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talent talk...

Insights and trends in leadership, talent management and coaching.

May 2008
In This Issue
Building Confidence
Why Do People Leave Their Job?
Motivational Quotes
Staying Motivated in a Struggling Economy

"Time is the coin of your life. It is the only coin you have, and only you can determine how it will be spent. Be careful lest you let other people spend it for you."

Carl Sandburg

 

"You may delay, but time will not."

Benjamin Franklin

 

"The problem with communication ... is the illusion that it has been accomplished."

George Bernard Shaw
 

"You can never solve a problem on the level on which it was created."

Albert Einstein

 

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Exams are over and a fresh crop of university and college students is entering the workforce with high hopes, high expectations and very likely high debt! They are also bringing a new set of values and personal motivators that many will find challenging. These 'millennials', children of the   boomer generation, have a good work ethic but 'how' they want to work is quite different. Their lives have been structured from the time they entered daycare so they like to know what is expected of them, but they resent being micro-managed. They seek out workplaces that offer flexible work arrangements (time is the preferred commodity, not money), lots of opportunity to collaborate with peers, and managers who provide regular feedback and praise.

 

Are your Managers prepared with the knowledge, attitudes and confidence to coach this new cohort? If you think they could use some guidance and training please inquire about our new program, the Confident Coach, designed to enhance the coaching skills of managers which, in turn, will have a positive impact on employee engagement.

Enjoy this issue of Talent Talk!

Rebecca Heaslip

President

Leadership Insight

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Building Confidence
 

Confidence is a critical ingredient to your growth and development. You develop self-confidence by creating success. Through your goals you can provide for frequent successes. Set short term goals in the beginning. Experience often the satisfaction of moving a 'Short Term Goal' to the 'Goal Accomplished' area of your daily planner or other tracking device.Leadership Insight Logo People who have well-defined goals in life develop confidence through achieving those goals. Thus, they are always better prepared to confront new situations, and achieve higher goals. As you achieve goals, and feel the satisfaction of achievement, your confidence in your abilities is enhanced as is your potential to achieve more and higher goals.

Lack of confidence also stems from our inability to visualize successfully doing whatever it is we want to do. Careful planning, specific action steps, and affirmations help you to clearly plan exactly how and why you can achieve your goals. It focuses your imagination on the positive rather than the negative.

Confidence is the key ingredient to any plan. It is part of the solution to every obstacle you have identified in your goal. Fortunately, confidence is a limitless resource; the more you use of it, the more there is to use. However, there is a price to be paid. To "use" confidence requires involvement: only through involvement (and consequent testing and confrontation) are boundaries pushed back and fears overcome. To take goal setting seriously guarantees that you will need to increase your confidence. To take goal setting seriously also guarantees that you will increase your confidence.

Reference source: Resource Associates Corporation, Supervisory Development Program. Copyright protected worldwide. Adapted by Sorrell Associates, LLC

 
Why Do People Leave Their Job? 
 

Experience-Based Retention

ü  Is it because of money? 

ü  Benefits? 

ü  The fact they believe there are no real opportunities for them at the company?

While many might argue about which of the above has more impact on whether or not a person decides to jump ship, attempting to identify the main overall culprit is probably the least productive approach to increasing retention. Why? Because while studies may show that one factor carries more weight than another, those same studies also show that all of the factors have the ability to influence people to some degree.Leadership Insight Logo

So that means by focusing solely on the main culprit - whatever it might be - your retention plan is only as good as the number of people in your company who are primarily affected by that factor. Which means that it's nowhere close to being 100% effective.

People and Situations

Are you going to retain every person you hire?  Of course not. The key is to retain those people you want to retain, those employees who make a difference and contribute a tremendous amount to the company in numerous ways. And in order to retain those superstar employees, you have to consider what kind of experience you're providing to them.

Life is nothing more than a series of experiences, and people respond to them in a rather predictable fashion.

They strive to avoid negative experiences, and they tend to gravitate toward positive ones. That rule certainly applies to people.  After all, people provide an experience, don't they? I'm sure you could identify people in your life who provide negatives experiences and people who provide positive ones.

Which ones do you try to avoid?

The same holds true for an employment situation. If people aren't receiving a positive experience in their job, they're going to try to find a new one. The challenge is to ensure that they're receiving that positive experience. However, there are two aspects of this challenge to keep in mind:

Experiences are very person-specific.  In other words, what one person believes is a positive experience might not be the case for another person.

Employees are not apt to come right out and tell you what constitutes a positive experience for them. Unless you have a very outgoing and highly communicative person on your team, you'll have to gather that information yourself.

Productivity and Profitability

As you might imagine, there are many different components to an experience, especially an employment experience. The good news is that there are ways to not only account for all of them, but also to ensure that you're addressing them in a way that will create positive experiences with your team and increase retention.

In future issues, we're going to identify and discuss these different components, how they affect the overall employment experience and why, and how your understanding of them can help you to maximize the productivity - not to mention the profitability - of your team.

Copyright protected, all rights reserved worldwide. ©2008 Gary Sorrell

 

Staying Motivated In A Struggling Economy
 

Fear is a very powerful emotion.  When we live in fear, even of the unknown, there is a tendency to isolate, exert control and be on the defensive. It drains our energy and creates exhaustion.Leadership Insight Logo

The majority of coaching conversations I am having these days are about this fear generated by a struggling economy. Worry over business progress, finding a job, salary and bonus eliminations, increased job performance expectations have taken over people's mindsets thus decreasing motivation and focus for themselves and their business.

While no one has a crystal ball to know exactly what will happen with the economy, you do have the keys to move through this time by the actions you take to minimize the fear and maximize your choices. Following are three key tips on how to refocus and regain motivation during a challenging time:

Key Tip #1 Get Back to the Basics

What are the critical items you need to do to maintain positive movement forward in your career and in your life? What can you take charge of? There are critical items that you need to focus on day in and day out in whatever your work effort is about. If you are unemployed, there are critical items. If you run a business, there are critical items. What are they? Identify, simplify and take action

Key: Think of this also in your personal life.  What critical items do you need to happen in order to maintain joy and relieve stress? Is it time with family? Time to golf? What critical items do you need that may have been ignored due to your focus on fear?

Key Tip #2 Define and Honor Your Genius Work

In Ernest Oriente and Judy Feld's book Smart Match Alliances, they describe genius work as "Genius work is the highest and best use of your time. When you do your genius work- the activities that produce the greatest results in the shortest period of time for you - the struggle ends...fast."

What is your genius work? What is the work you do that suspends time and delivers the greatest results? Define it, honor it and spend the majority of your day doing it.

Key: To define your genius work, answer the following question: 

What are three areas of focus and corresponding activities that would constitute the best and most valuable use of my time today? 

Key Tip #3   This Too Shall Pass

Because there is no crystal ball, we cannot predict when this economy will take a positive, sustained turn. However, history proves that it will turn. It has always done so; there is no reason to think it will not do so again. 

Key: History also shows that YOU have been through challenging times in the past and moved through those times as well. Perhaps it has not been the economy but other life events. Identify for yourself what life challenges you have faced in the past and how you have navigated the uncertainty. That should give you clues as to your ability to face this current challenge AND specific things you could do to make the process less painful.

Reprint permission granted by author Cheryl Leitschuh, Ed.D. LP