The Third Zone

Specialists in Organizational and Executive Leadership

  • Home
  • Our Team
  • What We Do
  • Successes
  • Blog
  • Reading
  • Contact

Oct 26 2016

Employee Rebellion as a Success Enhancer

In an organization having a base of employees who strive to conform … go along with the stated goals, the methods of doing the job or with the majority of opinions … seems nice.  No time wasted on major disagreements that side-track the direction and progress both desired and being made within the company.  Yet, although convenient on one hand, creating and residing in such a culture of ‘agreement’ also has the thinking-out-of-the-boxability to stifle achievement of the very goals that have been established.  And further, such an atmosphere is a significant contributor to individual burnout that can undermine the greatest of organizations.

In our coaching we see this quite often.  And it’s not limited to any particular level of employee.  In fact, however, it appears that the higher one moves within the organization the greater the pressure to conform … to play one’s cards right … don’t make waves or rock the boat … relent to the prevalent opinion rather than stir up the pot.  And here in lies the problem.  Playing by these rules appears to escalate the burnout that negatively impacts both the energy and enthusiasm

within the overall company and thus the level of success.

Francesca Gino addresses this issue  in her article in the Harvard Business Review entitled “Let Your Workers Rebel” that thoroughly addresses this challenge at the same time it provides a winning solution.  She says “Throughout our careers, we are taught to conform — to the status quo, to the opinions and behaviors of others, and to information that supports our views. The pressure only grows as we climb the organizational ladder. By the time we reach high-level positions, conformity has been so hammered into us that we perpetuate it in our enterprises.  Organizations consciously or unconsciously urge employees to check a good chunk of their real selves at the door. Workers and their organizations both pay a price: decreased engagement, productivity, and innovation.”im-a-rebel

Yet there is a solution that makes sense and Gino calls it ‘constructive nonconformity’ as it promotes innovation, improves performance,  and can enhance a person’s standing more than conformity can.  Her research substantiates that going against the crowd gives us confidence in our actions, which makes us feel unique and engaged and translates to higher performance and greater creativity.  Isn’t this ultimately what we want?

Here are the 6 steps of moving to a culture that encourages constructive nonconformity:

1. Give Employees Opportunities to Be Themselves
The person who is allowed to be their authentic self is simply more engaged.  Tell them what needs to be done rather than how to do it and allowing them to solve problems on their own … or at least try.
2. Encourage Employees to Bring out Their Signature Strengths
Give people the opportunity to identify their own strengths and then tailor their responsibilities to those strengths.
3. Question the Status Quo, and Encourage Employees to Do the Same
Encourage the questions of “Why” and “What If”.  Stress that the organization is not perfect which encourages the offering of other approaches or ideal
4. Create Challenging Experiences
The sense of boredom grows when there is little variety or challenge in any job.  Maximize variety, inject novelty into the work and give people responsibility and accountability in their work to maintain interest and energy.
5. Foster Broader Perspectives
Create opportunities for employees to view problems from multiple angles.  Use language that reduces self-serving bias.  Hire people with diverse perspectives.
6. Voice and Encourage Dissenting Views
Look for disconfirming evidence rather than supporting evidence.  Create dissent by default and identify courageous dissenters.

out-of-the-boxCreating a work culture of constructive nonconformity can be a case of ‘be careful of what you wish for’.  However, to the extent that one can strive to keep their job exciting and energy generating, the payoff is the momentum that exists within the organization … momentum that serves the company well in terms of moving along the path of desired accomplishment.  Oh yes … the other payoff is that burnout is minimized with the benefit of adding to the longevity potential of valued employees.  In this case encouraging rebellion comes with clear-cut benefits. Maybe you might want to try it?

Mike Dorman

Written by Mike · Categorized: Employee Success

Sep 21 2016

The Gains and Sacrifices of A Successful, Effective Leader

Anyone who is given the opportunity to lead in their organization … lead a department, division, the company or a project … has the overall responsibility to accomplish whatever the task associated with the job.  Where some struggle is in determining how they can most effectively motivate their team members to achieve the goals.  What we find in coaching various leaders is that whereas they are selected to fill the leadership role, it is often because of their overall skill and knowledge pertaining to the job’s focus.  At the same time, it is too often, without providing that ‘leader’ any training as to how to carry out the job in the most positive, impacting manner.  Too often, leaders have been left to their own sense of what being a leader means and requires of them.  And this is where some experience very real problems.

Have you ever worked for one of these leadership types?
dictator-yelling-leader

  • The Dictator Leader – they communicate the directions in a way that leaves little room for another to ask for clarification to enhance her/his understanding. Just Do It!
  • The Member of Royalty Leader – They use their position to remind all that THEY are in charge and they rarely, if ever, think of getting their hands dirty
  • The Nurturing Parent Leader – especially the one who sees the job as giving the charge the answers to any question rather than helping them develop their own ability to devise solutions
  • The Fun Leader – is very much focused on making the work ‘fun’ and it’s not uncommon to lose sight of the need and drive to achieve the task in shortest amount of time possible.
  • The Magician Leader – now that this person has been put into the position of leader, they interpret this to mean they get to spend their time doing their favorite part of the project and magically disappear keeping
    their head under the hood of the car and rarely to be found.

You must have known some of these.  However, the way you view and execute your style of leading will determine just how effective you will be and that is key.  Chris Meyers, the founder and CEO of BodeTree developed his own skill in leading by recalling the various leader types he had experienced … and used them to determine much of what he didn’t want to do.  Being the leader of his organization allowed him to execute his role based on his following beliefs. They mirror the experiences in this situation encountered as a coach in many organizations.

  • Leadership is a lot like parenting. When you’re a parent, you love your child so much that you want to give them anything parenting they want. The temptation is that by reveling in the good times and spoiling them with gifts, they will somehow love you more.
  • However, parenting isn’t about fun and games. It’s about molding your child into a person who can be an upstanding, respectable, and successful adult someday. That requires discipline, dedication, and difficult decisions. If you want what’s best for your child, you act as a parent first and a friend second.
  • The same logic applies to managing a team. As a leader, it feels good when the team is relaxed, comfortable, and having fun. However, just as with parenting, leadership requires more. You can’t help people grow, mature, and perform without pushing them. If you don’t lay out expectations for the team, push people out of their comfort zones, and hold people accountable, you’re failing in your most important role as a leader. Trying to be everyone’s best friend is a fundamentally selfish act. It’s not about you and how well you’re liked. Leadership is about helping people become the best they can be. That means stepping up and doing what is hard, no matter what.
  • The role of the CEO is a fundamentally lonely one. You have no peers and end up doing the team a disservice when to try to be everyone’s best friend. Leadership means putting others ahead of yourself, and the team ahead of everyone. That requires discipline, sacrifice, and courage.
  • If you do the right thing for individuals and the team as a whole, you won’t always be liked. That simply goes with the territory, because employees need leaders, not friends. team-leader

It is this last point that represents a real obstacle for some who like the idea of advancement and yet, appear unwilling or unable to relinquish the idea of being friend to those they lead.   Some are good with this whereas others realize that for them and their enjoyment of the job, being friend is more important.  There is no wrong decision.  Rather it’s a matter of what’s right for each individual.  Wanting to climb the ladder of success is the goal of many.  However, the climb carries with it certain requirements that determine our success … or lack thereof.  It’s definitely something worth thinking about!

Mike Dorman

Written by Mike · Categorized: Effective Leadership

Sep 19 2016

4-Lenses Framework for Better Decision Making

Mike-Dorman

Often, while we are trying to circumvent some obstacle that is preventing us from moving forward effectively, we find ourselves stuck in some view of a situation that is keeping us there.  There is one very valuable coaching tool that can be used … that of viewing the matter through various perspectives.  How would superman or wonder woman deal with the challenge?  If locked in a dark closet how does the issue look and feel now?  How would your boss or your best friend view and deal with the problem?  You get the idea I’m sure.

I was recently introduced to an app that allows me to take my regular photo … shown above … and alter it to provide various ‘painted’ looks  And whereas I’ve had fun playing with it I have come to realize that this, too, allows me to view myself in different ways.  In so doing I get to view any situation that I’m trying to alter or move through with different eyes or perspectives.  Let me provide an example.

Presume that I have thoughts that I believe could improve the approach being used to achieve a goal of the company or department in which I work. Let’s pretend that even though I think my ideas are good and of potential value, my normal personality renders me to be quiet and defer to those with louder voices and a willingness to just ‘put it out there’.  So I recognize that I need a different perspective of myself that might allow me to become more vocal for my own good and the good of the organization.  Here are some perspective changing photo versions of me that answer the question of how ‘this’ person would handle the same situation:

mike-bold


This is the BOLD and colorful me
.  This person is confident in his thoughts and ideas to the extent that he is willing to express them quickly and loudly to others.  He has nothing to lose and may find great reception to the ideas he presents.

mike-contemplativeThis is the CONTEMPLATIVE and reserved me.  He is a good listener … open to hearing and understanding what others have to say of a given situation.  He asks questions to clarify his understanding.  THEN … confident that he knows where others stand, he offers his ideas that may reinforce aspects of what others have said and suggest variations that he believes will make the difference.

mike-confident

Here is the CONFIDENT and COMFORTABLE me.  He knows how he views this.  He is willing to listen to the ideas of others and still believes there is great value to presenting his perspective of the situation … for the goodof the organization.  He sees himself as both a good listener and spokesperson.

mike-in-face
Here is the IN YOUR FACE me.  Brash and combative, he is so determined to make his point and be heard that he appears insensitive to opinions of others.  In fact, he is often the first one to speak his mind and is so pleased with himself that he fails to really listen and hear what others have to offer.  Team player he is not.

In doing perspective work we have given ourselves the opportunity to see the stumbling block differently … and then we get to choose how we want to proceed by drawing upon any of the traits our ‘other’ persona offer.  As for my example above, the way I choose to move forward is to incorporate the traits of the CONFIDENT and COMFORTABLE me seasoned with the desire to clarify my understanding as a trait of the CONTEMPLATIVE me.

There is no right or wrong.  Viewing any decisions we have in front of us through various perspectives is a very effective way to create the move-forward path that you believe will best work for you.  Whether you step into the shoes of the Incredible Hulk or the Flying Nun to gain different views makes no difference.  Doing it does truly provide a breakthrough leading to effective action.  Try it!  You may really like it!
Mike Dorman

Written by Mike · Categorized: Employee Success

Sep 07 2016

Skills Needed for Advancement: Technical … Yes, AND Just One More Thing!

When coaching an individual pertaining to their work an often expressed desire is to be recognized as a candidate to advance in a wclimbing ladder2ay that will enable her/him to earn more money.  Although some are willing to rely on others to find them ready, others enter the initial job with every intention of advancing as quickly as possible and doing what they can to impress the bosses with their capabilities and, in turn, make  them worthy of promotion.  This latter group stands to find success faster because they see making their own success as their job.

Impressing others with the technical skills needed for the work is most often the key focus and yet, it turns out, this is just one key ingredient. As a stand-alone, it stops short of what can further the perception of being a stand-out candidate for advancement. 

The other important element is one’s ability to demonstrate leadership skills.

 What does this mean when, perhaps, and especially, you are not in charge of others and thus are leading no-one but yourself?

An article produced on-line by BusinessTimezoneGlobal organization addresses this issue simply and effectively.  It speaks well to “… – how to define yourself as a leader in your organization”.  “A leader has multiple attributes that distinguish him as different from the masses and that he can be looked up to by members of his organization.”  And here are the three ways in which you can add ‘leadership’ to your resume of the technical attributes that you might already possess.

  1. Establish Yourself As Dependable. Today’s business environments need reliable problem-solvers. The more you become dependable more your stature grows as a recognized leader.
  1. Resourcefulness is the next crucial step. Being able to know or find the answers to problems will always be valued. Also, making yourself available always gets the attention of upper management. The importance of data sometimes defines the success of the operation; however, all business systems still depend on human interaction.
  1. Make Yourself Approachable to your peer group and your junior colleagues. This enhances your reputation as a team player and a great motivator.

Asserting oneself as a dependable person sounds like a good thing to do and what that means in an organization is the taking on of new responsibilities and completing them.  Here are some key attributes of the successful, dependable leader:
leading fish

  1. Leading From the Front ~ remaining outside of the various points of view and decisions that might be offered on the way to the final move-forward plan is a valuable and necessary attribute of the leader. As such you avoid taking the easier route that can come from the hasty decision and this requires discipline.
  2. Being a good listener and communicator ~ demonstrating your willingness and ability to allow others to speak and truly hear and understand what they are conveying is something that a good leader does and does well.
  3. Having good follow-up after plan execution ~ this provides the continuing direction that successful project execution needs to maximize success. Your leader skills make this a no-brainer.
  4. Emphasizing the human approach ~ and earn the appreciation of colleagues as they believe in you and your abilities. Be it hearing their problems and attempting to help solve them gains respect and is another sign of a good leader.dollars signs

Undoubtedly there are those we could identify as ‘natural born leaders’.  Yet, and the great news, is that developing and demonstrating ‘leadership skills’ isn’t a form of rocket science.  Incorporating the above ‘traits’ into being a part of your daily approach to your job will definitely enhance the very resume that you want to use in applying and being considered for your next advancement.  Ka-ching … Ka-ching!
Mike Dorman

Written by Mike · Categorized: Employee Responsibility, Uncategorized

Aug 24 2016

Sure Your Success is Your Job ~ Why Outsource It?

The topic of responsibility as related to personal job growth and success is timeless.  Regardless of the organization in which I work as a business leadership coach, it is inevitable that I will encounter some individuals who express frustration with the lack of effort that their boss or their company makes toward helping them advance.  We’ve addressed this previously through our blog entitled “Whose Job Is It Anyway” wherein the message relates to us as individuals taking charge of what we want to achieve.  Although originally written a few owning your pathyears ago it still continues to attract readers today.

In order for more of us to individually view our advancement and ultimate success as OUR job the degree of ‘employee engagement’ must improve.
Marshall Goldsmith, a renowned business coach, recites some rather surprising statistics related to this.  Only 13% of employees world-wide are actively engaged at work.

And … 24% are actively disengaged meaning they are admittedly very unhappy or unproductive or both.

Okay.  The message is clear.  If we want to advance and ultimately be more and more successful, we have to view that as our job and our job alone.  And yet … what do we do to accomplish that job.  Goldsmith puts forth six straightforward and simple steps as questions to ask ourselves as follows and they all begin with “Did I do my best …”:

  1. To set clear goals? … do I know what I’m aiming to achieve in a clearly understood way?
  1. To make progress to achieve my own goals? … are you successful moving toward them or do you find yourself stuck at some point?
  1. To be happy? … as a result of the satisfaction I feel in moving toward my goal?
  1. To find meaning? … Is the work I’m doing providing a sense of satisfaction through progress I am making in getting closer to achieving my goals?
  1. To build positive relationships? … developing relationships with others to whom I can turn for desired help or provide help as needed?
  1. To be fully engaged? … to the degree to which I commit to being conscientiously engaged will have a very positive impact on the results I can anticipate

Whether the economy is strong or weak … whether the business or industry you’re in if you can dream itis soaring or stagnant … being willing to view our personal growth and success as our individual responsibility is the one thing that we can count on.  Accepting it as our job gives us the best chance of accomplishing whatever we want to accomplish.  Goldsmith’s questions are not complex whatsoever.  Rather, they help us to stay the course that we have for ourselves by serving as foundational elements that help to maintain our focus and drive to wherever we decide we want to go.  Why would anyone want to give that power to another?  Not me!

Mike Dorman

Written by Mike · Categorized: Employee Responsibility, Uncategorized

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 33
  • 34
  • 35
  • 36
  • 37
  • …
  • 55
  • Next Page »

Contact

Toll Free: (866) 902-3777
Direct Phone: (949) 733-3777





    The Third Zone
    (Headquarters)
    5319 University Drive #212
    Irvine, CA 92612

    Copyright © 2025 The Third Zone

    Powered by Guild™

    Please wait...

    Subscribe to our newsletter

    Want to be notified when our article is published? Enter your email address and name below to be the first to know.
    SIGN UP FOR NEWSLETTER NOW

    190220 Ebook CTA image

    Being Thrown Under the Bus:
    What to Do When It happens to YOU in the Workplace

    Chapters include:

    • The Meaning of Being Thrown Under the Bus
    • The Ones Who are Likely to do the Throwing
    • The Impact on the Individuals and the Organization Where Throwing Under the Bus is Tolerated
    • Responding After Having Been Thrown Under the Bus … You Get to Choose
    • How to Minimize the Likelihood of Finding Yourself Under the Bus

      Your Name (required)

      Your Email (required)

      Your Phone

      Thanks for your message!

       

      Loading Comments...