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Using the Right and Left Brain at Work

August 17, 2008 by admin

Most organisations are designed to maximise the contribution of employees left brains to the pursuit of success. Targets are set, plans are laid, logic is deployed, progress is measured and accountability is maintained. Such ‘left brain’ activities fit nicely the milieu of meetings, time pressures, deadlines and procedures that form the social system of most organisations.

However most of us choose an employer based on ‘right brain’ criteria in pursuit of ‘right brain’ goals.

  • Will the work be fulfilling?
  • Will I part of a great team?
  • Will my efforts help to make the world a better place?
  • Will the job give me a lifestyle that works for me?

It is the ‘right brain’ that is the seat of creativity, imagination, innovation and passion. Unless we build a social system that feeds, stimulates and enables right brain contributions we should continue to expect as many as 1 in 4 of our employees to be looking to leave in the next 12 months, while 2 of the remaining three will be in survival (‘count the years, months and days until I retire’) mode.

Take a quick audit of your social system (meetings, processes and procedures) at work. How many opportunities in the average week are there for meaningful ‘right brain’ conversations that are likely to lead to the successful pursuit of right brain goals?

Of course it is easy for our left brains to rationalise away this paucity of ‘right brain’ opportunity in the name of efficiency and the pursuit of effectiveness. To overcome this tendency just remind your left brain of the critical importance of enabling good people to do great work, and of the need for frequent and regular innovation and renewal, if your organisation is to survive never mind thrive in the next few years.

You may find that it gives your right brain just enough time and space to do some big picture thinking.

Filed Under: Leadership, management Tagged With: change, creativity, enterprise, innovation, Leadership, learning, leftbrain, management, Motivation, passion, performance improvement, performance management, practical, progressive, rightbrain, time management

Goals, Priorities and Resources; where does it all go wrong?

August 14, 2008 by admin

Spending time developing and clarifying goals is rarely time wasted. Although some of us spend time clarifying our work goals few of us spend time developing goals for other important aspects of our lives – family, community and self. This is one of the reasons why we find work-life balance so hard to achieve. Goals that have been set in our professional lives are not balanced by goals in other areas. The goals that we have set start to demand creativity and resources and before we know it…

Sometimes we set goals that do not provide clear priorities. Or they provide us with so many priorities that we may as well have no priorities at all. Priorities are immediate next steps that will move us closer to our goals. Good priorities are ones that we cannot fail to address. They are so simple and appealing that they cry out for us to get on with them.

But often we forget to allocate time and other resources to our priorities. Without resources to go with them our priorities are worthless. Without doubt time is the most precious resource that we can commit to a priority. I often find myself working with senior managers to clarify goals and priorities (no more than three or four at a time) and then schedule time in busy diaries to spend on them.

By scheduling two 90 minute blocks of time every week to work on priorities many managers ‘magically’ start to make tangible progress towards goals that had previously frustrated them.

Filed Under: Leadership, management Tagged With: change, coaching, decision making, diversity, enterprise, goals, Leadership, management, objectives, performance improvement, performance management, practical, social enterprise, talent, talent management, third sector, time management

The Fine Art of Progress

July 8, 2008 by admin

I get fired up about management because it the best tool for helping both organisations and the people that work in them to make progress.

Outstanding managers are able to facilitate the progress of both the individual and the organisation and to connect these in a way that results in win/wins for both.

They do this by:

  • regularly creating time and space to allow people to understand what progress looks and feels like right now – for them and for the organisation
  • building a consensus around the ‘direction(s) in which progress lies’
  • enabling people to make things happen in pursuit of progress – they promote a ‘bias for action’
  • by building the skills and confidence of people to act creatively and pro-actively in pursuit of progress within the mission, vision and values of the organisation.

One of the greatest opportunities for performance improvement is to take more time to explore these questions about progress in some depth and then to link them to immediate next steps – practical things that individuals and groups can do to close the gap between where we are now and where we want to be.  And this is what Brilliant 121s are all about.

Filed Under: Leadership, management Tagged With: 121s, change, decision making, Leadership, management, one to ones, performance improvement, performance management, practical, progressive, strategy, time management, Values, values

And Peter’s Rewards…

July 3, 2008 by admin

To enjoy this in its full glory make sure you checked out the previous post on The Motivation Problem first.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zqjQDP9KX6E]

Filed Under: Leadership, management, Uncategorized Tagged With: communication, decision making, Leadership, learning, management, performance improvement, performance management, time management, Uncategorized

The Motivation Problem

July 1, 2008 by admin

One of my favourite films is Office Space. In this clip the job evaluation consultants ask ‘our hero’ Peter Gibbons to talk them through a normal day – and he does…

Enjoy!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e-n0d54Nx5c]

If you haven’t seen the film you might like to ponder what the results of Peter’s honesty were!

Watch out for tomorrow’s post!

And if anyone asks you why you are watching videos on the company’s time tell them it is management development.

Filed Under: Leadership, management Tagged With: Leadership, learning, management, Motivation, performance management, time management

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