ATTITUDE: The 8-Letter Word that Spells Either Boom or Doom for Your Business. By Eric Chester
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I'd challenge you to find a
kid over the age of 8 who hasn't been lectured to death about the
importance of a positive attitude. They get it from their parents, from
their teachers, from their coaches and, yes, from their employers.
Why
then do managers struggle relentlessly to keep their front lines
staffed with friendly, cheerful, enthusiastic young people?
The
following is an excerpt from Eric's forthcoming book, REVIVING WORK
ETHIC - A Leader's Guide to Ending Entitlement and Restoring Pride in
the Emerging Workforce.
I'll offer three explanations:
First, it's just not cool to be positive.
From James Dean to Fonzie and from Pink to Puck, the hippest icons for
youth generally sport a giant chip on their shoulders and are always
looking for a fight. Hundreds if not thousands of examples of bad
attitudes invade the consciousness of today's youth, and the worst
offenders usually get the most attention and the biggest contracts.
Smiling, happy teens are viewed by their peers as goofy, spoiled, naïve
kiss-ups. But if you're dismissive, have an edge, or create havoc
everywhere you go, you're in good company. Trendy teen fashion stores
such as Hollister, Aéropostale, Guess, and Abercrombie & Fitch
employ-almost exclusively-the young, elite, pouty-faced cool kids in
their communities who stare off into space as if they have something
more important to do than help moms buy overpriced jeans for their kids.
A second explanation is that they see work as a bad thing.
You're supposed to hate work; everybody does. Why should they be happy
at work when work is the very thing the authority figures around them
(parents, teachers, bosses, et al) constantly complain about? How many
times can they hear things, like "Work sucks." "Thank God it's Friday!"
"I'm calling in sick." "As soon as I can find something better, I'm
outta there!" without it completely eroding their view of work?
The
third reason young employees aren't as happy as they used to be is that
they can't go anywhere these days without experiencing-up close and
personal-stories about death, destruction, terrorism, chaos, and, what
appears to be all out anarchy. This media-filled world won't
allow them to escape the ranting political activists, the news of
terrorism and natural disasters around the world, reports of crime,
disease, scandals, and poverty. The world had its share of these kinds
of problems when we were young too, but we weren't continually inundated
with hi def surround sound reminders of all of them every waking moment
of our lives.
With all they are exposed to, it's an uphill battle for any kid to stay positive.
As
parents, educators, and workforce leaders, our challenge is to
inoculate ourselves from taking on their negativity and, instead, help
them embrace a positive attitude. This is not done by telling them the
joke of the day or forcing a smile in their direction, but rather by
taking sustainable measures to breed positivity into your interactions.
Here are four steps you can take to impact the attitudes along your
front lines:
- Remove the Negative. Enter your
workplace through the backdoor and see your operation from your
employees' perspectives. There's a big difference between a sign on the
employee entrance that says, "All Employees Must Park in the Back Lot"
and one that says, "Our Customers Pay Our Wages, So Let's Save the
Closest Parking for Them." Carefully edit the negative language and
overtones out of employee emails, notices, and other forms of
communication that could be stated in a more positive way. Take steps to
remove the drab and dreary signs, colors, and broken items that have a
way of infesting themselves in the back areas allowed by managers
because "employees are the only ones exposed to it." You can't isolate
them from all the negativity that surrounds them, but you can take steps
to remove some of the nastiness from your workplace.
- Provide blind 360° feedback that comes from their coworkers.
Conceal individual identities, but remove the "me vs. you" stigma from
an attitude assessment by allowing them to see themselves through
varying perspectives. (Young people love this; that's why their Facebook
wall is so important to them.) If their peers tell them to ditch their
bad attitudes, you may see instant improvements.
- Be on
the lookout for those glimpses of the attitude you're trying to instill
in your people, and be prepared to call attention to it.
"Thanks for being so willing to pull a double, Jake. Your positive
attitude is an example for the others, and I'll make sure the folks at
corporate hear about this." Don't get so caught up in dealing with all
the bad attitudes that you overlook the good things that happen as a
result of positive ones. Remember, what draws the most attention is what
gets repeated.
- You Lead the Attitude in Your Culture
A
positive attitude at work is infectious, so the more you call it out to
others and encourage it in key employees, the easier it will be for you
to radiate it throughout your culture. This starts with the small
things you do, like calling out the guy who went overboard for a
customer or the receptionist who braves the blizzard to open on time,
but it continues with how you highlight those kinds of things each day.
Positive
shifts in your culture occur only if you model the attitude you want
them to have, and after you begin sharing good things that are happening
throughout your business with your young people. When you can't share
positive news about your company, shine the light on something good
that's taking place in your community, the nation, or the world. Make it
your mission to be a purveyor of good tidings. Schedule pre-shift
huddles solely to share success stories of individuals, of the team, and
of the company. Even though talk is cheap, what they hear from you can
be prove invaluable.
As they say, "attitude is contagious," so
let them catch the right virus from you and see coming to work as the
brightest part of their day. It will be directly reflected in how they
interact with your customers, which will give you even more to rave
about.
Eric Chester, President and Founder of Generation
Why, Inc. and The A Game, LLC (The Bring Your A Game to Work
initiative), author of Getting Them to Give a Damn-How to Get Your Front
Line to Care About Your Bottom Line (Dearborn 2005), and award winning
speaker is available through www.GenerationWhy.com or by calling 303-239-9999.