What happens when you come across a book that preaches that disrespect is
grounds for immediate dismissal? That you shouldn’t concern yourself with
being liked … instead, be respected; that you should remember that you work
for someone, a company … that person has the right to say what you do, when
you do it, and how you do it; and that you shouldn’t tolerate abuse,
disrespect, or a lack of ethics or integrity from your employer … life is
short, there are other jobs?Most likely, you would sit up and take
notice. I did.
Being a blunt type of person, It’s Called Work for a Reason by
Larry Winget was a welcome addition to my personal library. It leaves no one
unchallenged and the sacred cows of the workplace up for grabs. It’s not for
the thin-skinned, anyone void of a sense of humor, wrapped up in political
correctness or immersed in the business parable babble that frequents the
best seller lists.
According to Winget, “The formula for success isn’t a secret. It’s simply
this: Hard work will achieve great results and will lead to greater
success.”
When it comes to the workplace, he continues, “Business gets better right
after the people in the business get better.”
The workplace has changed over the years. For some, less hours; for
others, more. For some, flex time; for others, hours are in stone. For some,
the sky is the limit; for others, the job is a dead end. And for some, the
workplace is alive with opportunities; for others, it’s a place to hang out
until you retire in eight years.
It’s Called Work for a Reason opens up all whole Pandora’s Box of
issues that can be likened to having an elephant in the room that no one
wants to acknowledge or deal with.
A common dilemma for a manager is how to deal with the dead weight in the
department; and for the employee, it’s how to deal with the dead weight
that’s a co-worker. For Winget, that’s a simple one … amputate it.
Think of the workplace personnel as a type of bell curve in three
sections, as in 20 percent, 60 percent, and 20 percent. The first 20 percent
section is the go-getters—they are jazzed about work, will take on just
about anything, don’t grumble and gripe and need little supervision.
Comparing them to a VCR would put them in “fast forward” mode all the time.
The middle section of 60 percent is good workers, not great, but good.
Reliable, on time, gets work done, not very creative, but they are the
backbone of the organization. Their VCR mode is on “play.”
Then there are the remaining 20 percent. Many are retired on active
duty—they get a paycheck, show up most of the time, going the extra mile
isn’t in their mantra, sluggish is the norm. Their VCR mode is either on
“stop” or “rewind.”
Ironically, most managers put enormous energy into the stop/rewind group.
Why? Probably because they’ve always done it that way. Wignet’s take is that
it’s simply impossible to do—you can’t motivate the unmotivated; you can’t
educate the uneducable; and you can’t make some care. What a manager must do
is learn how to write them off and save energy.
So, with all that excess energy that will be harnessed, what does a
manager do? Redirect it.
One of the ahas about the “stars” of the workplace—those top 20 percent—
is that not only do they not need to be motivated to do well, but that they
don’t stay around indefinitely. This group gets bored easily and is more
likely off searching for greater workplace challenges and adventures.
That leaves the 60 percent group—the not so great, just pretty good
group. You feed them, nurture them, and let them sprout their wings. Many
can be great, they just have been overshadowed. When one of the top 20
percent moves on, the understudy is ready for the spotlight. As Winget says,
“There is a gold mine of talent just waiting to shine.”
As a manager, your job becomes to move them to another level—the upper 20
percent or to the bottom of the pile. Kind of like heading them up, heading
them on, heading them out. Works for me.
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© 2006, All Rights Reserved. The Briles Group, Inc.
Judith Briles, Ph.D. is a speaker and award-winning author of over 20
books.
Her latest book is Money $marts: Personal Financial Success in 30
Days! She can be reached at 303-627-9179 and emailed at Judith@Briles.com.
Her website is
www.Briles.com.
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