Play Well in the Sandbox to Excel in the Sandbox
03/September/04 Filed in: Leadership
Articles
Question...so why care about playing well with
others? Because it’s a key to success, whether
defined in terms of career, money, or a meaningful
life. Hands down, people competency is the most
distinguishing feature of top performers. By ‘people
competency’ I mean emotional intelligence,
interpersonal effectiveness, and team related skills
– in short, playing well with others.
Question...so why care about playing well with
others? Because it’s a key to success, whether
defined in terms of career, money, or a meaningful
life. Hands down, people competency is the most
distinguishing feature of top performers. By ‘people
competency’ I mean emotional intelligence,
interpersonal effectiveness, and team related skills
– in short, playing well with others.
Technical competence is a threshold requirement for excellence, but typically won’t differentiate top from average performers. A study at Bell Labs found engineers basically did engineering the same way – but their top performers created relationships that measurably contributed to effectiveness, e.g. top performers had telephone calls returned in an average of 20 minutes, compared to 4 hours for less stellar peers. A long-term study tracking the career achievements of 80 PhD students from the 1950’s until 1994 concluded that emotional intelligence abilities were 4 times more important than IQ in determining professional success. CFOs take note; top performers return significantly more economic value than average or poor performers. In a study analyzing thousands of people, top performers in complex jobs (salespeople, account managers, lawyers, physicians) were 127% more valuable than average performers.
Enterprises increasingly depend on knowledge workers and the transfer of knowledge between people in other roles both inside and outside the organization. It is human nature that people don’t readily share knowledge unless the environment in which they operate is open, collaborative, and supportive. It doesn’t take many who ‘don’t play well with others’ to damage what could be a productive environment.
Skill in emotional competence, interpersonal effectiveness, and working in teams is learnable, and continues to improve throughout life with appropriate experience – which means you can impact playing well with others in your own life and in an organization. For best return on investment of time, money, and energy, remember that meaningful interpersonal competency is learned through experience that is repeated over time and based on real-life situations.
What can savvy enterprises do to cultivate playing well?
~ Build playing well into the performance management system. Ensure development opportunities for people competencies are as available as technical and professional skills and information.
~ Remember that Leadership sets the example. If the top executives don’t take people competencies seriously, it’s going to be difficult for anyone else to do so.
~ Celebrate milestones, create rituals for transitions, and debrief significant events. Honoring or discussing major transitions can prevent disruptions in morale and productivity. This is especially important for high growth organizations as well as those experiencing significant change.
~ Help people use inherent talents and interests. Connect interests to enterprise objectives, deemphasize moving up the promotion ladder as the only means of achievement. Yes, people want advancement, but increasingly what people will DEMAND is that their work be meaningful and interesting. Helping people find their right fit is a great move to increase productivity and employee retention.
~ Don’t let people get away with toxic behavior. Avoid rewarding results that are obtained leaving a wake of human destruction - ultimately you will strip mine the value of the organization, good people will leave, and the remaining are as likely to sabotage efforts as work toward organizational goals.
~ Seek and support opportunities for people to find fun and humor in their work. Playing well involves at least some element of …well, play.
I continue to hear a theme from clients, business leaders, and other colleagues, that as the world becomes increasingly more high tech, there will be a corresponding need for high touch. My experience is sometimes executives fear that high touch environments get in the way of goals, or else they simply waste resources and time without adding value. The evidence is compelling, however, that high touch environments can accelerate and sustain success.
So here’s the bottom line – if you want to excel, learn to play well.
Tom Stevens (c)2003
Technical competence is a threshold requirement for excellence, but typically won’t differentiate top from average performers. A study at Bell Labs found engineers basically did engineering the same way – but their top performers created relationships that measurably contributed to effectiveness, e.g. top performers had telephone calls returned in an average of 20 minutes, compared to 4 hours for less stellar peers. A long-term study tracking the career achievements of 80 PhD students from the 1950’s until 1994 concluded that emotional intelligence abilities were 4 times more important than IQ in determining professional success. CFOs take note; top performers return significantly more economic value than average or poor performers. In a study analyzing thousands of people, top performers in complex jobs (salespeople, account managers, lawyers, physicians) were 127% more valuable than average performers.
Enterprises increasingly depend on knowledge workers and the transfer of knowledge between people in other roles both inside and outside the organization. It is human nature that people don’t readily share knowledge unless the environment in which they operate is open, collaborative, and supportive. It doesn’t take many who ‘don’t play well with others’ to damage what could be a productive environment.
Skill in emotional competence, interpersonal effectiveness, and working in teams is learnable, and continues to improve throughout life with appropriate experience – which means you can impact playing well with others in your own life and in an organization. For best return on investment of time, money, and energy, remember that meaningful interpersonal competency is learned through experience that is repeated over time and based on real-life situations.
What can savvy enterprises do to cultivate playing well?
~ Build playing well into the performance management system. Ensure development opportunities for people competencies are as available as technical and professional skills and information.
~ Remember that Leadership sets the example. If the top executives don’t take people competencies seriously, it’s going to be difficult for anyone else to do so.
~ Celebrate milestones, create rituals for transitions, and debrief significant events. Honoring or discussing major transitions can prevent disruptions in morale and productivity. This is especially important for high growth organizations as well as those experiencing significant change.
~ Help people use inherent talents and interests. Connect interests to enterprise objectives, deemphasize moving up the promotion ladder as the only means of achievement. Yes, people want advancement, but increasingly what people will DEMAND is that their work be meaningful and interesting. Helping people find their right fit is a great move to increase productivity and employee retention.
~ Don’t let people get away with toxic behavior. Avoid rewarding results that are obtained leaving a wake of human destruction - ultimately you will strip mine the value of the organization, good people will leave, and the remaining are as likely to sabotage efforts as work toward organizational goals.
~ Seek and support opportunities for people to find fun and humor in their work. Playing well involves at least some element of …well, play.
I continue to hear a theme from clients, business leaders, and other colleagues, that as the world becomes increasingly more high tech, there will be a corresponding need for high touch. My experience is sometimes executives fear that high touch environments get in the way of goals, or else they simply waste resources and time without adding value. The evidence is compelling, however, that high touch environments can accelerate and sustain success.
So here’s the bottom line – if you want to excel, learn to play well.
Tom Stevens (c)2003
