100 Ways to Motivate Others: How Great Leaders Can Produce Insane Results Without Driving People Crazy
Scott Richardson
Steve Chandler
This new edition includes fresh insights into communication and rapid decision-making, the importance of personal self-leadership and physical energy, and exciting new methods for enrolling clients and selling to customers in service-oriented ways that leave behind the old paradigm of manipulation and persuasion.
The authors will help you learn:
• How to slow down and enjoy a new level of focus.
• How to build on your peoples' strengths.
• A simple and creative way to hold people accountable.
• How to enjoy cultivating the art of supportive confrontation.
Это новое издание поможет вам по-новому взглянуть на свои коммуникации и вашу способность быстро принимать решения, а также важность личного лидерства и физической энергии.
Авторы помогут вам узнать:
• как замедлить или ускорить процесс работы и повысить внимание к деталям.
• как построить корпоративную этику, корпоративный дух и прочие составляющие ответственного коллектива.
• как воспитать ответственность и любовь к работе у ваших сотрудников.
• как с помощью искусства конфронтации добиться от подчиненных максимальных результатов в короткие сроки.
Steve Chandler, Scott Richardson
100 Ways to Motivate Others
To Rodney Mercado
Acknowledgments
To the greatest motivator there ever was, Mr. Rodney Mercado, child prodigy, genius in 10 fields, and professor of music and violin at the University of Arizona.
To Chuck Coonradt, who, unlike other consultants, not only talks about how to motivate others, but has a proven system, the Game of Work, that delivers stunning results and fun to the workplace in the same breath. Chuck used the Game of Work on his own business first, and blew the lid off the results for his Positive Mental Attitude Audiotape company. Chuck realized that what he had created, the Game of Work system, was worth a fortune to companies of all sizes: It brought more financial success than even Positive Mental Attitude! Chuck has helped our own businesses succeed.
To motivator extraordinaire Steve Hardison, about whose talents we have written much, but never too much.
To Ron Fry, Gina Talucci, and Michael Pye at Career Press, for many years of wonderful service to our writing efforts.
And to the memory of Lyndon Duke (1941-2004), a magnificent teacher, motivator, and friend.
“While business is a game of numbers, real achievement is measured in infinite emotional wealths: friendship, usefulness, helping, learning, or, said another way, the one who dies with the most joys wins.”
– Dale Dauten
Introduction to the Third Edition
The world of leadership has changed dramatically since the first edition of this book was written, and Scott Richardson and I have now revised and refreshed this organizational leadership guidebook to meet the times.
We have added 10 new ways to motivate others, bringing us into the modern world.
The book now includes fresh respect for the communication and rapid decision-making that the global community demands.
The importance of personal self-leadership and physical energy have been added to the solid leadership principles that made the first editions of this book so popular with leaders and managers of every kind of organization, from corporate, educational, and non-profit, to community groups and even families.
Motivating others requires a connection to people’s deep desires. It’s not just about loading them up with a lot of how-to information. Transformation is more important than information. Action is everything. A great motivator of others will value testing over trusting. She won’t waste time getting her people to trust change or trust the system – she will work on ways to test them.
Change in the workplace and the world is exponential now. It is no longer linear, predictable change. It is more like the absolutely unexpected, shocking change described so dramatically in Nassim Nicholas Taleb’s The Black Swan. Because of this, great motivators are now welcoming change and helping their people see all change as a creative opportunity.
Organizations are more vulnerable than ever to suddenly disappearing. They can become obsolete in a heartbeat. But rather than finding that frightening, one who masters motivating himself and others finds it exciting.
The new edition we have created for you addresses all these quantum shifts in organizational reality. It updates and upgrades your skills as a leader to motivate others to feel the same excitement you do about the global market and its opportunities. The 10 new ways to motivate others that we have added to this book are what work for us and our clients. They are not theory. And because they are not mere theory, we invite you to use them immediately, and see them as tools, not rules.
– Steve Chandler
1. Know Where Motivation Comes From
Leadership is the art of getting someone else to do something you want done because he wants to do it.
– Dwight D. Eisenhower
There was a manager named Tom who came early to a seminar we were presenting on leadership. He was attired in an olive green polo shirt and white pleated slacks, ready for a day of golf. Tom walked to the front of the room and said, “Look, your session is not mandatory, so I’m not planning on attending.”
“That’s fine, but I wonder why you came early to this session to tell us that. There must be something that you’d like to know.”
“Well, yes, there is,” the manager confessed. “All I want to know is how to get my sales team to improve. How do I manage them?”
“Is that all you want to know?”
“Yes, that’s it,” declared the manager.
“Well, we can save you a lot of time and make sure that you get to your golf game on time.”
The manager Tom leaned forward, waiting for the words of wisdom that he could extract about how to manage his people.
We told him: “You can’t.”
“What?”
“You can’t manage anyone. So there, you can go and have a great game.”
“What are you saying?” asked the manager. “I thought you give whole seminars on motivating others. What do you mean, I can’t?”
“We do give whole seminars on this topic. But one of the first things we teach managers is that they can’t really directly control their people. Motivation always comes from within your employee, not from you.”