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MEDIOCRITY WILL KILL YOU
Because I have worked closely with all kinds of clients in all kinds of industries, I have been able to pinpoint a widespread stumbling block that keeps too many organizations from being their best. It is the practice of tolerating mediocre performers.
Let’s face it, it’s not the dishonest or disrespectful or undependable people who keep us from excelling. Most of us are smart enough to cut our losses and fire these losers fast.
No, most often the cause of less than peak performance is the mediocre players who keep us from having exceptional, winning teams that outperform the competition.
The main reasons mediocrity is allowed to flourish are because:
1. Most of us are just too nice. We don’t want to be responsible for hurting anyone’s feelings or putting them in dire financial straights. We avoid short-term pain and end up tolerating long-term misery.
2. “I just don’t have time right now to hire and train a new employee.” (This is another way of saying your team doesn’t have any bench strength. In other words, the convenience of mediocrity trumps the inconvenience of change.)
3. “We will have to pay unemployment.” (No one stops to think about the long-term cost of substandard performance versus the limited-time payment of benefits. One way or another, you’re going to pay and the right decision is in favor of the overall quality of your organization.)
There are some simple solutions to these problems, but, like most things worth doing, they aren’t necessarily easy.
1. Recruit and interview religiously: Make sure you are looking for new hires even when you don’t need anyone at the moment.
2. Then, when you are not in desperation hiring mode, you can raise the bar: When you don’t have to hire the first minimally qualified person who shows up, kick your hiring standards up a notch and don’t settle for less.
3. Hold everyone accountable, including yourself: Spell out what it takes to be a successful member of your organization and make sure everyone knows exactly what’s expected.
4. Become an employer-of-choice. Is yours a fun place to work? Do you have family-friendly policies? Do all the players on your team enjoy working together? When you can answer “yes” to these questions, you’ll be able to attract top-notch talent at every level.
According to Daniel Pink, the author of Drive, everything we think we know about what motivates us is wrong. His book pits the latest scientific discoveries about the mind against the outmoded wisdom that claims people can only be motivated by the hope of gain and the fear of loss. Pink cites a dizzying number of studies revealing that carrot and stick can actually significantly reduce the ability of workers to produce creative solutions to problems.
How much would it be worth it to you to have the benefits of autonomy listed below? Or, maybe, the question should be: How much less would you work for if you had control over one or all of them? Do you know which of these are important to the people who work for you?
1. The ability to choose the hours and the times you work.
2. The ability to select the people you work with.
3. The ability to choose the things you do at work.
4. The ability to decide the best ways you do your job.
It would be interesting to ask your present team and/or job applicants to rank the items above in order of importance to them.