Seth Godin
Organizations are built on the work of people who
don’t get paid very much, don’t receive sufficient respect and are
understandably wary of the promises they’ve been hearing for years.
Calling these folks the
bottom of the org chart doesn’t help.
Imagine that throughout
your career you were paid as little as legally possible, the last to be hired
and the first to be laid off. Imagine that the boss gets more vacation days,
doesn’t have to clock in and out, and is actually given control over how he
spends his time.
Why is it surprising to
bosses, then, that some workers respond to this arrangement by doing as little
work as possible?
Here’s the thing: people
actually want to do a good job. They want to be proud of their work, they
appreciate being engaged, they thrive when they have some measure of control
over their day.
Too often, though, the
optimistic leader meets the pessimistic front line and distrust undermines all
the good intent. The boss loses patience and reverts to the test-and-measure,
trust-no-one, scientific-management tradition of dehumanizing the very humans
who make the whole project work.
And so, back to being
mediocre. Back to high turnover, low trust, no care. Back to workers who don’t
believe and bosses who are now cynics.
Mostly, back to an
ordinary organization that’s like so many others.
There’s an alternative.
But it’s a process, not an event.
Step 1: A
commitment, from the top, that this place is going to be different. The commitment is
open-ended. It involves leading and showing up and keeping promises, for months
and years into the future. It’s non-cynical, and it views leadership as an
opportunity, the possibility of serving customers at the very same time you
inspire and enable employees.
This is going to take a
long time, and it’s not going to be the cheapest path. It turns out, though, in
industries where people matter (which is more and more of the work we do) that
this path pays for itself eventually.
Step 2:
Hire for attitude, not for learned skills. You can teach
someone to do just about anything. It’s far more difficult to build an instinct
to care. When you hire trustworthy people who are willing to trust you, you
have an opportunity to build trust, which enables communication, which allows
you to teach, which upgrades everything.
If you are in a hurry to
assemble a group of people who can ‘do the work’, you will end up with folks
who merely needed a job. On the other hand, if you are willing to invest in
people who are enrolled in the journey you’re on, you will end up with a team.
[Corollary: Fire for
attitude, fix for skills. The attitudes you put up with will become the
attitudes of your entire organization. Over time, every organization becomes
what is tolerated]
Step 3:
Be clear in actions and words about what’s important. It doesn’t do any
good to hire for attitude but only reward for short-term results. If you reward
a cynic merely because he got something done, you’ve made it clear to everyone
else that cynicism is okay. If you overlook the person who is hiding mistakes
because his productivity is high, then you are rewarding obfuscation and
stealth.
Who gets the employee of
the month parking space? Who gets laid off?
People
are watching you. They’re not listening to your words as much as they’re
seeking to understand where the boundaries and the guard rails lie, because
they’ve learned from experience that people who do what gets rewarded, get
rewarded.
Hint: if you tell people
something is important but fail to give them the tools and the support and the
training that they need to do that important thing, you’ve just told them that
it’s not actually important.
Step 4:
Be clear and consistent about how we do things around here.
It’s going to be a long time before people act like
they own the place. After all, you own the place and you don’t even act like
you do most of the time.
This job
is important. It feeds my family. It pays the rent. It’s connected to my
self-esteem. I will act in the interest of my family, not your invisible
shareholders.
Step 5:
Your problem is not their problem. The people who
build the foundation of your business have plenty of things to worry about.
Your narrative about your day is not one of them.
Over time, it’s
reasonable to expect that an engaged and respectful working environment will
lead to ever more big-picture thinking. But it’s naïve and self-defeating to
expect a 20-year-old who’s been on the job for a week to make a connection
between the customer who just walked in, your big wholesale account, the loan
that’s due soon and the espresso he just pulled.
Every day, you’re going
to be tested on these five principles. Every day, there’s going to be a moment
of urgency, a shortcut presented, a confusion. And in that moment, the first
principle is going to come into question.
But this is the
foundation, it’s not the bottom. This is the source for all your possibility,
for the change you seek to make.
Isn’t it worth it?
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