|
| |
Motivation What Works?
by: William Frank Diedrich
Blame and criticism are highly overrated as motivators. You already know this.
Think about it. When you spent a lot of time trying to correct someone--an
employee, your spouse, your parent, your child, anyone--did it work? When
someone was blaming and critical of you, did it work? Like most of us, you
probably felt the blaming was unfair or inappropriate. The problem is that
blaming and criticism don't inspire us. If you are sensitive, they make you feel
small. There is an answer.
Blaming and criticism arise out of frustration. We see that the behavior of
another is not what we want, and so we try to blame it away. As I look back on
my careers as a teacher, coach, executive, and consultant I can see all of the
times I was ineffective as a critic. Blaming and criticism may serve you as a
way of venting your frustration, but they don't get the job done. The result is
continuous struggle and/or removing the person from your sight. We stop talking
to our child or spouse. We move the troublesome employee to another department
or do our best to avoid them. There is a better way.
We tell ourselves that we tried and that we just couldn't succeed in getting
them to change. The problem, of course, is that we were trying to change the
wrong person. In fact, we cannot change other people. We can only change
ourselves. Our attempts to change others create frustration, stress, and
blaming. Relationships become strained and dysfunctional (meaning "not
working"). Yet the answer that we thought was in the other person was within us
all along.
You may be skeptical at this point. After all, you had good intentions. You knew
what the other person needed to do to be more effective or happier. You were
right. They were the problem. Yet, the question is still nagging us. Did
criticism and blaming work? Was it effective in producing the result you wanted?
Be honest. It didn't work, did it? This doesn't mean that you blame yourself.
Blaming and criticizing yourself doesn't work any better. What does work?
When we blame or criticize anyone, including ourselves, we are focused on what
we don't want. All of our emotional energy flows into the negative. Most of what
we do and say from a blaming mode actually serves to maintain or worsen the
situation. We expect people to misbehave, screw up, or fail in some way. We get
so emotionally invested in our judgment of their performance that we start
needing for them to fail. Their failures reassure us that we were right. Their
failures justify our negative opinion. Our focus on what we don't want helps us
to create what we don't want.
Their failures justify our image of self as good, intelligent, or competent. An
example would be the manager who blames and criticizes the employee who doesn't
perform. He's failing because there is something wrong with him (lazy, not
smart, no discipline). It can't be me; I'm a competent manager. By convincing
ourselves about what is wrong with the other person we prevent ourselves from
finding new pathways to reaching them. Our judgment becomes an impenetrable wall
that blocks us from seeing any possibilities for success.
When we blame, don't see the other person as real. We fail to consider their
needs and concerns, their view of the world. We resist them as people. Their
behavior is inconvenient, painful, or disruptive. It gets in the way of me
making my goals. One of the biggest complaints I hear from people in the
workplace is the lack of respect and consideration they experience at work. They
believe that their managers don't really care about them.
So, what's the answer? It's never easy, but it is possible. First we need a
vision. You know what you don't want. What do you want? If this level of
performance is not okay--if this behavior is not okay--what is? Clearly state
what you want. Clearly tell people what the vision is. Align yourself with that
vision. Do you want a workplace (or any other group you are in) where people are
treated with care and respect? Do you want a place where people feel good? Do
you want peak performance? Whatever you want, be it. Communicate it clearly.
Give people specific positive feedback on how they are succeeding. Offer
corrective feedback when people fall short. Ask them what they need. Ask for
feedback from them on how you are doing at manifesting your vision. Listen and
make changes.
Second, always talk to people with care. Don't get caught up in the ineffective
strategy of thinking people don't deserve your respect. Offer your help. Do all
that you can to create processes and relationships that support them in doing
well. If they refuse to do well, find out why. Sometimes in the workplace people
refuse to improve or change. Don't judge them for this. Maybe the job isn't for
them. Maybe this organization is not for them. If you can't help them to change,
see if someone else can. If no one can help them to change, help them to go.
Refuse to accept chronic behavior that doesn't fit with the vision.
At the same time, give lots of specific praise for good work. Constantly
reinforce people, and never take good work for granted. What you focus on
expands. What we reinforce we strengthen. If we constantly focus on appreciating
people for successes, we increase our successes.
Listen to the way people talk to each other. Challenge negative comments that
are "normal". Understand the dissatisfaction that is behind the comment, and
help people find appropriate ways to address it. Do not accept negative talk as
a way of life.
If you want to transform your workplace (or any group you are a part of), you
need to be a visionary. You need to be so into your vision that you live it
every day. Mistakes are opportunities to make positive corrections, to help
people, and to solve problems. Blaming and criticism are like shooting yourself
in the foot. Raise your aim to a higher level. See and encourage the best in
people. Believe in their ability to add to this vision. Give them the tools and
the feedback to help them. Include them in the vision by listening to them;
providing direct, honest communication; and treating people with the utmost care
and respect.
About The Author
William Frank Diedrich is a speaker, executive coach, and the author of Beyond
Blaming: Unleashing Power and Passion in People and Organizations. William
offers keynotes and workshops on leadership and moving beyond blaming. William
also offers a free online newsletter, Transformation Times. Learn more about
William at http://noblaming.com.
| |
|