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Sunday, 27 May 2012
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Beware
Of Backseat Driving!
by
Dan Bobinski
Sometimes we meet people who seem to know everything. I'm not
talking about Mensa members with IQ's of 200. I'm talking about
people who work in one department but act as if they are experts
on how things should be done in all departments.
Much like the frustration of listening to a backseat driver,
it's easy to get driven up a wall listening to a non-expert
sound off on how things ought to be done. By the way, these
may be the same people who point out how other team members
are "doing things all wrong".
You've probably heard their sentences start with phrases like:
"What you need to do is..."
"He really needs to..."
"If only they would..."
People who talk like this may be well intended, but sometimes
these words come from an attitude of superiority. Either way,
such phrases create division on teams, not cohesiveness.
In the workplace, most people problems are the result of co-workers
not truly understanding each other. This is because most of
us suffer from a social illness I call "adult syndrome".
That is, we think that as adults we need to have all the answers.
I don't know about you, but nothing magical happened when I
turned 18 that suddenly gave me the wisdom of the Almighty.
My parents, friends, and co-workers of the time might tell you
I thought otherwise, but in reality, the more I learned, the
more I realized how much I didn't know.
That awareness continues to this day, and it's why I advocate
an attitude of lifelong learning.
Notice The Sequence!
It was Stephen Covey in his book "Seven
Habits of Highly Effective People" who made popular
the phrase "Seek First to Understand, Then Be Understood."
I love the story Covey tells in his workshops about the father
who says, "I don't understand my son. He just won't listen
to me." Rather blandly, Covey replies, "There's the
problem!"
The point Covey makes is that the father doesn't understand
the son. Why? Because the father is trying to get the son to
listen, instead of himself listening to the son. If the father
would seek first to understand the son, the son would be more
likely to listen to the father.
Notice the sequence of the principle: Seek FIRST to
understand, THEN be understood.
This is much easier said than done (most of us strive to be
understood first), but I guarantee you this: Apply this principle
to any working relationship, and you will see amazing things
happen.
Another helpful idea is to realize where our responsibilities
lie.
Unless I am an in-line supervisor, someone else's job performance
is not my responsibility. Sure, it's easy to feel like we're
working harder than someone else, but how we handle that frustration
makes us or breaks us as team players.
Want to be principled when you see others not working up to
par? You have several choices.
A) Stay focused on doing the best job you can do for your own
areas of responsibility.
B) Go to your supervisor and seek FIRST to understand why it
appears that someone else is slacking off. Really seek to understand.
C) Go to the person you think is slacking off and genuinely
seek to understand how it is they have time to relax. Take note
of the word "genuinely." If you're trying to be flip
or if you come across sarcastic, the result is further division,
not cohesiveness.
D) Any combination of the above.
The key is not only that we have our own areas of responsibility
to worry about, but we're also lifelong learners, which means
as much as we'd like to think differently, we don't have all
the answers.
In the workplace, your co-workers are on the same team as you.
Criticize them and you diminish your team's effectiveness. Build
them up and you create a unified strength.
Bottomline: comments that sound like back seat driving can
drive a wedge between people and departments. Seek first to
understand, and not only will you be curing your adult syndrome,
you'll build a more effective team.
Dan Bobinski is the President and CEO of Leadership
Development, Inc., a US-based organisation that provides
human resource training and development to small, medium, and
large businesses, and whose mission is to enhance and refine
management and leadership skills for greater productivity, effectiveness,
and profitability. A certified behavioral analyst, Dan is a
popular keynote speaker, presenting at regional and national
conferences. He is co-author of Living
Toad Free: Overcoming Resistance to Motivation, a book about
removing obstacles to success.

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