They say we have to do what we're passionate about and what will motivate us. Is that a job? A salary? A promotion? A career change? A new relationship? A new city?
To say we have to follow our passion isn't the entire task. Dan Pink looks at 50 behavioral triggers that motivate us.
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June 27, 2019
What Motives You?
written by
Kneale Mann
tags:
book,
business,
clever,
communication,
create,
culture,
Daniel Pink,
drive,
human,
Kneale Mann,
leadership,
motivation,
passion,
performance,
presentation,
self awareness,
think,
you
June 24, 2019
Deciding Decisions Decidedly
A choice can require additional data or more time. Members of the team need further deliberation to make an informed call. The customer has to check budget allocations. You're unsure it’s aligned with the overall strategy.
Waiting can be justified but excuses can also be the reason we wait. Some decisions require time, others aren't made because we're in the way.
We look for leadership to be decisive and crisp. It’s about helping people get better, keeping everyone on track, and getting stuff done. But it isn't always smooth in real life. How often have you finally pulled the pin and the relief quickly replaces your fear?
Some inspiration as we deliberate:
The only person you really have control over is yourself.
Deborah Reber
It is in your moments of decision that your destiny is shaped.
Tony Robbins
When you make the right decision, it doesn't really matter what anyone else thinks.
Caroline Kennedy
Peacefulness follows any decision, even the wrong one.
Rita Mae Brown
Almost any decision is better than no decision at all.
Brian Tracy
Once you make a decision, the universe conspires to make it happen.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Once we make the decision, we can stop deciding.
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Waiting can be justified but excuses can also be the reason we wait. Some decisions require time, others aren't made because we're in the way.
We look for leadership to be decisive and crisp. It’s about helping people get better, keeping everyone on track, and getting stuff done. But it isn't always smooth in real life. How often have you finally pulled the pin and the relief quickly replaces your fear?
Some inspiration as we deliberate:
The only person you really have control over is yourself.
Deborah Reber
It is in your moments of decision that your destiny is shaped.
Tony Robbins
When you make the right decision, it doesn't really matter what anyone else thinks.
Caroline Kennedy
Peacefulness follows any decision, even the wrong one.
Rita Mae Brown
Almost any decision is better than no decision at all.
Brian Tracy
Once you make a decision, the universe conspires to make it happen.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Once we make the decision, we can stop deciding.
__________________________________________________________________
written by
Kneale Mann
tags:
budget,
business,
choice,
choose,
collaborate,
control,
decision,
done,
happen,
idea,
Kneale Mann,
leader,
leadership,
procrastinate,
social media,
strategy,
stuff,
team,
universe,
wisdom
June 15, 2019
Fix the Window
Years ago, I worked at an organization that did a company-wide survey on various issues such as compensation, benefits, ability to advance, collaboration, leadership, communication, and others. The item that was surprisingly high on the list was management’s inability to deal with non-performance.
Money is always high on the list, pay people properly. The ability to advance and grow is up there as well, offer an environment where people can thrive and improve. But what may have appeared to be a minor issue when they crafted the survey became a big topic of discussion.
Accepted Behavior
When we dug deeper, it was clear that employees wanted to be treated fairly which is no surprise but things that were tougher to measure like favoritism and compassion came to the forefront.
One stakeholder said she had grown tired of seeing others in her department being allowed to show up late for meetings, unprepared, miss deadlines, and nothing was done about it. Another mentioned he had cared less and less about his department because his boss was doing the same. In “The Tipping Point”, Malcolm Gladwell calls this the broken window hypothesis.
Gap Analysis
This is where something small turns into something that can paralyze your organization which is leadership’s inability to deal with people showing up late for meetings, not getting their work done, or playing favorites. Those little things can add up to a feeling or an attitude you can't quite describe and it can hurt a company at the core.
There are data that shows close to a trillion dollars in lost revenue just in North America each year is attributed to disengaged employees. The challenge is committing to engagement.
The cost of great people isn't only measured by competitive compensation, pension contribution, and three weeks' vacation.
__________________________________________________________________
Money is always high on the list, pay people properly. The ability to advance and grow is up there as well, offer an environment where people can thrive and improve. But what may have appeared to be a minor issue when they crafted the survey became a big topic of discussion.
Accepted Behavior
When we dug deeper, it was clear that employees wanted to be treated fairly which is no surprise but things that were tougher to measure like favoritism and compassion came to the forefront.
One stakeholder said she had grown tired of seeing others in her department being allowed to show up late for meetings, unprepared, miss deadlines, and nothing was done about it. Another mentioned he had cared less and less about his department because his boss was doing the same. In “The Tipping Point”, Malcolm Gladwell calls this the broken window hypothesis.
Gap Analysis
This is where something small turns into something that can paralyze your organization which is leadership’s inability to deal with people showing up late for meetings, not getting their work done, or playing favorites. Those little things can add up to a feeling or an attitude you can't quite describe and it can hurt a company at the core.
There are data that shows close to a trillion dollars in lost revenue just in North America each year is attributed to disengaged employees. The challenge is committing to engagement.
The cost of great people isn't only measured by competitive compensation, pension contribution, and three weeks' vacation.
__________________________________________________________________
written by
Kneale Mann
June 11, 2019
What's That?
It is an emotion related to natural inquisitive behavior such as exploration, investigation and learning, evident by observation in human and many animal species. The term can also be used to denote the behavior itself being caused by the emotion of curiosity.
So with that in mind...
Stay curious for learning. Stay curious about improving. Stay curious through searching. Stay curious like a child. Stay curious about now. Stay curious in life. Stay curious about others. Stay curious about learning. Stay curious for you. Stay curious through listening. Stay curious through living. Stay curious about possibilities. Stay curious in business. Stay curious about experiences. Stay curious for next.
Stay curious.
So with that in mind...
Stay curious for learning. Stay curious about improving. Stay curious through searching. Stay curious like a child. Stay curious about now. Stay curious in life. Stay curious about others. Stay curious about learning. Stay curious for you. Stay curious through listening. Stay curious through living. Stay curious about possibilities. Stay curious in business. Stay curious about experiences. Stay curious for next.
Stay curious.
written by
Kneale Mann
tags:
belong,
business,
children,
communication,
community,
connect,
culture,
each other,
human behavior,
improvements,
interaction,
Kneale Mann,
leadership,
learning,
life,
listening,
others,
people,
us,
world
June 5, 2019
The Good Life
If we want to invest in "the good life", where should we put our time and energy? Robert Waldinger outlines riveting data from a 75-year-long Harvard study of adult life that continues today. It seems clear; a happy life is not measured by a larger paycheck, more stuff, higher investments, or financial net worth.
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written by
Kneale Mann
tags:
age,
culture,
happiness,
Harvard,
health,
hope,
human,
Kneale Mann,
leadership,
lonely,
memory,
past,
people,
relationships,
Robert Waldinger,
study,
TED,
Twain