200
/ 100 Ways to Motivate Others
left, as far as I could possibly put it—a very uncomfort-
able position—and then he’d say, “Play this passage.”
He would then ask, “Now, if you had to choose one of
those two extremes, which one would you choose?”
“Well, all the way to the right, because it’s a little less
cumbersome than all the way to the left.”
“So what that’s
telling you, Scott, is that you probably
want to hold your hand position somewhere between all
the way to the right and all the way to the left, and it’s
probably going to be more to the right than to the left. So
find the way that works the best for you.”
And if I said, “Well, what about if other people say
you have to hold your hand a certain way?”
Mercado would then reel off a number of examples of
professional violinists who did it differently. He’d ask me
to reason it out.
“So
what is that telling you, Scott?”
“Well, that there isn’t one right way to do it.”
“Right, so find what works for you.”
And that was his teaching method.
So, I learned from that, and in motivating people I
adapted it to mean that there is never one right way to do
something. Rather than showing my people the “right way”
to make a phone call, or gather information from a client,
I will let them develop their own ways. The lesson learned
for me way back in music class
was that people will moti-
vate
themselves
in their own way if you gently guide them
toward the outcome you want.
/
201
95. Be a Ruthless Optimist
A leader is a dealer in hope.
—Napoleon Bonaparte
Pessimism is the most fundamental of all the mistakes
we managers can make. It is a position, a pose, taken by
the manager of not being optimistic
about the future of
the organization and, therefore, the future of the team.
It is a refusal to prepare for team meetings by learning
the rationale behind the latest company decisions. It is a
refusal to take a stand for the success of the enterprise. It
is a refusal to be an advocate for the organization’s ongo-
ing strategy.
It is also an exaggerated tendency to acknowledge and
agree with every issue’s downside without standing up for
the upside. Sometimes optimism is a lonely and coura-
geous
position to take, which is why most managers don’t
do it. The sad thing is, it is what the team wants and needs
the most from its leader.
While the unconscious manager doesn’t realize what
he or she is doing by being so pessimistic all the time, a
true leader knows exactly what optimism is and what it is
for: Optimism is the practice of focusing on opportunities
and possibilities rather than complaints and fears.
A true optimist is not a brainless Pollyanna,
wearing
rose-colored glasses. A true optimist is more realistic than
that. A true optimist is unafraid of confronting and under-
standing the problems in the organization. But once a prob-
lem is fully identified and understood, the optimist returns
the thinking to opportunity and possibility.
Dostları ilə paylaş: