Thursday, April 28, 2011
What Speaks to You?
Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry
Monday, April 25, 2011
Namecalling
Sunday, April 24, 2011
Expectations
Over the years, I have heard many quotes about expectations, but one particular quote has changed my life. "There's no relationship that can't be improved by lowering your expectations." [M. W., a personal friend]
This quote gave me great pause when I heard it. I thought it sounded horrible. What? No expectations of anyone? Isn't that like saying everyone's incapable? What is a world with low or no expectations like? How is this possible?
So much like any paradigm shifting comment in life, it took time to digest. The mental kick-it-around on this statement has literally taken years. To truly understand that statement, one has to consider expectations destructive instead of positive.
Here's some definitions for our discussion.
An objective is something that one's efforts or actions are intended to attain or accomplish; purpose; goal. An objective is a goal. My HR Manager mentors will be happy to know that I remember a really good objective is SMART - Specific, Measurable, Ambitious yet achievable, has a defined Result, and a Time for delivery. The best objectives, my HR Manager friends tell me, are those that are shared broadly in a work group (or a family, a pair of life partners, some friends) to inspire teamwork and support for delivery of the objective.
This is very different from an expectation which focuses on "the act or state of looking forward or anticipating". An expectation is a "I think it should be this way" and usually unshared, unspoken, unstructured, and rarely matches any sort of reality. It's what one hopes will happen rather than any sort of defined outcome. Psychology would lean toward calling expectations a projection of the expector's needs onto someone else.
Letting go of expectations in relationships, at work or at home, isn't getting rid of the objectives or the shared teamwork, it's getting rid of the hidden agendas and often destructive anticipations. It's choosing to accept how the deliverable presents itself rather than saying, "This doesn't meet my expectations". Ask yourself, "Does this meet the objective?" And if it doesn't meet the objective, as an HR Leader (or wife or husband or parent), consider these next questions, "What was the objective? How could it have been set more clearly to have met my intended outcome and make the do-er feel more successful?"
This isn't to say that people commit to things and don't deliver. Sadly, that does happen. However, this may be because the person isn't realistic about setting objectives for him or herself. Rather than feeling disappointed when a person exhibits the over-commit-under-deliver pattern, coach him or her. Ask a lot of questions when this person sets an objective. "Really? That's possible this week? With this and that going on?" In most cases, people want to do a great job. They want to do what's asked well. Not everyone is good at understanding that Time part of SMART.
The next time disappointment with an outcome sets in, be it with someone else or yourself, ask the question, "Was there an objective or an expectation?" If it was an expectation, do a better job moving it to an objective the next time and/or forgive the person, even if it is yourself, for not meeting this expectation. If there was an objective, figure out what went wrong and do better the next time -- be it helping those involved better define the objective or helping align your expectations to that objective.
We all expect our colleagues to behave like adults and our life partners to do what they say they will, but at the end of the day, they are human. What will keep us from wrecking a relationship out of disappointment and frustration is how we choose to manage expectations. As Marti says, "If it's important to you, do something about it. Don't just set there disappointed."
Monday, April 18, 2011
Flexibility and The Love-Fear Hypothesis
Sunday, April 17, 2011
Inflexibility
Friday, April 15, 2011
When no carrot remains
In today's mail bag, a career professional, more than qualified for the next level, gets permanently blocked for promotion. He says, "There is no carrot!" I agree. Other than this person's will to do good work, he's at a crossroads -- continue to suck up the same old draft from the lead dogs or choose another path.
While we're all masters of our own destinies, this situation stinks. What advice would you give my career man?
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
Professionalism - a poetic tribute
I hate, therefore I feel
I feel, therefore I am human
I am human, therefore I need
I need, therefore I work
I work, therefore I cannot feel
I work, therefore I cannot be human
I am not human, therefore I cannot feel
I cannot feel, therefore I cannot love or hate
I cannot love or hate, therefore I am professional
(Yes, it's been a tough week)
Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry
Tuesday, April 12, 2011
Rarity
Lessons from the Hamster Cage
So as an HR Leader, I get to travel a great deal and almost as much as Marti, but I enjoy a much bigger land area in my roaming. What goes along with travel is eating out, and well, either choosing to get fat or finding a way to exercise in a hotel. Exercising in a hotel sounds easy – go to the gym. Right? No. Some hotels (yes, even in today's modern world) don't have gyms, and some of them aren't worth being in for 5 minutes let alone long enough to get a recommended daily dose of healthy sweat. That's the hotel I'm in this week – gym not worth using in a climate too cold for running outside.
Being the persistent soul I am, Self and I have a chat (we do that, it's weird, we know).
Terri: We need to work out.
Self: Yes, we do. The gym at this hotel sucks, though.
Terri: This hotel has stairs and hallways. Big spaces to walk. We have a pedometer on this new iPod, we can do 10,000 steps.
Self: We will look like a dork.
Terri: I said walk, not run.
Self: Ok…
Self and I strap on the Asics Gel Nymbus shoes we're breaking in for running, the Polar Heart Rate Monitor, and the pedometer and head out in the hotel. Looking like a hot-wired, hippy robot in fancy turquoise and silver sneakers, Self and I determined there are 5 stairwells and 5 unique hallways in this hotel. We've got space. 900 steps per self-defined lap and running on the stairs is an option, as no self-respecting, airline-potato business traveler or tourist uses those.
About half-way through lap three, we start chatting again.
Terri: I feel like a hamster in a Habitrail® – up the stair tube, across the third level tube to another tube, back across the second level tube. (Google Habitrail®… it's a bunch of tubes for rodents to crawl around in for exercise.)
Self: Yep, but at least we're not the stupid hamster in the wheel running for his life and going nowhere. We're choosing how we move rather than letting the situation limit us.
Terri: Isn't that the point of Marti's Blog on "How Do You Want to Go Out" (October, 2010)?
This is what self and I were doing. No matter what the circumstance, we were choosing how we wanted to go out, and really that's a big lesson. Every moment in life is a choice of "How Do You Want to Go Out" and sometimes it's straight down the tube outside the front door of the office and telling this job to take itself and shove it. Self and I chose to go out walking in the hotel, regardless of passing the same guy twice in the hall and looking all red-faced in public, because I would rather know myself as a person of principled self-care than as someone who gained weight by staying in her room for lack of a likeable alternative. Choosing how to go out does require one to keep moving, even if it's just hanging around in the Habitrail® until a better alternative presents itself.