CsiGood 03-8-75 |
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GOOD BUSINESS Leadership, Flow, and the Making of Meaning Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi Viking, 2003, 244 pp.
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The author is professor of psychology at the Drucker
School of Management at Claremont Graduate University. The book describes some of the values,
goals, and methods of well-respected, visionary business leaders. It contains nuggets of value, but you have
to mine them from the psychology and philosophy with which the author seeks
to make meaning for life and work. “Our jobs determine to a large extent what our lives are
like.” (3) “The capitalist vision now stands alone on the world
stage. Will those who promote it
understand and accept the responsibilities that come with the privileges they
have been given?” (9) “We must have the conviction that our existence serves a
useful purpose and has value.”
“Business leaders…must also have a vision that gives life meaning…”
(11) “Philosophers have long held that happiness is the
ultimate goal of existence.” (21) [Do
you agree or disagree? Dlm] “Fundamentally, business exists to enhance human
well-being.” (21) “A valuable product
or service is one that customers perceive…as making them happier.” “Good business … refers to transactions
that make a genuine contribution to human happiness.” (22,25) “My definition of being successful is contributing
something to the world…and being happy while doing it…” (29, Norman Augustine) Happiness results from doing our best. Enjoyment is the exhilarating sensation of
being fully alive. (36) “Flow” is a
“deep sense of enjoyment.” (39) Eight conditions for a “flow experience:” ·
Goals are clear.
One knows precisely what tasks he must accomplish and savors the steps
along the way. ·
Feedback is immediate. One can see how well he is doing as he goes. ·
Opportunity and Capacity are balanced. The task is doable but challenging. ·
Concentration deepens. You get involved in it, or into it. ·
Involvement absorbs complete attention and blocks
out everything else. ·
There is a strong sense of being in control of your
own performance. ·
Time speeds up or slows down. ·
One losses one’s self in the experience. “Happiness cannot be attained by wanting to be happy—it
must come as the unintended consequence of working for a goal greater than
oneself.” (56, Viktor Frankl) “A good flow activity is one that offers a very high
ceiling of opportunities for improvement—playing the piano, for example,
… Thus it invites growth. If one wants to stay in flow, he or she
must progress and learn more skills, rising to new levels of complexity.”
(63) “Working with joy to one’s heart’s content while
responding to society’s needs is a perfect description of how flow functions
in the workplace.” (70) Page 72 has an interesting chart with degree of challenge
on the vertical axis and degree of skill on the horizontal axis. When both are high, there is “flow.” When both are low there is apathy. When challenges are high and skills are
low, anxiety. When skills are high
and challenge low, relaxation. In
between are worry, control, arousal (alert, focused), and boredom. (72) “A single episode of flow lifts the spirit momentarily;
when experienced over time, flow helps make a person unique and
indispensable.” (76) “…the first priority is to eliminate obstacles to flow at
all levels of the firm and to substitute practices and policies that are
designed to make work enjoyable.”
(81) The best way to manage people is to create an environment
where employees actually enjoy their work and grow in the process of doing
it. “While people are built to work,
most jobs are not built for people.” (85) “Any job becomes more attractive if it is considered
meaningful by society.” (87) “Few jobs nowadays have clear goals.” “Contemporary jobs seldom provide adequate
feedback.” (92) “But the need for control from above must be balanced
against the need for autonomy that even the humblest person holds dear.” (95) “A central task of management is to refrain from making it
[i.e. good work] even more difficult to pursue by emphasizing greed, cutting
corners in quality, ignoring the needs of workers and customers, and
generally transforming the organization into a soulless, valueless
enterprise.” (100) “It is part of management’s function to recognize and
reward the performance and the attitude of employees, and not just
their success, which may be due entirely to fortuitous circumstances.” (105) Collins and Porras advise, “concentrate primarily on
building an organization….” (107) Three “common things” that determine the success of a
business team (per Mike Murray of Microsoft) (114) 1. Every
team member has very clear goals that line up to what the company needs to be
doing. 2. The
manager is really good at planning all the incremental activities that need
to get done so the work flows smoothly. 3. The
manager is really good at communication and feedback In some organizations, “the mission of the organization…is
unclear to everyone, including the top leadership.” (116) According to Alfred Zeien, a leader should spend 90% of
one’s time on the three Ps: People, product, purpose.” “Purpose is the time that you spend with
people constantly going over and over and over in their minds, what is the
purpose of this whole undertaking.
Why are you doing that job? ….”
(117) “Even under the best of conditions information decays
rapidly as it is disseminated in groups.” “…the only way to combat it is to
make systematic efforts to keep lines of communication open.” “It is also useful for the manager to
reflect on whether it is he that unconsciously keeps his workers in the
dark.” (118-19 “To successfully
manage an organization one should also know its parts intimately—especially
the people who make it function.
Enrico Randone, former CEO…., claimed that as he moved up in the
organization he got to know personally almost ten thousand branch managers
dispersed from Milan to Manila….”
(1240 “The head of a large multinational corporation employs the
following strategy to keep the lines of communication and feedback open: ‘Two
weeks ago, I spent one entire week—five days—traveling to seven different
cities and having meetings with employees.’
‘That’s how you keep your finger on the pulse. …I’ve got to get out and be with customers
and be with employees and be in the field and watch what goes on and provide motivation.’ ‘That’s how you do it. You don’t do it sitting here.’” (125) “Workers need a compelling reason to focus their energies
on the job.” ‘People want to work for
a cause, not just for a living.’ (C.
William Pollard). (143) “…in our time the most powerful segment of society is the
one engaged in business….” (189) “In these market conditions businessmen who aim higher
than merely generating profits face an uphill struggle. Yet with power and leadership comes a
burden of social responsibility.” (190) “Max DePree points to the increasing inequity and greed as
the darkest clouds on the horizon.” (192)
“One solution to this dilemma is to confront more directly the
consequences of a purely market-driven view of the world….” (194) [But who
can pin the bell on the old cat’s tail?
Dlm] “Perhaps the most important distinguishing trait of
visionary leaders is that they believe in a goal that benefits not only
themselves, but others as well.” (197) “Probably the most important principle of organizational
behavior that emerged from the interviews was the importance of trust, which
is brought about by respect.”
“…managers must invest a great deal of their psychic energy in
monitoring and enhancing the well-being of the group. And before all else, they have to develop
self-discipline based on self-knowledge, which will prevent them from acting
capriciously and selfishly.” (200) “Among the leaders we interviewed, the principles of good
business were passed on through the belief systems of Judaism, Buddhism,
Catholicism, various Protestant denominations, and the Mormon Church. To an extent entirely unexpected, faith in
values acquired through a religious upbringing provided a solid platform for
action to individuals involved in some of the most high-tech businesses, from
aerospace to software. (209) [I wonder why it was considered
surprising? Dlm] |
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