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Marcus Buckingham Thinks Your Boss Has an Attitude Problem

2008-03-11 03:11:34

By Polly LaBarre

There is a noble promise at the heart of the new world of business: Everyone

has the right to meaningful work, and people who do meaningful work create the

most value in the marketplace. Even as the talent wars have fizzled into

pink-slip parties, few senior executives would dispute the vital importance of

finding, engaging, and developing the best people. Ask any CEO, "What's your

company's most precious asset?" Without hesitation, the answer will be, "Our

people." Ask the same CEO, "What's the primary source of your competitive

advantage?" Chances are, the reply will be, "Our unique culture."

This kind of talk drives Marcus Buckingham nuts. It's not that he disagrees

with the sentiments -- he's spent his 15-year career as a pioneering researcher

and a global-practice leader at the Gallup Organization, making the link

between people, their performance, and business results. What troubles him is

the lack of rigor behind the rhetoric. "There's a juicy irony here," says the

35-year-old Cambridge-educated Brit. "You won't find a CEO who doesn't talk

about a 'powerful culture' as a source of competitive advantage. At the same

time, you'd be hard-pressed to find a CEO who has much of a clue about the

strength of that culture. The corporate world is appallingly bad at

capitalizing on the strengths of its people."

Buckingham, on the other hand, is remarkably good at communicating his

subversive message. He has produced two best-selling books: First, Break All

the Rules: What the World's Greatest Managers Do Differently (Simon & Schuster,

1999), with coauthor Curt Coffman, and Now, Discover Your Strengths (The Free

Press, 2001), with coauthor Donald O. Clifton. Meanwhile, Buckingham has helped

build a ballooning consulting practice at Gallup, with more than 1,000 clients,

including Best Buy, Disney, Fidelity Investments, Toyota, and Wells Fargo.

His mission, as he describes it, sounds almost quaint: "to create a better

marriage between the dreams of workers and the drive of companies to win." His

methodology is anything but quaint. Buckingham has led an effort inside Gallup

to crunch three decades' worth of data on worker attitudes into actionable

insights on human performance and productivity. First, he and his team tapped

into a database of more than 1 million Gallup surveys that focused on workers

from around the world. Although these workers had been asked many questions,

there was one big question behind the interviews: "What does a strong and

vibrant workplace look like?" Buckingham eventually distilled 12 core issues

(called the "Q12" in Gallup-speak) that represent a simple barometer of the

strength of any work unit.

Next, Buckingham's team ran massive number-crunching studies to analyze how

answers to the Q12 shaped hard-core business results. The link between people

and performance was vivid. The most "engaged" workplaces (those in the top 25%

of Q12 scores) were 50% more likely to have lower turnover, 56% more likely to

have higher-than-average customer loyalty, 38% more likely to have

above-average productivity, and 27% more likely to report higher profitability.

Buckingham and his colleagues made one other finding that startled them: There

was more variation in Q12 scores within companies than between companies. That

is, in each of the more than 200 organizations that he analyzed, Buckingham

found some of the most-engaged groups and some of the least-engaged groups. His

conclusion: There is no such thing as a corporate culture. Companies are made

up of many cultures, the strengths and weaknesses of which are a result of

local conditions.

"It's staggering," he says. "Few of the CEOs in our study could say which work

units in their company were engaged effectively and which weren't. They didn't

know where their culture was strong and where it was weak, whether it was

getting better or getting worse -- or how much this variation was costing."

Talk about speaking truth to power. CEOs don't understand what makes their

employees tick. They don't know how to get the best performance out of the most

people. They can't say where their companies are strongest or weakest -- or

why. And that's just the first of Buckingham's series of assumption-busting

messages. "The major challenge for CEOs over the next 20 years will be the

effective deployment of human assets," he declares. "But that's not about

'organizational development' or 'workplace design.' It's about psychology. It's

about getting one more individual to be more productive, more focused, more

fulfilled than he was yesterday."

In several conversations with Fast Company, the tireless Buckingham offered an

overview of his pathbreaking research and identified five attitude adjustments

that redefine the essence of leadership in business.

Attitude Adjustment #1

Measure what really matters. (By the way -- the numbers you're using now don't

matter.)

Numbers are crucial to running a company, and CEOs love them. Yet the numbers

that most leaders use to manage the people who are part of their business are

mostly off target. The CEOs who come to us are almost always fixated on two

questions: How is our average performance improving over time? and How do we

stack up against our competitors?

Both of those questions obscure what's really important. Averages hide the fact

that within any company are some of the most-engaged work groups and some of

the least-engaged work groups. But this range is what is most revealing.

You can divide any working population into three categories: people who are

engaged (loyal and productive), those who are not engaged (just putting in

time), and those who are actively disengaged (unhappy and spreading their

discontent). The U.S. working population is 26% engaged, 55% not engaged, and

19% actively disengaged.

In essence, then, the CEO's job is to improve the ratio of engaged to actively

disengaged workers. But here's the problem: Few of the CEOs in our study could

say which work units in their company were effectively engaged and which

weren't. They didn't know where their culture was strong and where it was weak,

whether it was getting better or getting worse.

That's where the Q12 comes in. Survey the workforce every six months, and the

result will be a vivid picture of which work units are engaged in a way that

leads to the best performance and which workers are not.

I work closely with Best Buy, the big electronics retailer. When they started

surveying their employees in 1997, they were in the 45th percentile of our Q12

database. By the end of last year, they were in the 70th percentile. More

important, in those four years, 99 stores improved their Q12 scores

significantly, while just 18 stores had scores that fell. The 99 stores that

improved their engagement level dramatically improved their P&L budgets. The

stores whose engagement level fell missed their P&L budgets. These are the

numbers that matter.

Attitude Adjustment #2

Stop trying to change people. Start trying to help them become more of who they

already are.

CEOs hate variance. It's the enemy. Variance in customer service is bad.

Variance in quality is bad. CEOs love processes that are standardized,

routinized, predictable. Stamping out variance makes a complex job a bit less

complex.

There is, however, one resource inside all companies that will hinder any

attempt to eliminate variance: each individual's personality. Human beings are

the one irreducible complexity in every company. And you can't eliminate that

complexity by forcing people to become more like one another. You can't

standardize human behavior. Of course, that's precisely what most leaders

attempt to do. That goal -- standardizing human behavior -- is the driving

force behind most executive-training programs and leadership-development

courses. What's the quickest way to build a coherent culture? Get everyone to

manage the same way.

Not only is that approach psychologically daft, it's hugely inefficient. It's

fighting human nature, and anyone who fights human nature will lose. The best

managers don't even try to fight that fight. We studied 80,000 of them from 400

different companies -- people who excelled at getting great performance from

their people. These managers followed the same basic set of principles: People

don't change that much, so don't waste your time trying to rewire them or

trying to put in what was left out. Instead, spend your time trying to draw out

what was left in. When it comes to getting the best performance out of people,

the most efficient route is to revel in their strengths, not to focus on their

weaknesses.

Let me give you an example from my company. Our senior VP of marketing, Larry

Emond, doesn't have a lick of empathy. It was surgically removed at birth. He

also lacks a quality that I call "developer": getting a kick out of seeing

someone else grow. Now, I could spend my time admonishing Larry. I could try to

explain to him why that blistering email he dashed off had a crushing effect on

several people. But he still wouldn't get it.

You might think that Larry is doomed to be a poor manager. Absolutely not.

Larry's strength is that he has the qualities of self-assurance and a strategic

mind-set. He doesn't need to have empathy to achieve results. People feel that

Larry encourages their development, because he keeps thinking about how they

can be part of this future he's describing.

Now Larry's approach seems obvious -- why would you do anything else? And yet,

in most organizations, Larry would be confronted by some nice, well-intentioned

HR person -- probably going off of feedback from a 360-degree survey -- who

would say, "Larry, as a leader, you need to be more responsive to your direct

reports." There would be a lot of, "Tone that down, Larry." Well, how about,

"Dial that up, Larry"?

If you are clear about the outcome that you want, instead of standardizing the

qualities and steps that you think are required to get to that outcome, you

should honor the fact that Larry's nature is irreducibly unique -- rather than

wasting time and money wishing that it weren't so. What goes for Larry goes for

all kinds of people in companies. The best strategy for building a competitive

organization is to help individuals become more of who they are.

Attitude Adjustment #3

You're not the most important person in the company. (Believe it or not, your

middle managers are.)

American culture is CEO obsessed. We celebrate the hard-charging heroes and

mythologize the iconoclastic visionaries. Those people are important. But when

it comes to getting the most productivity out of everyone in the company,

they're not the most important people. Our research tells us that the single

most important determinant of individual performance is a person's relationship

with his or her immediate manager. It just doesn't matter much if you work for

one of the "100 Best Companies," the world's most respected brand, or the

ultimate employee-focused organization. Without a robust relationship with a

manager who sets clear expectations, knows you, trusts you, and invests in you,

you're less likely to stay and perform.

I admit, it seems like the most obvious point in the world. But do we revere

the role of the middle manager? Hardly. We don't even like the term! We'd

rather transform everyone into grassroots leaders, change agents,

intrapreneurs. We look at managers as costs to be cut -- or, at best, as

leaders-in-waiting, people who are putting in time before they get the big job.

So what exactly do great managers do? First, the best managers start with a

radical assumption: Each person's greatest room for growth is in the area of

his greatest strength. It goes back to my last point. Good managers believe

that each person is wired in a unique way -- and these managers are fascinated

by this individuality. Rather than seek to round it out or fill it in, the best

managers do everything they can to sharpen and amplify that uniqueness. And

then those managers work with people to help them understand their strengths,

to build on them, to give them the confidence to be different.

Attitude Adjustment #4

Stop looking to the outside for help. The solutions to your problems exist

inside your company.

Talent is a multiplier. The more energy and attention you invest in it, the

greater the yield will be. That's why the best leaders are relentless at

seeking out, shadowing, studying, and highlighting the lessons of their own top

performers.

The funny thing is that most CEOs spend their time benchmarking best practices

in other companies. They want to know how they're doing relative to their

peers. I tell my clients, Don't go on a tour of Disney, Southwest Airlines, or

Discover Financial Services. You have some of the world's best managers working

inside your own company. Look to them first. Learn from your own people first.

At Gallup, we've spent years documenting the simple, charming secrets of these

extraordinary people. In the corners of every big company that we've studied,

there are hundreds or thousands of them toiling away in relative obscurity. If

you find them and shine a light on them, they will point the company's way to

the future.

Take another look at Best Buy. It's like a controlled laboratory that is

devoted to understanding the power of local managers and local work groups. In

a sense, the company's strategy is built on uniformity -- everything from store

layout to product positioning to uniforms to operations manuals are

standardized across the country. Yet even across 400 nearly identical

environments, there's an amazing range of employee engagement and business

performance. In the Best Buy store that has the highest Q12 scores, 91% of

employees strongly agreed with the statement, "I know what's expected of me at

work." In the store with the lowest score, just 27% agreed.

Not incidentally, the store with the highest Q12 score ranks in the top 10% of

Best Buy stores as measured by P&L budget variance -- and the store with the

worst Q12 score falls in the bottom 10%. To improve overall corporate

performance, Best Buy's leaders don't need to look outside the company. They

just need to figure out how to build on the strengths of its best stores.

Building on these strengths means identifying internal best practices and

shining a light on your best managers -- people like Ralph Gonzalez. Ralph is a

store manager who was charged with resurrecting a troubled Best Buy in Hialeah,

Florida. He immediately named the store the Revolution, drafted a Declaration

of Revolution, and launched project teams, complete with army fatigues. He

posted detailed performance numbers in the break room and deliberately

over-celebrated every small achievement. To drive home the point that

excellence is ubiquitous, he gave every employee a whistle and told them to

blow it loudly whenever they "caught" anybody -- whether coworker or supervisor

-- doing something "revolutionary." Today, the whistles drown out the store's

soundtrack, and, by any metric -- sales growth, profit growth, customer

satisfaction, employee retention -- the Hialeah store is one of Best Buy's

best.

But here's what really impressed me. Most companies would take a best practice

like Ralph's whistle and say, "That's a great form of recognition. Let's give

out whistles in every store." Best Buy did something much smarter: It extracted

and spread the core lesson from Ralph's best practice, rather than

institutionalizing the practice itself.

Attitude Adjustment #5

Don't assume that everyone wants your job -- or that great people want to be

promoted out of what they do best.

There are two myths about talent that feed the conventional -- and misguided --

approach to career tracks and leadership development in most companies. The

first myth: Talent is rare and special. Wrong. We all have talent. What's rare

and special is a worker who finds a role that suits his or her talents. The

second myth: Some roles are so easy that they don't require talent. Wrong

again. We hear a lot about developing more respect for frontline workers and

customer-facing employees, but peel the onion and you run into a rigid

hierarchy of jobs. The compensation system evolves out of that hierarchy. So do

titles and careers.

We say that we want to build world-class organizations. That's meaningless if

we don't value world-class performance in every role. Yet the people who touch

customers the most -- hotel housekeepers, outbound telemarketers -- get the

least respect and the lowest paychecks. The assumption is that anyone can do

that job and that nobody would want to do it if they were given a choice to do

something else. Frontline talent has a prestige problem, and it's turning into

a corporate-performance problem.

We studied the 3,000 housekeepers of a 15,000-room luxury-hotel chain. It turns

out that great housekeepers are not beaten down by the relentless grind of

cleaning rooms. On the contrary, they seem to be energized by doing the work.

In their minds, the work they do asks that they be accountable and creative and

that they achieve something tangible every day.

Unfortunately, the only way we have to reward excellence on the front lines is

to promote people out of the very roles that they do best. We turn great

housekeepers into supervisors, virtuoso shelf stockers into salespeople, and

managers into leaders. A major challenge for CEOs is to define excellence in

every role -- and pay on it, award titles on it, distribute prestige on it, and

make it a genuine career choice.

Satisfaction at work depends on nothing more than self-knowledge. And that gets

leaders right back to their main task of engaging their employees at every

level. What are you doing to turn your people's talent into the kind of

performance that thrills customers, whether those customers are internal or

external? The beautiful thing about a culture that is built by focusing on

individual strengths is that no one can steal it. And any advantage that's hard

to steal is an advantage that lasts.

Polly LaBarre (plabarre@fastcompany.com [1]) is a Fast Company senior editor

based in New York. Contact Marcus Buckingham by email (mbuckingham@gallup.com

[2]).

Sidebar: 12 Questions That Matter

If you want to build the most powerful company possible, then your first job is

to help every person generate compelling answers to 12 simple questions about

the day-to-day realities of his or her job. These are the factors, argue Marcus

Buckingham and his colleagues at the Gallup Organization, that determine

whether people are engaged, not engaged, or actively disengaged at work.

Do I know what is expected of me at work?

Do I have the materials and equipment that I need in order to do my work right?

At work, do I have the opportunity to do what I do best every day?

In the past seven days, have I received recognition or praise for doing good

work?

Does my supervisor, or someone at work, seem to care about me as a person?

Is there someone at work who encourages my development?

At work, do my opinions seem to count?

Does the mission or purpose of my company make me feel that my job is

important?

Are my coworkers committed to doing quality work?

Do I have a best friend at work?

In the past six months, has someone at work talked to me about my progress?

This past year, have I had opportunities at work to learn and grow?

(c) 1992-1999, The Gallup Organization, Princeton, NJ. All rights reserved.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Links:

[1] mailto:plabarre@fastcompany.com

[2] mailto:mbuckingham@gallup.com