Category Archives: Emotional Intelligence

The amygdala hijack: is it OK to be human in your workplace?

Today this posting is published for HR practitioners on Discuss HR and I thought you might like to read it, too.

Last week I came back from a week’s holiday to news of ‘Plebgate’.  MP Andrew Mitchell had acknowledged his tirade against Downing Street police officers but denied the use of certain words, specifically that he had told them – as logged in the officers’ records of the incident at the time – that they were “plebs”.

Amidst the news reportage The Daily Telegraph published the full police log on 24th September, a contemporaneous record of what – according to the police officer involved – Mr. Mitchell had actually said.  A posting on the paper’s website included a poll with the question, “Has Andrew Mitchell’s integrity been so damaged that he must now resign?”  At the time I read this article, close to 13,000 respondents – an overwhelming 91% – had said yes.

I do wonder how often we look in the mirror.  Who hasn’t lost their temper every now and again and been horrified – shamed and embarrassed – after the event by their choice of language or, at the very least, by the lack of grace they had been able to bring to a situation in which their emotions were high?  Coming back from a week away with my mother I had certainly experienced the occasional sting of strong emotions in response to situations in which my needs were not easily met (though I notice I want to add that I didn’t respond with a string of insults and expletives).

Now you may be wondering:  why do I raise this incident in the context of this blog?  I do it because, despite the increasing talk of emotional intelligence in the work place, I wonder if we’ve really grasped the full implications of everything we’re learning.  Daniel Goleman (amongst others) has done so much to share with us the importance of emotional intelligence and it is by reading his writings that I have become quite familiar with the term “amygdala hijack” – for this is precisely what Andrew Mitchell experienced on the evening of Wednesday, 19th September, 2012.

It seems to me that, in our response to Mr Mitchell’s unfortunate words, we are at risk of going beyond condemning his behaviour to pretend that real people – nice people like us – never feel the sting of strong emotions.  In truth, it’s a very rare person who has never spoken in ways they regret and a rarer person still who has never experienced an amygdala hijack.  In the workplace, such a view can manifest in strange forms.  Where we have power, we can justify the occasional rant as some kind of righteous anger in response to the ineptitude of those we lead, even whilst taking firm action against a member of our frontline staff who has lost his or her temper with a colleague or, horror of horrors, with a customer.

In writing this posting, I don’t want to let Andrew Mitchell off the hook.  His behaviour really wasn’t pretty.  I do, though, wonder if we need to cultivate a more compassionate context for responding to the occasional loss of temper, which recognises that it happens to most of us sometimes.  In such a context, Mr. Mitchell might have been able to make a sincere apology and to know that yes, it is possible to draw a line under an unfortunate incident and move on.  In such a context, we would be slow to question someone’s integrity and quick to forgive.

What would this mean in the workplace?  In the first instance, it might mean providing the kind of training that helps people to understand how an amygdala hijack manifests itself and how they can manage their response both to their own feelings and to the feelings of others.  It might also involve using some kind of structure to support people following such a loss of temper.  This might include support for the person who has lost their temper as well as for anyone who has been on the receiving end.  It might also include support for the kind of dialogue between the people affected which restores understanding and goodwill.  Yes, there would need to be some way of addressing such behaviours if they had significant immediate effect or were regularly used by an individual and even then, I would hope for compassion and understanding for the individuals concerned.

I don’t think I am naive or a misty-eyed idealist, not least because I have had the privilege of practising such an approach in my own life and supporting others in this area:  I know what’s possible and I know that even this kind of restorative dialogue is no ‘soft touch’.  I wonder how you respond though – to Mr. Mitchell’s behaviour as recently reported, to the behaviours of colleagues in your workplace, to the ideas in this posting.  Please share your thoughts.

Handling a knotty discussion with a member of your team – can (s)he make it as a line manager?

Recently, a member of the Training Journal’s discussion forum raised a knotty question – how to handle discussions about the potential for promotion to a line management role with an employee who, whilst technically competent, lacked the “people skills” for the role.  The individual concerned had asked for the opportunity to step up.  His manager wasn’t convinced he could succeed and had told him so.  Still the staff member wanted to further his career in a line management role.

Maybe you’ve encountered this kind of thing before – fielding this kind of request can be a heart-sinking moment.  Even with all the HR wizardry in the world (a clear description of the behaviours needed to succeed as a manager in your organisation, 360 degree feedback which shows where this individual’s strengths and areas for development are and so on), you face the prospect of spending more time than you really want to trying to explain why you aren’t willing to promote him.  Secretly, you may have a concern that his reasons for requesting a promotion have more to do with increasing his pay packet (or status, or some other thing) than with a real desire to manage others.  This can be a real problem when time is already at a premium.

Worse still, the pressure to promote can lead to people taking on roles for which they really don’t have the skill.  This can undermine the morale of those being managed and may have disastrous consequences for the person who has been promoted.

How do you move forward in this kind of situation?

It’s all in the framing

As long as you’re thinking “I have to persuade him he’s not suited to a line management role” and “he doesn’t understand his limitations”, you’re at risk of setting up an impasse – you persuade, he resists, you persuade some more… until you’re both frustrated and exhausted.

There is another way.  A second approach is to take a more open view – to acknowledge your view that your team member is not ready for (and even may never be suited to) a line management role, whilst agreeing to work with him to explore this as a possibility and to do this in a way which keeps the business on track, and keeps his dignity intact – whatever you both discover.

Against this backdrop, you can take a number of steps on a path of exploration:

A step-by-step approach

Here are some of the steps I recommend you take on this path of exploration:

  • Explore his motivations for wanting to follow this path:  It may be obvious and still, the more you can understand his reasons for wanting to become a line manager, the more you can explore with him what ways he can meet his needs whether or not he gets the promotion he desires.  If he says he wants to have more influence in the business, for example, you may discover he’s quite happy to have coaching support to increase his ability to influence – and less concerned about promotion once he has this support;
  • Let him know that promotion is not guaranteed:  Most organisations promote people when a vacancy becomes available.  If this is your policy, you need to explain this from the beginning.  Your team member needs to know the nature of the journey so that (s)he can decide whether or not (s)he wants to go ahead;   
  • Let him know what you’re looking for in your line managers:  You may have a competency model or something similar to help you and even if you don’t, you still need to let your team member know what behaviours you need to see him demonstrate before (yes, before) you’re likely to support a promotion into a line management role.  The more you can help him to understand your expectations, the more he can work towards them as well as to assess, “is this really me?”;
  • Seek feedback from the business:  Whether you have a fancy 360-degree questionnaire or simply time to ask people for their views, ensure that you gather feedback early on in the process about your team member’s strengths for the role and areas in which (s)he will need to develop.  This helps to “keep it real”.  Use this information as the basis for a discussion with your team member:  let him know what people are saying and explore the implications;
  • Test and explore “hard truths”:  One of the most difficult aspects of this kind of exploration is when you see difficulties that your team member doesn’t appreciate – it’s easy to run away from this aspect of the discussion by telling yourself “he just doesn’t get it”.  It’s important to test your understanding with your team member and to speak honestly about your concerns, whilst also leaving ownership with him for his own choices (for example, “John, it sounds as though you believe you have the listening skills you need – is that right?  I think the feedback is telling us staff want more empathy from you, even though you think they should be able to work effectively without your understanding.  I think there’s a risk for you that, because the business can see you don’t see empathy as important (which we do), senior managers may be reluctant to promote you into a line management role.  I can help you to develop in this area but I will only do this on the basis that you understand the importance for your staff of showing them understanding”);
  • Agree a development plan:  A development plan for your team member needs to highlight key strengths and how these can be leveraged to make progress (or how they may limit progress if they are used as the basis for a people management approach).  It also needs to highlight key areas for development – those areas in which your team member needs to make progress in order to be an attractive candidate for promotion;
  • Give support in the form of assignments and coaching:  You can do a great deal to support your team member by giving him assignments which help him to develop in key areas, coupled with effective supervision and coaching.  Is it influencing he wants to develop?  Talk to him about the need to get buy-in from your project steering committee for an increase in funding – discuss tactics, explain why you propose certain actions, allocate actions to him.  A key to your overall success is to take a step-by-step approach, building the skills of your team member over time and making sure that any failures are relatively minor and leave his dignity as well as your business results intact;
  • Include a “get out of jail free card”:  This suggestion takes us right back to the beginning –  you think your team member may not be cut out for a line management role and you may be right.  Still, using persuasion and only persuasion is unlikely to succeed.  At the same time, it’s possible that the more your team member is exposed to the responsibilities of line management the more (s)he will understand this for himself.  However, if (s)he has the faintest sense that you might be waiting to tell him “I told you so” (s)he may be reluctant to share this insight.

The return on your investment

It’s possible that the outcome from this process is that you will be surprised – discovering that, despite your worst fears, your team member slowly develops the skills needed to become a valuable member of your management team.  Going into this process with a willingness to be surprised greatly increases the chances that this may happen.

It’s possible that your worst fears will be confirmed – not only does your team member fail to make any progress towards developing the skills (s)he needs, but (s)he also fails to develop any insight into his need to develop in order to manage others effectively.  This can be frustrating for you and everyone concerned though it does seem unlikely.  I have found that it’s rare for this to happen when so much support has been given.

Finally, it’s possible that your team member will come to understand that, no, this isn’t for me.  If you’ve included the “get out jail free card” I described above, it’s also easy for him to say so.

Perhaps there’s a larger context to consider.  Hopefully, all the actions outlined above will gain the loyalty of the team member concerned – you may well become the manager he remembers with gratitude in years to come.  And if this is the experience of one team member, it’s likely also to impact the experience of your wider team.  You don’t have to spread the word (and nor does your team member) for staff to recognise something special about the organisation they work for.

What are you taking from this posting?  I look forward to your questions and comments below.

Not being heard? Time to do something differently

Recently a friend sent a card by (if I remember rightly) Daily Telegraph cartoonist, Matt.  The card depicted a boardroom scene and the caption was along the lines of “That’s an excellent idea, Miss Smith.  Would one of the men like to put it forward?”  It must have spoken to some real or perceived truth – it made me laugh out loud.

As to that “truth”, it may have been about sexism in the workplace or it may, equally, have been about influencing others – whether you’re a man or a woman, and whether you are seeking to communicate with your seniors, your peers, or those you lead, there will be times when your message isn’t being heard.  When this is the case, what do you do next?

All too often, the key reason our message isn’t being heard is this:  we are expressing it in our own language (be that logical persuasion, using facts and data or by some other means) and assuming others will think about the same issue in the same way.  So, a good place to start is by putting ourselves in the shoes of our audience.  How do those we want to influence think about these things?  This can be hard – if all your boss ever thinks about is how to catch people out who are doing things wrong, you may be reluctant to speak his or her language.  Still, to speak the language of your audience may be enough to transform the conversation into one in which you get heard.  More than this, it may be enough to transform an important relationship, so that you are heard with ease again and again and again.

The Matt cartoon also speaks to a deeper truth – that sometimes you’re just not the person to put forward a message or idea.  If your agenda is to attract approval or appreciation, you may find it hard to stand to one side and still, letting someone else deliver an important message can be an effective way to be heard.  This is one reason why organisations (or rather, people in organisations) commission outside consultants to do research and then deliver a message which isn’t easily heard from people inside the organisation.  It’s hard to speak up as an individual and say “you ask for our ideas but you always shoot them down so we’ve stopped putting them forward”.  It can be more compelling to hear that “members of your board expressed the widespread view that whilst you ask for ideas, you are highly critical of ideas such that people feel it’s not worth offering ideas”.

There are ways to promote an idea without going to the expense of hiring in external consultants (which is, in any case, a rather hit or miss affair).  Savvy leaders know that ‘socialising’ an idea before making a formal presentation is an important part of gaining support for a proposal.  If you’re going into a meeting wondering if your proposal will be approved, you probably haven’t done your homework.

Sometimes, effective leaders make some dramatic gesture to get their message across, like the leader who, after several months of seeking unsuccessfully to engage staff in dialogue about the need to turn their part of the business into profit, announced the closure of the department.  Suddenly staff were ready to talk and, what’s more, to contribute ideas to enable a radical re-shaping of their department and, in this way, to secure its future.

Why is influencing important?  Because the more senior you are, the more you need to work with and through others.  And the more you need to work with and through others, the more you need to be able to gain support for ideas, proposals and plans of action.

I wonder, how does this idea land with you?  It could be that you understand the need to influence and still, you don’t know how – for you, the challenge is in turning this intention into effective action.  Equally, it could be that you find the ideas above uncomfortable and even repulsive – for you, the challenge is squaring the need to influence with values around openness and honesty or even with your preference for getting the work done.

I’d love to hear from you in via the comments box below – how does the idea of influencing others land with you?  What has worked for you?  And where are you stuck and still needing to make progress?

How to be an outstanding leader whilst also being yourself

A few days ago as I walked through my local supermarket I caught a glimpse of an interview quote, inviting the reader to buy a magazine in order to learn more.  The quote was something along the lines of “I won’t cut my hair, because it’s who I am”.  It could equally have said “I won’t change my clothes/ adapt my accent/ take the ear-ring out of my nose…” and many more things besides.  I found myself thinking “No, these things are not who you are.  They’re ways you choose to express yourself”.  Several days after I walked past this magazine, I realised that the headline was pointing me to an important truth for those of us in leadership positions:  we can be outstanding leaders AND be ourselves.  At the same time, we need to be clear on who we really are.

Why is this important?  At one level it’s about fashion in the world of leadership:  it’s so fashionable to be “authentic”.  If you pop the words “authentic leadership” into your search engine you’ll find all sorts of scholarly articles and theory.  A number of authors have written books on the subject.  It’s in vogue on the discussion groups on LinkedIn.  At another level, authentic leadership draws our attention because the challenge of being an outstanding leader whilst also being true to ourselves is one that exercises people in leadership roles – many people at some point in their leadership career find themselves grappling with what appears, on the surface, to be an irreconcilable dichotomy.

Take Jurgen, for example.  Promoted at a young age into a senior leadership role, Jurgen looked around him and formed a view of what it meant to be a leader in his organisation.  He started to adopt the behaviours of his peers, especially those he admired.  In his tough-talking, fast-paced organisation he started to adjust his style to make sure his staff were in no doubt what was expected of them and what the consequences would be if they didn’t deliver the results expected of them.  He reduced his focus on people and increased his emphasis on results, identifying key projects, making plans for each project, allocating work amongst members of his team and tracking results.

Jurgen thought he was doing the right thing but he quickly discovered it wasn’t working.  It wasn’t working because his colleagues – previously his peers and now members of his team – seemed to be offering less cooperation than before so that achieving results was getting more and more difficult.  He didn’t know it but it wasn’t working in the eyes of those who had recruited him either, who expected he would bring a softer approach than other members of the senior management team, in line with their aspirations for a less “macho” and more emotionally intelligent leadership style.  Above all, it wasn’t working for Jurgen because it felt deeply uncomfortable – it just “wasn’t him”.  Jurgen felt like an imposter in the role, because he didn’t feel comfortable doing it the way others were doing it and he thought this was the way it needed to be done.

Jurgen took the initiative to organise a coach, who helped him to understand that he could be himself and still be an outstanding leader.  He developed a statement of values in which authenticity was key.  He dropped the persona he had adopted when he first stepped into his role in favour of an approach that was more natural to him.  It seemed like he was on track.  At the same time, when I met Jurgen a few months later, I noticed that I had a suspicion about some of Jurgen’s behaviours – it seemed possible to me that some of the behaviours he identified with as an expression of his authentic self dated back to a time in his early life and had not been examined since.  He thought he was the person who was always kind to people and he was – but he didn’t know why or even what kindness meant to him.  In moving away from the leadership persona he had adopted to a more “authentic” way of being, Jurgen had stepped into a set of unconscious behaviours which, in turn, were not always effective or even truly him.

Meeting Jurgen prompted me to identify and share some of the things I have seen leaders do who have learnt to be highly effective whilst also remaining true to themselves.  Here are just a few of them along with a few words about how Jurgen has applied them:

First, set your intentions

Jurgen set an intention to be authentic in his role as a leader and, following our conversation, added his intention to continue to develop as an outstanding leader.  This set up what you might call an inner dialogue as he started to explore what it meant to be both.

This was coupled with being clear about his intentions in specific situations, for example when he had to address a performance shortfall in a member of his team.  He sensed that being an outstanding leader in this situation meant addressing the issue and bringing it to a resolution – to an improvement in performance or to the recognition that his team member wasn’t in the right job.  At the same time, he also wanted to embody his core value of kindness and compassion.  He set the intention to explore how he could address the issue with kindness and compassion whilst still bringing it to a clear resolution.

Then, discern between your intentions and the means by which you achieve them

Jurgen realised that in attempting to be kind to his team member, he had been holding back on addressing the issue at all.  He’d let his team member flounder and he’d stood back and watched as colleagues became increasingly frustrated at the levels of performance they witnessed.  As the annual appraisals season approached, Jurgen knew he would be basing his year-end performance rating on behaviours he witnessed but not discussed with his team member.  The more he looked at his approach, the more he realised that it was anything but kind, even though kindness was at the heart of his intentions.

Once he had examined the effects of his existing approach, Jurgen was in a better position to explore what different approach he might take.  At this point, it made sense to him to ask more experienced colleagues how they handled this kind of issue.  He discovered that those he most admired were most likely to address the issue head on.  He also discovered that they were the most skilful in the way they framed the issue.  This gave him the basis for a different approach which was still consistent with his core value of kindness.

Ask yourself, “is this really me?”

Jurgen went one step further, and took time to examine why kindness was so important to him.  In doing so, he became aware of the extent to which he’d taken on a value of his mother’s – sometimes even at his own expense.  Examining his value in this way helped him to decide both to keep this value and to re-frame it.  He decided he needed to include kindness towards himself as an essential part of this value.  He likened it to the oxygen mask in the plane – realising he had to put on his own oxygen mask before helping others.

Jurgen started to develop the habit of examining his beliefs about himself and found that, sometimes, the outcomes surprised him.  He discovered some beliefs he decided to let go, realising he had thought they were his own and finding they were not.  As a result and, over time, he developed a stronger and deeper understanding of himself and greater confidence and self belief.  It seemed paradoxical to him at first and still, alongside this greater sense of self, he found he was less attached to doing things in particular ways – he became more flexible in his approach.  And as he became more flexible in his approach, consciously adapting his behaviour to meet the needs of the situation as well as thinking about what it meant to be authentic, he found his effectiveness as a leader improved.

How about you?  To what extent is it an aspiration you hold:  to be both authentic and effective in your role as a leader?  And how consciously do you explore what it means to be you?  How open are you to new insights about yourself – how conscious are you?  Please share what comes up for you in the comments.

Struggling to stop working?

My brother was in Japan for a few months at the turn of the year where habits of working way exceed our own.  Where else but Japan has a word (Karoshi) for ‘death by overwork’?  The International Business Wiki reports estimates of 10,000 deaths a year from Karoshi in an article on Japanese Work Ethic.  So prevalent is this issue that some companies are warned to reduce the number of hours worked by their employees.

So I was intrigued, a few months back, when the Harvard Business Review’s Morning Advantage included a brief article entitled Want to Play?  It included the reminder that, in 1930, John Maynard Keynes made two predictions about economic growth:  that living standards in “progressive countries” would be four to eight times higher by 2030 (he was right) and that workers would enjoy a 15-hour working week (…mmm… didn’t he get that one wrong?)  Morning advantage points to an essay in Jacobin by Mike Beggs, who offers a number of explanations for Keynes’ miscalculation.  Here’s what they say:

“Theoretically, we could spend our increased wages by choosing to work less, as Keynes predicted, but we don’t.  Instead, we choose to spend our excess cash on commodities – which seems irrational since all of us complain about our lack of free time.  So why don’t we make choices that maximise our pleasure? Well, it’s not so easy, especially since our work habits – productivity over play – are the result of social norms.  A shift to more free time can happen, Beggs notes, but only if it’s a ‘collective one’.”

HBR also points to the possibility of a different future:

“Take HBR author Leslie Perlow, whose research shows that productivity increases at companies that make planned and uninterrupted time off a top priority.  Everyone wins, right?”

I notice how much I resonate with the idea that many of us spend more money on commodities even whilst yearning for more free time.  And yes, it is irrational, because we are not, fundamentally, rational beings.  We don’t always know why we are working so hard – or we have an idea of our reasons for doing so which does not stand close examination.  Equally, we don’t always know why we buy what we buy.

So, on the eve of this Bank Holiday, you might like to take a moment to reflect on the hours you are working and notice – really notice – why.  Notice the things you are telling yourself.  Go deeper and ask yourself, and what does that do for me?  And again, and again, and again… if you do this with openness and curiosity you may be surprised at the needs you are trying to meet and at the emotions – tender, vulnerable, sweet emotions – that accompany new insights…

…Or perhaps, you might want to commit to three days without work.  Each one can be just as good.

Covey’s second habit: start with the end in mind

Photo by Bill
From http://signsoflife.goose24.org/?sign=124

When I learned last month of the death of Stephen Covey, author of the seminal book The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People, I committed to re-read his book and to write a posting about each of his seven habits.  Returning to his book I am reminded of chocolate mousse – it’s so rich you don’t want to eat too much at a time.  So, a month after I wrote about his first habit, I am taking a few moments to write about his second.

Covey’s first habit, “be proactive”, is about taking responsibility for our own lives.  His second habit, “start with the end in mind” is about writing the script we want to follow.  As Covey puts it in this chapter:

“Begin with the end in mind” is based on the principle that all things are created twice.  There’s a mental or first creation, and a physical or second creation to all things”

and later:

And if I do this, day after day my behaviour will change.  Instead of living out of scripts given to me by my own parents or by society or by genetics or my environment, I will be living out of the script I have written from my own self-selected value system.

Writing as a coach, it’s easy to say that much of Covey’s material in this chapter has been written about elsewhere.  NLP offers a model for outcome-oriented rather than problem-oriented thinking, for example.  The film and book The Secret have been immensely popular amongst seekers of wisdom and new insights.  Laura Whitworth and colleagues in their splendid introduction to coaching, Coactive Coaching, offer exercises which are the embodiment of Covey’s second habit and which have become familiar to coaches and their clients around the world.  Indeed, Covey himself readily acknowledges his own sources throughout the book.  To recognise the fact that ideas in this chapter can also be found elsewhere takes nothing away from Covey, who has organised core ideas in a way which illuminates them.

He begins by inviting readers to write the eulogy they would like to have read at their funeral – this really is beginning with the end in mind.  When we engage deeply with this exercise, it provides a powerful context for our decisions and our actions.  This is not just about manifesting the physical possessions we desire:  it’s about understanding the overall context of our lives and the role individual desires have in this context.  It seems unlikely, for example, that a new Mercedes will feature in our self-written eulogy.  The love of friends and family, the contribution we made through our work – these are amongst the things that we may look back on.

Covey also invites people to create a personal mission statement, a statement of our vision and values and how we intend to enact these in practice in the different roles we hold in our life.  He contrasts a life lived in line with this level of personal clarity with one which is guided by centres outside ourselves – the young person for whom friendship is so important that s/he will do nothing that might offend, the executive whose commitment to work is such that s/he constantly prioritises work over family, even the person whose focus is on some kind of enemy.  As I write, I do so with compassion, recognising how much the shift from such external centres to operating from a set of clearly defined personal values is a journey in itself.  (I shared my values on this blog in 2009, and though I revisit them periodically, they have not changed much in the interim).

Given Covey’s recognition that “all things are created twice”, it’s not surprising that he dedicates space in this chapter to visualisation and to affirmations as the means by which we can increase the quality of our first creation.  He also recognises the importance, in the context of both family and organisations, of participation in creating a mission, vision and values which have the full commitment of everyone involved in delivering them.

Covey’s ideas in this chapter are highly practical – writing your own eulogy, writing a personal statement of mission, vision and values, involving members of your family or organisation in writing a shared mission statement.  I could say more about each exercise in turn but this seems to be gilding the lily:  for now I invite you, simply, to try at least one of these exercises and to let me know – how did you get on?  

When it’s time to harvest your dreams

I’m away on holiday this week – on the day this is published I shall be tucked away in Kent on a five-day meditation retreat.  It will be good to turn off the mobile for a few days and to leave all sorts of modern technology behind for a few days.

Preparing for my holiday I wanted to give you something to read whilst I’m away, and decided to borrow the photo above from my dear friend James More.  James and I were briefly at school together and had something in common – farming.  My parents farmed and James also came from a farming family and has gone on to make his career as a consultant to farmers under the name More Rural Consultancy Ltd.  Recently, James was involved in a successful attempt to create a new World Record – with fifty Case Quadtracs (that’s big tractors to you and me) spending five minutes ploughing just one field.

As a farmers’ daughter, this event touches something in me – a part of me which is deeply connected to the land.  But there’s more than this – this successful attempt at a World Record was the fruit of a vision.  I don’t know much about the vision, but I do know that someone had the vision and, having had it, set about making it happen.  This meant finding a suitable site and farmers willing to travel from across the country to join in.  It meant inspiring them to join in.  And it meant handling all the bureaucracy that is involved arranging an official (and yes, in this case, successful) World Record attempt.

If you’re on holiday, too, and even if you’re not, it’s harvest time.  This is a time when you can look at the fruits of your labour and say, it happened because I followed my dream.  It can also be a time when you look forward and ask yourself, what are my dreams for the future?

May your dreams be worthy of you.

Covey’s first habit: be proactive

Following the recent death of Stephen Covey, I have been revisiting his most famous of books, The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People.  On my way to meet a client I take time on the train to read about Covey’s first habit:  be proactive.

In this first habit, Covey targets the opportunity for self-determinism that sits between stimulus and response.  This is about the difference between an unconscious reaction and a carefully chosen response.  Covey uses the story of Viktor Frankl who, in the Nazi death camps in World War II, realised that (in Covey’s words) “he could decide within himself how all of this was going to affect him”.  Covey is careful to differentiate between being proactive and taking the initiative.  He says:

[Proactive] means more than merely taking the initiative.  It means that as human beings, we are responsible for our own lives.  Our behaviour is a function of our decisions, not our conditions.  We can subordinate feelings to values.  We have the initiative and responsibility to make things happen.
This assertion tests me – because I hold the view that emotions have a wisdom to which we need to listen.  But quickly I settle into an understanding of what Covey is saying.  Given my own values for example, I would choose to view the emotion of anger as a sign that some need is not being met and to recognise that I am telling myself some story about how someone else is responsible.  If I act on the stimulus – react – without thinking, I am likely to lose my temper.  If I respond in line with my values, I am bound to take time out to process my emotions before choosing my response.  So far, so good.

Covey offers a further idea which is the consequence of taking this kind of responsibility and which challenges me greatly:

[…] until a person can say deeply and honestly “I am what I am today because of the choices I made yesterday”, that person cannot say, “I choose otherwise”.

Later he refines this idea by adding:
It’s not what happens to us, but our response to what happens to us that hurts us.  Of course, things can hurt us physically or economically and can cause sorrow.  But our character, our basic identity, does not have to be hurt at all.
And further:
Any time we think the problem is “out there”, the thought is the problem”. 
When we think the challenges in our businesses are down to the market, when we think we have a “problem” member of staff, when we complain that our wife/husband/boss/sister doesn’t understand us… when we wish that things outside us were different, we are not being proactive in Covey’s use of this term.  When we focus our attention on  those things we can do something about, we are being proactive.
Covey offers a number of ways to apply this first habit, of which I highlight just one:
1.  For a full day, listen to your language and to the language of the people around you.  How often do you use and hear reactive phrases such as “If only,” “I can’t,” or “I have to”?
Please let me know how you get on.

Managing up and across

Increasingly, business takes place within a “matrix”.  Managers manage the work of people who are not their direct reports.  People manage projects whose success depends on the inputs of people across the organisation.  Priorities shift and change.  Priorities compete.  Work styles clash.  And that’s before you factor in the boss – have you noticed yet that the boss also needs to be managed?  Not surprisingly, this new reality is rarely reflected in the literature.  A wide range of good research was conducted in a bygone era – before the matrixed organisation gained ground.


So, I was intrigued to notice recently that the Harvard Business Review is due to publish the HBR Guide to Managing Up and Across.  This is what they say about it:



Does your boss make you want to scream? Do you have more than one boss? Do you spend your day corralling people who don’t report to you? Do you work across departmental silos? Collaborate with outside contractors?


Then you know that managing up and across your company is critical to doing your job well. It’s all about understanding your boss’s and colleagues’ priorities, pressures, and work styles. You need to manage up and across not just because you may have a problem boss, an incompetent colleague, or fabulously hairy projects that touch all parts of your organization. You need to manage up and across, for example, to get your marketing and sales folks to see that your project will help them meet their goals, too; to establish authority with higher ups so they’ll bless your new product ideas; to secure people’s time for a new team when they’re already feeling overextended.


The Guide to Managing Up and Across will help you get the information and resources you need to solve your challenges, increase your effectiveness, and make your day-to-day worklife more enjoyable.

The Guide to Managing Up and Across will help you get better at:


• Getting what you need from people who don’t report to you

• Coping with micromanaging, conflict-aversive, or generally incompetent bosses

• Discovering what drives your colleagues

• Partnering with your boss

• Selling your ideas up and across your company

• Making the most of your boss’s influence

• Establishing a shared vision and commitment

• Juggling multiple bosses’ priorities

• The art of persuasion—tailoring your pitch based on your audience

I haven’t read it (yet) and still, I do know that it’s addressing challenges that we increasingly face in the workplace.

Wanting to influence your staff? Listen up!

Research at the Columbia Business School has recently highlighted the role of listening in being influential.  Researchers asked co-workers both to assess their colleagues’ skills and habits and to assess how influential they are.  They conducted this research with students on MBA programmes as well as with executives in organisations.

The research findings do not entirely dispel the myth of the charismatic leader.  Rather, researchers found that the most influential people had strong skills both in listening and in expressing their point of view.  Why is listening so important?  On the one hand, listening helps leaders gather information about those they lead which they can use to tailor an influencing approach.  On the other hand, listening – really listening – builds trust amongst staff.

In truth, I am reminded of Gary Chapman’s little book The Five Love Languages:  The Secret to Love that Lasts.  Although its intended audience is a long way from the world of business, Chapman’s thesis – that we all like to give and receive love in five different ways – offers insights which – surely – can equally be applied in the workplace.

And if you want to learn more about the research from Columbia Business School, including five key ways in which you can listen effectively, just follow this link to read a summary.