Are You Motivated–Or Are You Driven?
(2011-05-30 10:16:12)
标签:
杂谈 |
分类: 企业管理 |
Of course, that’s a lot easier to observe in someone else than in yourself, which is one reason people see shrinks. But here are some signs:
Are you pursuing something, or are you being pursued? At the most basic level, people are motivated by rewards and driven by fears. A lot of research suggests that optimists are more successful than pessimists. Lawyers are the great exception, according to Martin Seligman of the University of Pennsylvania, partly because they’re selected, trained, and paid to look for what might go wrong. Also, Seligman points out, much of the law is a zero-sum game; it’s easier to seek rewards when they do not have to be carved from the flesh of a loser.
Who has defined success for you? Sure, you may
have budgets and targets and stretch goals, but if those are your
only milestones, you’ve forgone the chance to find intrinsic
motivations–like, for example, recognizing your own growing
expertise. (On Broadway, there’s a famous story about the legendary
1950s director George Abbott, a man utterly contemptuous of actors
who had been to school to find an emotional reason for everything
they did. Once a young actor asked Abbot, “What’s my motivation?”
when given a stage direction. “Your salary,” Abbot
snapped.)
Are you trying to stand out or to fit in? There’s always an element of pride in motivation.. Motivated people like to show off their accomplishments, and revel in the uniqueness of what they have done. They may do this in an abashed, aw-shucks manner, but they do it. Someone driven, by contrast, is complying, even when he is a so-called high achiever; those young-banker-types who used to run around the Central Park reservoir in t-shirts saying “Warning: Contents Under Pressure” were showing off their conformity.
Are you getting somewhere? Motivation may be intrinsic, but it thrives on feedback loops. New research from Harvard Business School’s Theresa Amabile documents the unexpected power of progress as a motivator: It’s the number-one reason people report having had a good day at work, ranking ahead of recognition, incentives, clear goals, or support. You want to know that you’re getting somewhere. We’ve all seen films where sailors grew mutinous when they despaired of seeing land and had to be driven sullenly back to their stations. We’re no different: When we’re progressing, we’re motivated; when not, we start driving ourselves.
Most managers try to be conscientious about motivating their people rather than driving them. Why is it so hard to do unto ourselves what we would do to others?