People Seek Joy in Their Work
I recently re-read the work of Dr. W. Edward Deming. He's one of
my "thought hero'es"-someone who has greatly influenced how I see
quality, performance, productivity, success and "WOW!ing" both
employees and customers. Several decades ago, Deming offered a new
perspective on how the game of business could be played, and as a
result, produce a totally unpredictable outcome.
Dr. Deming is most noted for his quality work with the Japanese
after World War II, helping turn the war- torn country into the
economic power it is today. He presented his quality concepts here
in the U.S. to the big automakers, but arrogance, pride and "Flat
World Thinking" brushed his concepts and contribution aside.
So Dr. Deming took his concepts to Japan. What was once the quality
kiss of death - "Made in Japan"- is now a symbol for innovation,
quality and production leadership.
A line from Dr. Deming jumped out at me: "People seek joy in work."
WOW! Here's a "touchy feely" concept from the hard core measurement,
TQM, quality, "everything must be quantifiable," GURU. I looked at
the concept again and wondered what this visionary understood about
human nature and productivity that might serve us today.
"People Seek Joy in Work":
Webster defines "joy" as, a very glad feeling; happiness; great
pleasure; delight; to enjoy. My son offered another word, which
further captures the spirit, FUN!
So the question must be asked, "If people seek joy in work, what is
causing or preventing joy in your work?" Take it a step further-what
is causing or preventing joy in your team's work?
I conducted a mini-survey with business associates for ideas and
insights into this question: "How do you create Joy at work?" I was
impressed by the answers,. Kkey words included:
"acknowledgement, recognition, a sense of accomplishment, meaningful
work, a connection, bond, or feeling of belonging with the people at
work."
Other descriptors included: "feeling valued, trust, a big vision,
policies and procedures that make sense and support the vision,
being treated like a human" (sounds like a combination of feeling
valued, trust and common sense policies and procedures.)
It's not surprising that the exact same answers came up in a Harvard
Business School study as key "motivators." The study, conducted by
Frederick Herzberg, examined a wide cross-section of industryies as
well as employee levels, and even from different countries and
cultures. They discovered the "KITA's" or "Kick in the pants" and
detailed the results in his classic article: "How Do You Motivate
Employees?" Look at the above paragraph and you'll notice the same
words being used in both studies (my informal study and Herzberg's
very formal study).
Key long term employee motivators: "acknowledgement; recognition;
sense of accomplishment; meaningful work; feeling valued; trust; a
bond or connection."
So what's the bottom line from quality expert Deming?
Herzberg confirms joy in work motivates employees. Sounds as if
Deming is suggesting a combination of the hard skills, those items
we can touch and measure, AND the soft skills. The soft skills are
simple-they're the ones that leave people saying "WOW!".
Here are a couple ideas for enhancing "Joy" in work:
1. Make the Connection Between Joy in Work and Motivation.
It's important to make the connection that attitude and joy is a
choice. One customer service team has taken this concept and put it
into action by creating mini do-it-yourself posters stating: "Choose
Your Attitude Today!" The bottom of the mini poster is devoted to
two pictures (clip art shots). One photo shows a positive, up-beat
attitude, can-do, solution-oriented, up-beat attitude and the
second - , well, let's just say it's the other end of the spectrum.
Team members place a name badge on the attitude they're choosing for
the day. It's a great visual reminder, and it's lots of fun.
2. Create a Big Vision and Help People See the Significance of Their
Job.
When the team is "playing big," they're experiencing joy…even if the
task is tough. When people see their job makes a difference, they
experience joy. Remember, there are no "I'm just a..." jobs. You've
heard it before, "I'm just a receptionist, I'm just the janitor, I
just work in shipping." These "I'm just a..." people don't get it.
They don't understand the significance of their contribution. The
result - ...a joyless job. Help these people see the big picture and
the joy factor increases.
3. Acknowledge Someone Today
Add some joy to your universe and to someone close to you. Offer a
sincere word of praise or acknowledgement, send a Tthank-you note,
find someone doing something "Right" and tell him or her. It's easy,
cheap and doesn't take a lot of time.
It's simple: Increase the Joy Factor and you increase the quality,
motivation, performance, productivity and the WOW! Factor.
There you have it from three experts-Deming, Herzberg and now,
Rosenberger.
Keep making a difference!
2005 © Mark Rosenberger All rights reserved.
Mark Rosenberger, CSP helps companies transform employee
performance, productivity and sanity. He is a sought after speaker,
performance strategist and author of six books. Do you count on
certain people to make your life work? Discover how to be caught
more and dropped less, plus achieve more than you ever thought
possible - download the FREE Trapeze Buddy e-book at
www.NoSplatZone.com
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