| Leaders do nothing
more important than get results. But you can't get results by
yourself. You need others to help you do it. And the best way
to have other people get results is not by ordering them but motivating
them. Yet many leaders fail to motivate people to achieve results
because those leaders misconstrue the concept and applications
of motivation.
To understand motivation and apply it daily,
let's understand its three critical factors. Know these factors
and put them into action to greatly enhance your abilities to
lead for results.
1. MOTIVATION IS PHYSICAL ACTION. "Motivation"
has common roots with "motor," "momentum," "motion," "mobile,"
etc. - all words that denote movement, physical action. An essential
feature of motivation is physical action. Motivation isn't about
what people think or feel but what they physically do. When motivating
people to get results, challenge them to take those actions that
will realize those results.
I counsel leaders who must motivate individuals
and teams to get results not to deliver presentations but "leadership
talks." Presentations communicate information.. But when you want
to motivate people, you must do more than simply communicate information.
You must have them believe in you and take action to follow you.
A key outcome of every leadership talk must be physical action,
physical action that leads to results.
For instance, I worked with the newly-appointed
director of a large marketing department who wanted the department
to achieve sizable increases in the results. However, the employees
were a demoralized bunch who had been clocking tons of overtime
under her predecessor and were feeling angry that their efforts
were not being recognized by senior management.
She could have tried to order them to get the
increased results. Many leaders do that. But order-leadership
founders in today's highly competitive, rapidly changing markets.
Organizations are far more competitive when their employees instead
of being ordered to go from point A to point B want to go from
point A to point B. So I suggested that she take a first step
in getting the employees to increase results by motivating those
employees to want to increase results. They would "want to" when
they began to believe in her leadership. And the first step in
enlisting that belief was for her to give a number of leadership
talks to the employees.
One of her first talks that she planned was to
the department employees in the company's auditorium.
She told me, "I want them to know that I appreciate
the work they are doing and that I believe that they can get the
results I'm asking of them. I want them to feel good about themselves."
"Believing is not enough," I said. "Feeling good
is not enough. Motivation must take place. Physical action must
take place. Don't give the talk until you know what precise action
you are going to have happen."
She got the idea of having the CEO come into
the room after the talk, shake each employee's hand, and tell
each how much he appreciated their hard work - physical action.
She didn't stop there. After the CEO left, she challenged each
employee to write down on a piece of paper three specific things
that they needed from her to help them get the increases in results
and then hand those pieces of paper to her personally - physical
action.
Mind you, that leadership talk wasn't magic dust
sprinkled on the employees to instantly motivate them. (To turn
the department around so that it began achieving sizable increases
in results, she had to give many leadership talks in the weeks
and months ahead.) But it was a beginning. Most importantly, it
was the right beginning.
2. MOTIVATION IS DRIVEN BY EMOTION. Emotion and
motion come from the same Latin root meaning "to move". When you
want to move people to take action, engage their emotions. An
act of motivation is an act of emotion. In any strategic management
endeavor, you must make sure that the people have a strong emotional
commitment to realizing it.
When I explained this to the chief marketing
officer of a worldwide services company, he said, "Now I know
why we're not growing! We senior leaders developed our marketing
strategy in a bunker! He showed me his "strategy" document. It
was some 40 pages long, single-spaced. The points it made were
logical, consistent, and comprehensive. It made perfect sense.
That was the trouble. It made perfect, intellectual sense to the
senior leaders. But it did not make experiential sense to middle
management who had to carry it out. They had about as much in-put
into the strategy as the window washers at corporate headquarters.
So they sabotaged it in many innovative ways. Only when the middle
managers were motivated - were emotionally committed to carrying
out the strategy - did that strategy have a real chance to succeed.
3. MOTIVATION IS NOT WHAT WE DO TO OTHERS. IT'S
WHAT OTHERS DO TO THEMSELVES. The English language does not accurately
depict the psychological truth of motivation. The truth is that
we cannot motivate anybody to do anything. The people we want
to motivate can only motivate themselves. The motivator and the
motivatee are always the same person. We as leaders communicate,
they motivate. So our "motivating" others to get results really
entails our creating an environment in which they motivate themselves
to get those results.
For example: a commercial division leader almost
faced a mutiny on his staff when in a planning session, he put
next year's goals, numbers much higher than the previous year's,
on the overhead. The staff all but had to be scrapped off the
ceiling after they went ballistic. "We busted our tails to get
these numbers last year. Now you want us to get much higher numbers?
No way!"
He told me. "We can hit those numbers. I just
have to get people motivated!"
I gave him my "motivator-and-motivatee-are-the-same-person!"
pitch. I suggested that he create an environment in which they
could motivate themselves. So he had them assess what activities
got results and what didn't. They discovered that they spent more
than 60 percent of their time on work that had nothing to do with
getting results. He then had them develop a plan to eliminate
the unnecessary work. Put in charge of their own destiny, they
got motivated! They developed a great plan and started to get
great results.
Over the long run, your career success does not
depend on what schools you went to and what degrees you have.
That success depends instead on your ability to motivate individuals
and teams to get results. Motivation is like a high voltage cable
lying at your feet. Use it the wrong way, and you'll get a serious
shock. But apply motivation the right way by understanding and
using the three factors, plug the cable in, as it were, and it
will serve you well in many powerful ways throughout your career.
2004 © The Filson Leadership Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
=====================================================
The author of 23 books, Brent Filson's recent books are, THE LEADERSHIP
TALK: THE GREATEST LEADERSHIP TOOL and 101 WAYS TO GIVE GREAT
LEADERSHIP TALKS. He is founder and president of The Filson Leadership
Group, Inc. - and has worked with thousands of leaders worldwide
during the past 20 years helping them achieve sizable increases
in hard, measured results. Sign up for his free leadership ezine
and get a free guide, "49 Ways To Turn Action Into Results," at
http://www.actionleadership.com/
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