As published in ERE.Net
Recently, I heard a hiring manager comment that she would “Prefer not to hire anyone at all.”
Her company is growing. They are actively looking for people. At the same time, this manager who has been tasked with building up her team is openly telling candidates that if she has her way, not one of them will be hired. Indeed, given the choice, it’s hard to imagine candidates accepting an offer if they did get one, compared, say, to an offer from an enthusiastic and confident employer.
While making the observation that this woman lacked confidence might be something of an understatement, it is only a start.
Confidence begets confidence, just as lack of confidence begets lack of confidence. This manager was demonstrating a lack of confidence in herself, her company, its hiring process, and in the candidates. That, in turn, makes it extremely difficult to attract top people: if the hiring manager doesn’t seem confident, what does that tell the candidate about the company?
While most businesses viewed the Great Depression as a time to hunker down, cut everyone possible from the payroll, and hide under the bed until things got better, one CEO took a different perspective. He saw the Depression as an opportunity to find the best people, build their loyalty and commitment, and stockpile equipment and material against the day the economy turned. Tom Watson’s confidence that things would get better propelled IBM into becoming the global powerhouse it remains to this day.
In another example, a recent news report featured an economist claiming that hyper-inflation and total social collapse is just around the corner. Is that likely? I’m no economist, but I have to wonder how many people today remember Dow 36,000? James Glassman’s book was published at the height of the Internet boom: in October 1999, just a few short months before the market crashed in March 2000. The predictions of a rosy future stretching into forever were loudest, and most believable, at the top; what does that say about the news today?
In the end, though, while this woman’s lack of confidence may have been made obvious by the economy, and helping her reframe the news was an important step, further investigation revealed the economy wasn’t the actual cause. The actual cause was both more immediate and less obvious: she fundamentally didn’t trust the hiring process her company used. If you don’t trust the process, it’s hard to have confidence in it, and the more vulnerable you are to surrounding influences such as the news. In a strong economy, her lack of trust could easily go unnoticed simply because the positive news flow would allay her fears; without the positive backdrop, however, her fear and her lack of confidence in the system were fully exposed. Sadly, this lack of confidence appears to be the case in a great many different companies.
It’s a topic I write about in the next Journal of Corporate Recruiting Leadership. In that article, I specifically get into some ways to address the problem. While it’s certainly true that we don’t control the economy, we can control how we react to it. We control as well how well our recruiting systems are designed and how well trained we are in using different parts of it. Understanding what we control and how to exercise that control well is the key to true confidence.
November 12th,2010
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As published in Corp! Magazine
Horror movies follow some fairly predictable tropes: the monster slowly awakens; someone sees it happening, but no one really believes him. As the story unfolds, people go to investigate and are captured, killed, driven mad and so forth. There’s always something terrible going on, and there’s always some helpless innocent caught up in it, acting the way helpless innocents generally act.
Of course, when the helpless innocent doesn’t act as expected, well, that can cause the whole story to change. The classic comedy, “Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein,” is a traditional period horror film, complete with the legendary Bela Lugosi, in which the helpless innocents are Bud Abbott and Lou Costello, acting like, well, Bud Abbott and Lou Costello. This, of course, causes the plot to go flying off the rails, at least as far as Count Dracula’s dastardly plot to reawaken Frankenstein’s monster is concerned.
The key element of a horror film is that our helpless innocents are put into a situation in which they have no idea what to do. As in most situations, when we don’t know what to do, we do what we know how to do. Indeed, successful horror relies on that phenomenon: the terror comes from seeing how our ordinary actions lead deeper and deeper into trouble. Alternately, if those ordinary actions are slightly askew, the horror becomes comedy. In that case, the humor comes from seeing Abbott and Costello responding to a deepening horror by doing what they normally do.
The movie works because the tendency to do what we know how to do is both powerful and universal. Most people, confronted by novel situations, react that way. When there is truly nothing they can do, they attempt to exert control anyway by doing something that they can do. The results are often comedy or horror, depending on perspective and circumstance.
At one nonprofit, the founder of the organization was a man who had started out working in a stockroom. When the organization hit a financial crisis, he fixated on doing inventory. There was simply nothing useful he could do. Rather than feel helpless, he did the thing he could do. This made his board very happy as it kept him busy while they raised money for the organization.
At a high-tech company, a product deadline was threatened by a vendor not delivering a critical software component on schedule. There was nothing that could be done: the entire product was designed around that deliverable. The department head responded to the situation by demanding his employees work long hours, before the vendor delivered. After it was delivered might have made some sense, as the company would need to make up the lost time, but before? The department head had no control over the vendor, so he dealt with the situation by controlling the people around him.
Comedy and horror might be quite enjoyable when viewed from a safe distance, like a movie screen, but are much less fun to be in the middle of. How, though, does a leader avoid having her actions turn the situation into a comedy of errors or frustrating, painful experience for her employees?
The key is to practice dealing with chaos. Consider successful athletes: they learn all the moves and drills of their particular sport. Then they practice by competing against other athletes in order to become comfortable with the unexpected actions of their opponents. Indeed, Judo competition is referred to as “randori,” or “seizing chaos.” Because it’s not possible to predict what strategies people will employ or control what an opponent does, the successful athlete learns to adapt to the situation. Rather than becoming stuck on one response, they become adept at switching strategies to counter their opponents.
Successful leaders need to develop the same skill. It’s not enough to just know the theory of leadership; you also must practice in a chaotic or ambiguous scenario. Sadly, for many leaders, that means practicing on the job. As most athletes learn the hard way if they move straight from drilling to competition, getting used to chaos takes its own practice.
Fortunately, just as athletes have multiple training tools at their disposal to learn to deal with chaos before they enter competition; tools are available for business leaders as well. Predictive scenarios, a type of live action serious game, provide the sort of detailed, ambiguous situations that enable a leader to become comfortable with chaos. Unlike traditional leadership training exercises, there is no one, right answer. Participants need to motivate others, win deals, provide feedback, and execute strategies in a constantly shifting environment. Rather than just talking about leadership, participants need to display leadership and do it well enough to convince others to follow them.
Like the athlete, the leader becomes adept at switching strategies and at managing unpredictable situations. Rather than being trapped by doing what they can, they become able to apply what they know. Instead of comedy or horror, they achieve success. Now, that is something you do want to be in the middle of!
Stephen Balzac is an expert on leadership and organizational development. A consultant, author, and professional speaker, he is president of 7 Steps Ahead (www.7stepsahead.com), an organizational development firm focused on helping businesses to increase revenue and build their client base. Steve is the author of “The 36-Hour Course in Organizational Development,” published by McGraw-Hill and a contributing author to volume one of “Ethics and Game Design: Teaching Values Through Play.” Contact him at steve@7stepsahead.com.
October 31st,2010
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behavior,
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Recently, I was running a leadership and negotiation exercise, which involved participants attempting to determine who they could and could not trust. The exercise required that participants work with one another and included various techniques for verifying the truth or falsehood of someone’s claims.
The dynamic between two of the participants, we’ll call them Fred and Barney, became extremely interesting: Fred needed Barney’s help, but Fred was convinced that Barney was lying to him and looking for a way to double-cross him on a business deal. Barney, meanwhile, was going to great lengths to prove that he was telling the truth and dealing in good faith. The more evidence Fred found that demonstrated Barney was telling the truth, the more Fred was sure he was lying. Not only was Fred not convinced, he even came up to me and complained that he thought that Barney was violating the rules of the exercise because he was clearly lying. When the exercise was over and I debriefed the participants, Fred was stunned when he found out that Barney was telling the truth all along.
Part of the value of this particular exercise is that behavior in the exercise tends to correlate well with behavior in the office. Unlike the exercise, however, in real life we don’t have any magical means of verifying the truth. Of course, as we can see, even that doesn’t necessarily matter. Once an opinion is formed, sometimes nothing will change it. That may be fine in some obscure situations, but in business it can get you in trouble.
Read the rest at Corp! Magazine
October 26th,2010
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How often have you heard someone from a company say, “We hire slow and fire fast?”
I’ve heard this line so often that it sounds sort of a like a mantra or one of those wise sayings that are taken for granted but are generally wrong: “I invest for the long term,” or “There is no room for emotions in the work place,” or “The Red Sox will never win.”
This is not to say that it’s always wrong to “hire slow.” However, it’s important to understand the different ways that a company can hire slow. Some of them make more sense than others. What, fundamentally, does it mean to hire slow? For that matter, what does it mean to “fire fast?”
Read the rest at the Journal of Corporate Recruiting Leadership
October 25th,2010
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My first jujitsu sensei liked to frequently remind us that if you wanted to go from San Francisco to LA, you didn’t go by way of Portland, Oregon. Naturally, the wise-guys in the class, which included me, would make cracks about the airline schedules. I don’t know if there actually were flights that went from San Francisco to LA via Portland, but it wouldn’t surprise me in the slightest!
Of course, the point my sensei was trying to make was that a straight line is the shortest distance between two points. While this is certainly true in normal mathematics, fans of “A Wrinkle in Time,” might recall that a tesseract is the shortest distance between two points. While traveling via tesseract is purely science fiction, the fact remains that sometimes the direct route, that is, the straight line, is not the most rapid means of getting to your destination. Sometimes, you’re better off with a metaphorical tesseract. This is true in business and, as it happens, also in jujitsu (although that’s a separate topic). As a case in point, let’s look at the increasingly popular Results Oriented Work Environments (ROWE).
Read the rest at Corp! Magazine
I have a fondness for old time radio podcasts. Indeed, one of the big advantages of the iPod is that it created a whole slew of opportunities for those of us who want to listen to such things. One of my discoveries was a podcast of the Avengers radio show. Yes, there was one, although it didn’t really come from the Golden Age of radio, rather being adapted from the TV show. Nonetheless, listening to episodes of the Avengers pointed up four very important points:
1. Russian accents are only the second most villainous sounding accents. British accents are the most villainous, probably because they always sound like they have anti-social personality disorder.
2. British accents also sound heroic, at least when they aren’t the villains.
3. Old time commercials in a British accent sound like something out of Monty Python.
4. When word “helpless” is said immediately before “Emma Peel” you know someone is in for a very nasty surprise.
I’m not entirely sure what this means, although the first might reflect my image of Boris Badenov as the quintessential Russian villain. Since this year is the 50th anniversary of Rocky and Bullwinkle, perhaps Russian accented villains will make a comeback. I’ll leave that to James Bond (or Moose and Squirrel). What is more interesting is how well a 1960s cold-war espionage show holds up half a century later. Despite all our changes in technology and politics, and the much touted generational shift in the workplace, it should come as no big surprise that human nature hasn’t changed at all: people are still, basically, people, and John Steed and Emma Peel are just as suave and sophisticated today as they were fifty years ago. Despite all the noise about Boomers, Gen X, and Gen Y, there are also some things about the workplace that simply haven’t changed, although our perception and understanding of them might have.
In my book, “The 36-Hour Course in Organizational Development,” I discuss the twelve key elements of building a successful business. These elements are, in many ways, as timeless as John Steed and Mrs. Peel, if not always quite so sexy. They are, however, the key points that any entrepreneur needs to work with if you want to maximize your chances of creating a successful business.
Read the rest at Under30CEO
September 30th,2010
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In an upcoming Journal of Corporate Recruiting Leadership I talk about the perils of “hiring slow” and “firing fast.” As I’ve been doing, I wanted to give you just a taste of the “hiring slow” part here.
A company can hire slow for two major reasons: because they know exactly who they’re looking for and are willing to wait for the right people to apply, or because they don’t know who they’re looking for and believe they’ll know when the right person applies.
The first is more useful. If you’ve done your homework and figured out the characteristics of the employees you’re looking for, and if you’ve trained your interviewers to recognize those people, then by all means hire slow. Take your time and wait for the right people or, better yet, go out and attract them to the company.
Read the rest at ERE.Net
September 29th,2010
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“Mind your Own Business”
A Radio Show for Entrepreneurs by Entrepreneurs
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I will be appearing on the “Mind your Own Business” Radio Show this week. The show provides advice, information and connections for entrepreneurs, service providers and established companies. Tune into MYOB this Sunday between 9-11 AM to hear my segment!
Local Stations:
WBNW 1120 AM – Needham, MA
WPLM 1390 AM – Plymouth, MA
WESO 970 AM – Southbridge, MA
WSMN 1590 AM – Nashua, NH
or stream online @ MYOBTheRadioShow.com
September 2nd,2010
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Last Friday, I was on Business Insanity Talk Radio speaking on the five components of effective leadership. If I’ve done this right, here’s the segment I was in:
SteveOnBusinessInsanityRadio20August
August 25th,2010
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“Destiny! Destiny! No escaping that for me!”
– Gene Wilder in “Young Frankenstein”
As fans of Mel Brook’s classic comedy Young Frankenstein know, Gene Wilder’s destiny as Dr. Frederick Frankenstein is to follow in his grandfather’s footsteps and create the monster. This being a comedy, things do work out somewhat better than they did in the original story. Destiny, it appears, can be changed with sufficient effort. Indeed, precisely because Frederick Frankenstein realizes that he’s following in Victor Frankenstein’s footsteps, he is able to turn things around at the last minute and bring about a happy ending.
In my consulting projects and in conducting leadership training with various groups, from college students through executives, I’ve frequently observed destiny in action. People play out the roles that they believe they are supposed to play out. Organizationally, we act as we’ve been taught to act in our various roles: CEOs are expected to behave in one way, managers another, engineers yet another. For example, in some companies it’s perfectly normal for engineers to show up to work in jeans and T-shirts, but totally inappropriate for a manager to do the same.
Read the rest at Corp! Magazine