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Bill
Karlson is a former corporate manager and executive recruiter
who now writes and speaks to groups across America about leadership
and finding satisfaction in your work. His book Get Top
Dollar in a Job You Love is a self-directed job search
system to help them understand themselves and the work that
will bring them a satisfying career. (Click
here to learn more about the book.) Leader Links
editor Michael Duduit recently visited with Bill about some
of the challenges leaders face in the workplace.
Leader Links: One of the
topics on which you frequently speak is how to bring infectious
passion into the work place. Why is passion important in the
work place?
Karlson:
There was a study done recently that said that our economy
is running at about 30% capacity. It's not due to lack of
equipment or lack of lots of other things -- people just don't
care about their jobs in the first place. So if you want a
business reason corporations are saying, "How do I
make a change to get our people to actually look forward to
coming to work so productivity goes up significantly without
adding to cost?" That's the business reason for it.
The other
side is that God wants me joyous, happy and free. He doesn't
want me miserable and worrying and stressed out and tense
all the time. I have a personal belief that we're all here
for a mission. The challenge is that we're given so many more
opportunities in terms of gifts, and skills, and talents and
distractions that we get good at something and we stay there,
even though it's not fulfilling us.
I'm amazed.
I do this with audiences -- secular or not secular -- I give
them a chance to talk about if they had a chance to bring
passion to their life. Let's just give an example: if you
won the lottery and you never had to work again -- you bought
the cars, gave to the church, you've paid off the debts, given
money to the kids, and you've traveled the world 10 times
and you have five houses then you say, "OK, I'm not
excited about that anymore." How would you spend your
time? I go back to Maslow's hierarchy of needs -- mostly I
try to get to that self-actualization level, which says I
want to feel like my life is significant. That's different
for every single person. Mother Teresa was certainly different
from Bill Gates, and Gates from Donald Trump.
And what
I hear is about half the people in any audience say I'd volunteer
my time and I'd put up a foundation to help people. Well,
then why aren't you doing that on the job? "I'm an accountant,
Bill. I can't do that on the job." I say, "Let me
give you eight different ways to take a look at that so that
you can bring some passion into your life." Then I go
through a series of exercises that give them a chance to look
at it in a perspective they've never seen before. They say,
"I didn't realize I could actually feel this way about
my work."
Leader
Links: As we try to lead those folks, what are
some suggestions you can give to us about how to motivate
passion in coworkers.
Karlson:
I was a headhunter for twelve years. I spent my first
four months dismally failing at that job. Made 4,000 phone
calls, had zero income and nothing on the horizon. I went
to a national conference and got my boss to set me up with
interviews with some of the best people in the organization
multi-thousand dollar producers year after year after year
and said, 'How do you do this?" They all focused on
the other side. They said, "It's not about where they
work; it's about how they feel about their work. And here
are the things you have to look at."
You have
to find out why the people want to show up in the first place.
How do we motivate people? My message is, having done that
for 12 years, you can't. Not long term. You can pressure them,
you can give them a carrot, you can do something that will
make them jump for awhile and then they are going to go back
to wherever they were before you started. If you pressure
them, the sad truth is they actually go down a little below
where they were before. I don't know how you get someone to
follow you unless they choose to long term. So instead of
trying to lead anybody because in this country we manage
them and there's a huge difference. If we're going to lead
them why don't we find out what they'd like to do first and
give them an opportunity to do that under the confines and
challenges we have of trying to meet our own objectives.
I encourage
people to do one of three things. One: Quit, because about
ten to fifteen percent of people working for anybody need
to move on. They've known it for a long time. You've known
it for a long time but they are performing just good enough
and it's not enough stress to get rid of them so you keep
them. That's affecting everybody else around.
Then there
are a whole bunch of people who are really ready to break
off to the next level within your organization but you don't
know how to give them that kind of growth to let them go.
I show them how to do that. Then you have a whole bunch in
the middle who really don't know why they're showing up to
work. As long as the check clears they're OK. What I'll do
is give them a chance to have some fun in their job, so they're
driving in tomorrow morning looking forward to getting there
early, and they look up and its 5:30 and they were off the
clock at 5 and they don't know how that happened.
Leader
Links: How about the leaders themselves? How do
you help them to understand better how to motivate themselves
in their work?
Karlson:
It's exactly the same core philosophy. Leaders aren't
born, they are built, but we don't have a particularly effective
system for building leaders except for our armed services
and they do a terrific job of it. But the rest of the country
is hit or miss. Most people get good at something, they get
noticed, they get promoted past their point of being good
at what they were doing, and now they are leading others.
They may or may not ever want to or have those kinds of skills.
And my perspective is let me take you through the same exact
experience I want to take your people through.
Do you
even want to be a leader? Is it killing you spiritually? Is
it causing you to do and say things that are against your
core values but you're forced to do because of the organization
or the goals? You're shortening your life that way. You need
to move on.
Or if
you love what you do, would you stop trying to violate people
by the golden rule. Do you understand that if you utilize
the golden rule you're going to cause people to be upset at
least three out of four times? The problem with that is it
doesn't apply to business leadership. Let's say that I tend
to be very externally motivated. I can talk all the time.
I don't pay any attention to detail. I fly through life and
I'm the corner of the company. That's how I want to be with
you, the person I lead. So I'm going to treat you just like
I'd like to be treated. The challenge is that if you'd look
at their core personality groups there are essentially four
main bodies. What if you happen to be strongly introverted
and very much driven by detail and all I do is talk at you
all the time, never write it down and don't give you any guidance
whatsoever? How do you feel in terms of being led?
In my
experience professional leaders rarely lead from their own
space. They set the vision and they're out there so people
know exactly where we'll going. But if I'll work with you
where you are, take the time to understand where are you,
why are you here in the first place, where would you prefer
to sit, how would you like me to manage you, would you rather
that I give you a specific amount of detail and we have a
very set schedule for you because that's how you best operate
or would that drive you crazy? Until I ask you I don't know.
So what most leaders that I see ineffective leaders do
is manage back to their own styles and let the other people
try to figure that out, which causes significant disconnect
between performance and people being people.
What's
the biggest challenge organizations have? Turnover and retention.
Well, as a recruiter, my peers will guarantee their people
for 30 days. What if I guarantee mine for a year? I said no,
I don't want one quick placement in an organization; I want
a long term relationship, and if it doesn't work out I want
to be the first person they call and fix it. I'll give them
their money back or replace that person for free. They said:
"you're nuts." I said, probably, but I made a six-figure
income for twelve years.
The lessons
I've learned relate to: how do I get my people to stay? What
I heard from these senior leaders was: "Bill, I have
to let Bob go." Why? "He's not working out."
Why? It's always about fit. It's almost never about competency.
Now that's what the letter is going to say that they get
the legal reasons. They don't fit. Well, what does fit mean?
I have to take a look at the cultural influences, I have to
start looking at the dynamics of their organization, their
leadership style, I have to look at the individual personalities.
What causes them to move on? I did exit interviews with every
single one of them, and I went from having to send out twelve
people to an interview to three, which is incredible in terms
of my industry. And I almost never had somebody leave unless
there was an elderly parent problem, spouse problem, child
problem that had nothing to do with fit. They stayed because
I took the time to get them connected with the work and then
I educated the leadership in terms of how to deal with them.
So I wrote
the book. All these questions about you to better make certain
you know what you're getting into before you get there. Some
things will cause you to quit. Please have the answers. As
an example, where will you sit? You should ask, "where
will I be sitting?" Have you ever asked that before?
No. I've got a low level job. I've got two places I'm going
to put you. I haven't thought about it. It's going to be random
chance when you show up. But you happen to be extremely introverted.
You're going to be doing accounting work for us. I've got
two desks left. One is an open cubicle by the elevator by
the girl who has the big jelly bean jar so that everybody
who comes in says hi right next to you. Or I've got one in
the basement with a door that rarely opens and a phone that
rarely works which would you prefer? Where could you perform
at your best? How would you feel if you were by the elevator?
I've designed a series of questions based on their personality.
Leader
Links: What would you say is the biggest single
mistake that organizations make in trying to recruit leaders?
Karlson:
They don't understand that when you bring a leader in
to assume your role or any role quite frankly they don't.
If you don't understand the culture of where you're going
to put someone what happens in cultural diversity is that
they don't blend. They slam into one another and the stronger
culture wins and kills the weaker culture. Sadly, more often
than not, an organization takes a leader out that they don't
like and there is rarely an off-the-site meeting where we
all talk about it. We just decide this isn't working individually
and you just stop doing those little things that you could
have done when you had a choice; you let them go and they
start to get in deeper and deeper trouble because they are
reacting in a way that cause you stress. An organization can
take a leader out very quickly.
On the
other hand, a strong leader who understands his organization
can pull it back from an extremely difficult place and put
it back on its feet. People choose to follow them based on
the fact that the leader has given them a place that matches
their core values. So the fundamental issue is: do you understand
where your people are and what they care about? Coming in
and waving a flag and giving motivating speeches is fine but
it has nothing to do with long term performance. The best,
effective leaders understand their people first.
I was
very briefly in the army ROTC in undergraduate school. Once
the commanding officer was watching me, and he pulled me aside.
He said, "Bill, I really like you but I'm really concerned
about your abilities to survive in Vietnam." I said,
"What's the problem?"
He said,
"Let me ask you something: how would you get your troops
to do what you what them to do?" I said, "I'll give
them an order and they'll follow it." Do you understand
you can't do that? I'm an eighteen-year-old kid.
He said,
"No, Bill, if you ever have to use your rank to get something
done they've lost respect for you and they will take you out
sometimes literally. You have to have their trust and respect.
Well, how do I do that? There are a series of things you can
do to earn their trust and respect. And they come back to
spiritual values. Are you a trustworthy person? Are you strong
enough that I can put my faith in you and follow you, knowing
that I'm going to be OK and if it doesn't work out because
leaders do not have control around them sometimes it will
still be OK?"
Leader
Links: At some time, almost every leader faces
the challenge of letting someone go. Is there a way that a
Christian leader handles that situation that's different from
a person not informed by the faith?
Karlson:
Because of legalities, because litigation is so prevalent
and attorneys rule the roost most of the time, I think that
with bigger corporations Christian leaders act just like any
other leader they refer to somebody in human resources.
It's done. People are escorted out of the building. The computers
are locked down.
But when
you add the spiritual piece to Christian leadership, you say,
"I'm going to be of service to this person." Because
you're a Christian leader you already know their heart to
begin with and you're going to find the most effective way
to do that so they heal as it's happening. When I've had to
let people go I always do it off site. I do it in a place
that is comfortable for them and I will end it. The sad truth
is 90% of the time a person knows this is coming. It's not
a surprise to them. The hardest are the ones who don't get
it. They are just stunned.
Now I
am not talking about economic stuff I'm talking about the
fit issue. It's just not going well, the performance is not
there though they're trying hard. I take them off site and
say, "Michael I need to talk to you about something that
is very important to both of us. Let's get a cup of coffee
in the morning. What's your favorite place? Great. You're
going to have the day off tomorrow so we're going to meet
there and I'll take care of whatever I need to take to make
sure things are fine." What I want to do is be able to
go to a place where they're comfortable relatively early in
the morning and sit down and say, "Well, how do you think
things are going with your job?" What I tend to discover
is that if they're given the permission to vent how they
really feel most of the time it's a blessing that they had
the chance to move on, but they couldn't make that cut because
they're married, they've got responsibilities. It's killing
their spirit -- because if it's not working for them it's
not working for me and we both know it but they don't know
how to get out. This is a society that says you have to work
and you just can't walk away from a good job when you have
obligations, even if it's spiritually killing you.
I listen
to them first to find out where they are. I say, "What
do you think your options are?" I allow them to come
back and say: I can do this, I can do that. "If you had
a chance to go do something else would you?" Well, yeah.
"OK, I've got maybe a blessing for you. You're going
to have that chance. I wanted to meet you offsite because
you might not feel good about what I say next, and if you
want to cry that's OK. I'm giving you the day off so you're
perfectly welcome to go home and not have any reservation
about any processes. You can call me during the day, and if
you want to talk about some other issues you can. The decision
has been made so it's not a bargaining situation but I want
to be of service and see if I can get you to the next step."
Leader
Links: To quote one of your own phrases, "What
is the strongest leadership secret you'll ever love?"
Karlson:
That you don't have to lead to get someone to follow you.
You don't have to lead to get people to follow you if you'll
go where they are first. But I will tell you in corporate
America it is almost never done. We have really, really good
management in this country but there's no leadership. It's
not about leading them someplace because typically the people
that are following you have better answers than you'll have
anyway. Your goal is to be out past where they are and have
this vision and stay above the details. So you really can't
keep them on target, but they continue to keep you focused.
It's not
just getting out there and commanding your troops to follow
you, setting these incredibly tough goals, and if they don't
work out firing them. That's where most leadership is. No
matter how they phrase it, that's how it's done. And I think
that's incredibly unproductive and inefficient. A leader says:
who are you, what do you want, how can I help you get that?
Are our goals in congruence, because if they are not both
of us lose. As long as the goals are in congruence it's going
to be a wonderful match and you're going to succeed with it.
But if they're not, check it out, find out why not, and if
they need to move on it's a blessing to allow them to go do
something else, so long as it's done with love, where they
see it in your eyes that this is not punishing it's not
being judged wrong. It's a bad match.
A leader
says, "It's my responsibility for putting you in a position
like that and I apologize. It shouldn't have gotten there.
It should have been better." I think we're here to be
of service. You don't have to be perfect when troops see
their leaders vulnerable and open and really doing the best
they can they will forgive them in most instances.
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You
can visit Bill's website at www.billkarlson.com.
Or click here
to learn more about his book, Get Top Dollar in a Job
You Love.
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