
speaker, workshop/retreat leader, and management team developer
on leadership, change, customer focus, culture, teams, and personal
growth. His web site is www.clemmer.net.
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