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The Total View
Welcome
to the September 1, 2004 issue of The Total View
Your resource
for cutting-edge news, tips, and tools to help you hire, manage,
and motivate top-performing employees.
If you
are receiving this issue as a forward, and want your own subscription,
visit
http://www.chrysaliscorporation.com/newsletter.htm
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In This Issue
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1. My Brain Was Smokin' - What I Learned in CriteriaOne Training.
2. Perfect Labor Storm Alerts #231 to #235.
3. Hire High Motivation Employees like the Experts.
4. As Seen on CN8 Money Matters...August 23, 2004.
5. Best Practice Tips and Resources.
6. Obesity Weighs Down Health Care Costs
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The Total View is written and published each Wednesday by
Ira S. Wolfe, founder of Success Performance Solutions. (Yes,
Ira writes every article, every week!) and is distributed
with permission by The Chrysalis Corporation.
Ira S.
Wolfe 2004 - All Rights Reserved. Reprints and other distribution
by permission only.
To learn
more about The Chrysalis Corporation or to read back issues
of The Total View, visit our web site at http://www.chrysaliscorporation.com
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1. My Brain Was Smokin' - What I Learned in CriteriaOne Training.
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By Marilyn Walker, Director of SPS Assessment Center
It was
Wednesday morning at 8:45. I was sitting in a meeting room
with eight women representing industries from food processing
to banking.
We were
all there - eager to learn how to hire and promote the right
employees. The workshop leader, Ira Wolfe, started the training
by asking us what we thought was an easy question - to describe
the traits of our "ideal" employee:
Without
hesitation, my counterparts for the next few days started
calling out the following descriptors:
--Team
player
--Reliable
--Creative
--Loyal
--Self-motivated
--Passionate
--Good communicator
--Ethical
We then
kept adding to the list:
--Friendly
--Visionary
--Strategic
--Goal-oriented
--Tenacious
--Fun
--Global thinker
--Change agent
--Participatory
That was
easy. We all knew what we wanted. Well - we thought we did.
The next part got a little harder. It became painfully apparent
that we weren't going to agree on what these descriptors meant.
It started
with words "team player." To some of us it meant
an individual who "got along with people" while
to others it meant someone who helped his team to "win."
As I looked around, I noticed a few eyes roll at the suggestion
of the word "win". "Why does everything have
to be about winning," one participant said later. "Team
playing is about sportsmanship." Good point. That was
the first clue that the next three days could prove to be
mighty interesting. Without clear definitions and expectations,
something as simple as misunderstanding what we meant by team
player could cause a lot of stress in the workplace
We then
moved on to what did "fun" mean? How complicated
could describing fun be? While everyone agreed having a sense
of humor was important, a few of us thought a "fun"
individual might be susceptible to goofing off or playing
practical jokes - and that wouldn't be tolerated in some of
our businesses. So much for fun. We moved on.
What stopped
all of us in our tracks was "self-motivated."
While
all eight of us agreed that self-motivation was a required
trait for our ideal employee, we each had a different vision
about what a motivated employee looked like - excited, engaged,
hard-working, supportive, driven, urgent, energetic. Ira then
asked us how we would differentiate between the upbeat, enthusiastic,
pencil tapping, leg shaking, continuously-in-motion individual
and the less emotional, more reserved, but highly committed
and competent candidate. We must have looked like deer caught
in the headlight.
That is
when all of us recognized that there might be a humongous
difference between an employee who is energetic and enthusiastic
and one who is productive. The wheels began to turn. We were
beginning to see why each of us had misjudged the commitment
and competence of a few former employees before and after
we hired them.
It was
just 9:30 when Ira introduced us to what became one of the
highlights of the training - the concept of the Quality of
Motivation. Ira definitely had our attention.
We first
learned that everyone is motivated. What we didn't realize
that not all motivation is positive. By positive, Ira explained
that we had the motivational skills (yes - motivation is a
skill) to acquire and keep things that bring us pleasure and
to avoid and escape those things that bring us pain.
It was
easy to understand that attainment (getting what I want) and
maintenance (keeping what I have) are positive motivators.
Ira gave a great example about how this fits in our workplace.
Many people have the motivational skill to go out and get
a job but fewer people have the motivational skill to show
up on time. But most of us hadn't thought that avoidance (staying
away from discomfort) and escape (getting out of pain) were
also positive motivators. But this started to make sense.
To become self-sufficient, we each need to be motivated to
achieve new things, maintain what we have, avoid unnecessary
pain, and escape the pain when we do experience it.
Our society
places more emphasis on "thrill of victory and agony
of defeat" and overlooks training the skills of maintenance
and avoidance. Just think about life today. If something breaks,
throw it away and buy newer and better. What motivation is
there to maintain anything. And don't bother to avoid unnecessary
pain - there is a pill or surgery to fix whatever ails you.
We have become a nation of pleasure seeking escape artists.
The good
news is that positive motivators are life skills. Once we
learn them, we have them. When we use them, we have the ability
to enjoy long term positive results.
But that
is only half the story. There are four more motivators, called
counter-productive behaviors. And many people are more skilled
at using these counter-productive behaviors than they are
at experiencing positive behaviors. Why is this so important
to know? Because many of us as managers unwillingly end up
trying to motivate employees and all we do is make things
worse. The result is a short term positive outcome……with
long-term negative consequences.
Let me
prove my point. How many of us have gone to a one-day pick-me-up-rah-rah-feel-good
seminar? Let's admit it, we all have at one time or another.
We leave feeling upbeat, positive and ready to conquer the
world. MOTIVATED. But something happens on the way back to
the office. Reality hits hard when the mobile phone rings
while we're stuck in traffic and your assistant calls to tell
you that your computer has crashed and has a virus. We soon
realize that life hasn't changed at all. For the positively
motivated, you use your escape and achievement skills. For
the negatively motivated, the worst is yet to come.
Research
has shown that nearly two-thirds of the people who attend
motivational seminars actually feel worse within seven days
after the seminar than they did before they went in the first
place. Morale and productivity now takes a dive. Why is that?
When these negatively motivated employees think about the
great day of escape they had and begin to think how everyone
else is probably taking back control of their lives but they're
stuck in this crummy job, with a crummy life, and a crummy
boss, the last thing they want to face is to have a smiley
faced, perky, positively motivated co-worker say, "Isn't
this a great day"?
So what
do they do? They fall back on their counter-productive motivators
they are so good at using. Ironically this gets them motivated
- not productive, but passionate and energetic at proving
that they are worse off than the next guy.
Most people
would label this type of individual as un-motivated or de-motivated,
but that is not true at all. That is the mistake that many
managers make. Negatively motivated people are very motivated
and passionate about proving why the world is out to get them
and why nothing will ever change. Their pain is always worse
than your pain. They believe that while they are fighting
for every penny and every breath of air, you are the lucky
one because you are pretty or tall or smart or had rich parents
or whatever. If you ever try to win the battle of the attitudes,
you can't. Negatively motivated people are incredibly competent
and very passionate about defending their state of hopelessness.
Unfortunately they are good at winning battles by wearing
other people down. Negative people are like a giant vacuum.
They just suck the life out of a company.
The point
finally hit home. Before these first few hours, we all believed
what negative employees needed was a little motivation. We
now knew this was like throwing grease on a fire. We learned
something that will change the way we look at motivating ourselves
and others. We need to stop filling the counter-productive
buckets and start teaching positive motivators.
Our brains
were starting to smoke and it was only 10:15 and we had two
and one-half more days to go. It only got better as we learned
five techniques to positively motivate employees.
To learn
more about the CriteriaOne(tm) process, follow this link:
http://www.chrysaliscorporation.com/criteria_one.htm
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2. Perfect Labor Storm Alerts #230 to #235.
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Fact #23:
in the Road Jack No More - Truckers Short of Staff: Trucking
executives are having a tough time filling jobs in the United
States, according to the San Francisco Examiner. Competing
industries such as construction are paying more, and driving
500 miles a day can be lonely and sometimes stressful. J.B.
Hunt CEO Kirk Thompson says, "Growth is at a virtual
standstill until additional truck drivers are attracted."
Fact #232:
According to the Tulsa World, trucking companies are trying
to combat the 105 to 110 percent turnover rates with higher
wages and signing bonuses. But drivers are less concerned
about money than about being treated with honesty and respect.
Fact #233:
The Canadian Medical Association wants the government to provide
$765 million to address the shortage of doctors, nurses and
other health-care professionals, according to the Associated
Press. The money would be used for, among other things, workforce
planning--such as forecasting the number of practitioners
needed to reduce the waiting lines for medical care.
Fact #234:
One in every 278 Americans now work for Wal-Mart (Source:
Business Week).
Fact #235:
More than 75 percent of the workforce must be retrained to
keep the jobs they have. 80 percent of jobs will require some
sort of postsecondary education. 61 percent will require more
than a high school education but less than a bachelor's degree.
(Source: U.S. Department of Labor).
Don't
be caught in storm without all the facts. "The Perfect
Labor Storm Fact Book: Why Worker Shortages Won't Go Away"
is a must-read leading edge forecast that predicts workforce
trends for decades to come. Order your copy today - $7.95
includes no shipping costs for limited time only.
http://www.kickstartcart.com/app/netcart.asp?MerchantID=37174&ProductID=1717642
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3. Hire High Motivation Employees like the Experts.
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It is
finally here. After three years and hundreds of hours, The
How to Hire The High Motivation Employee audio series is complete.
Six 30-minute CDs - more than three hours of interviews -
guide a manager through each section of the TotalView(tm)
Assessment System, complete with examples and stories you
can use to hire the right employee and build the best teams.
Why TotalView? It is simply the best job matching and employee
evaluation system on the market today.
The first
CD begins with an overview of the TotalView(tm) Assessment
System and explanations of each of the Abilities scales. The
second CD focuses on Motivations and Interests. And CDs three
through six discuss the four major personality traits and
eight sub-scales in detail.
As a thank
you for reading The Total View newsletter, we're offering
the complete audio series for only $159 through August 31,
2004.
Order
How to Hire The High Motivation Employee here:
https://www.mcssl.com/app/javanof.asp?merchantid=37174&productid=1969461&IP=322.7.786.182&qty=&afid=
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4. As Seen on CN8 Money Matters...August 23, 2004.
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"Hiring
the right people is the hardest part of a manager's job."
Listen to how 2 Best Place to Work (PA) Companies have used
SPS online personality tests and CriteriaOne services to hire
the right people and improve customer service.
Segment
1 - Personality Tests help Community Bank embrace diverse
workforce
http://www.super-solutions.com/audio/CN8_EmployeeMotivators_Wolfe_Mohn.wmv
Segment
2 - High-tech company hires the right people with CriteriaOne
http://www.super-solutions.com/audio/CN8_EmployeeMotivators_Wolfe_BobZ.wmv
(Download
speeds may vary - please be patient or contact us for a CD)
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5. Best Practice Tips and Resources.
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Learn
the secrets about how to match an employee's capability, motivation,
and behavior to the core competencies required by the job:
TotalView
Assessment System - Match an employee's abilities and personality
to a specific job:
http://www.chrysaliscorporation.com/totalview_overview.htm
Personal
Interests, Attitudes, and Values (tm) - What fills your employees'
buckets (motivators):
http://www.chrysaliscorporation.com/piav.htm
DISC -
How do employees respond to problems, people, pace, and procedures:
http://www.chrysaliscorporation.com/disc.htm
Complimentary
Interviewing IQ Test. Find out how well you and your managers
know the ins and outs of interviewing:
http://www.chrysaliscorporation.com/interviewing_iq.htm
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6. Obesity Weighs Down Health Care Costs
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Carrying
their own weight may be a problem for many employees when
it comes to keeping up with their performance, but not so
when it comes to pounds.
--About
40% of Americans, or 68 million people, will be obese by 2010.
--31% of Americans are now obese.
--Being overweight increases the risk of diabetes, heart disease,
cancer, arthritis, and other health problems.
--Obesity has roughly the same association with chronic health
conditions as 20 years of aging. (Centers for Disease Control)
--The Surgeon General reports that more than 9 percent of
the nation's health-care expenditures-- about $117 billion--and
300,000 deaths annually are directly related to obesity and
physical inactivity.
--Four million people are severely obese (100 or more pounds
over a healthy weight). The number increased from one in 200
in 1986 to one in 50 in 2000.
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Contact Information:
The Chrysalis
Corporation
2001 Hammock Drive
Valdosta, GA 31602
229-257-0665
e-mail:
mike@chrysaliscorporation.com
To learn
more about The Chrysalis Corporation, visit:
http://www.chrysaliscorporation.com