GOOD
BOSS BAD BOSS
How
to be the Best… and Learn from the Worst
ROBERT
I SUTTON, PhD
SECTION II
WHAT THE BEST BOSSES DO
CHAPTER
4: STARS AND ROTTEN APPLES
Unfortunately,
too many bosses have such blind faith in solo superstars and unbridled
competition. While stunning solo
performances may occur, collaboration and cooperation evaporate, and so do
collective innovation and performance. The
best bosses do more than charge up people, and recruit and breed
energizers. They eliminate the negative
(bad apples). Negative thoughts,
feelings, and events produce larger and longer-lasting effects than positive
ones.
OTHER SMART
PEOPLE TRICKS
1. Show Them The Love
Organizational
life is filled with time-consuming and distracting routines. Bosses need a few moments to make people feel
appreciated; take time to listen, show appreciation, be empathic and
unselfish. Do not underestimate the power of showing a little love. Spend less time on those endless routine
chores and spend more time showing your people a little love.
2. Assume The Best
Too many bosses
forget the power of the human touch. Studies has demonstrate that believing in
some of your people can boost their performance. Smart bosses can spark performance by
expressing confidence (self-fulfilling prophecy). It creates better results than doubting their
ability.
3. Cut Loose The Real Losers
The challenge
for bosses is that they see what they believe (confirmation bias) that is
selective thinking where one tends to notice and to look for what confirms one’s
belief, and to ignore, not look for, or undervalue the relevance of what
contradicts one’s beliefs. Confirmation bias
can cause bosses to make exclusively glowing judgment about people they have
invested a lot of time and money in or who they simply find the likeable or
admirable
4. Keep Teams
Together
It takes time
for people to learn each other’s strengths and weaknesses and develop effective shared ways of doing things. A study of R&D found that teams got more
and more productive during their first 4 years or so, but productivity finally
started dropping if they did not bring in new members after about 5 years.
5. Protect Yourself From The Energy Suckers
Share your
passion and creativity for those people who will benefit from it and who leave
you feeling charged up rather than drained. Developing the fine art of indifference and
emotional detachment is part of becoming a boss with grit.
6. Take A Look in The Mirror
All bosses
have limited power over who they lead. Good
bosses get more out of their people, and they attract and keep better people.
to be continued....
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