Book Summary: First, Break All the Rules
by: Regine Azurin
This article is based on the following book:
First, Break All The Rules
‘What The World’s Greatest Managers Do Differently’
By Marcus Buckingham & Curt Coffman
Simon & Schuster
271 pages
Based on a mammoth research study conducted by the Gallup
Organization involving 80,000 managers across different
industries, this book explores the challenge of many companies -
attaining, keeping and measuring employee satisfaction. Discover
how great managers attract, hire, focus, and keep their most
talented employees!
Key Ideas:
- The best managers reject conventional wisdom.
- The best managers treat every employee as an individual.
- The best managers never try to fix weaknesses; instead
they focus on strengths and talent.
- The best managers know they are on stage everyday. They
know their people are watching every move they make.
- Measuring employee satisfaction is vital information for
your investors.
- People leave their immediate managers, not the companies
they work for.
- The best managers are those that build a work
environment where the employees answer positively to these
12 Questions:
- Do I know what is expected of me at work?
- Do I have the materials and equipment I need to do
my work right?
- At work, do I have the opportunity to do what I do
best everyday?
- In the last 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/purpose of my company make me feel
my job is important?
- Are my co-workers committed to doing quality work?
- Do I have a best friend at work?
- In the last six months, has someone at work talked
to me about my progress?
- This last year, have I had the opportunity at work
to learn and grow?
The Gallup study showed that those companies that reflected
positive responses to the 12 questions profited more, were more
productive as business units, retained more employees per year,
and satisfied more customers.
Without satisfying an employee’s basic needs first, a manager
can never expect the employee to give stellar performance. The
basic needs are: knowing what is expected of the employee at
work, giving her the equipment and support to do her work right,
and answering her basic questions of self-worth and self-esteem
by giving praise for good work and caring about her development
as a person.
The great manager mantra is don’t try to put in what was left
out; instead draw out what was left in. You must hire for
talent, and hone that talent into outstanding performance.
More wisdom in a nutshell from First, Break All the Rules:
1. Know what can be taught, and what requires a natural
talent.
2. Set the right outcomes, not steps. Standardize the end but
not the means. As long as the means are within the company’s
legal boundaries and industry standards,let the employee use his
own style to deliver the result or outcome you want.
3. Motivate by focusing on strengths, not weaknesses.
4. Casting is important, if an employee is not performing at
excellence, maybe she is not cast in the right role.
5. Every role is noble, respect it enough to hire for talent
to match.
6. A manager must excel in the art of the interview. See if
the candidate’s recurring patterns of behavior match the role he
is to fulfill. Ask open-ended questions and let him talk. Listen
for specifics.
7. Find ways to measure, count, and reward outcomes.
8. Spend time with your best people. Give constant feedback.
If you can’t spend an hour every quarter talking to an employee,
then you shouldn’t be a manager.
9. There are many ways of alleviating a problem or
non-talent. Devise a support system, find a complementary
partner for him, or an alternative role.
10. Do not promote someone until he reaches his level of
incompetence; simply offer bigger rewards within the same range
of his work. It is better to have an excellent highly paid
waitress or bartender on your team than promote him or her to a
poor starting-level bar manager.
11. Some homework to do: Study the best managers in the
company and revise training to incorporate what they know. Send
your talented people to learn new skills or knowledge. Change
recruiting practices to hire for talent, revise employee job
descriptions and qualifications. |