Are you cheating at checkers?
Tim Connor
Confused by the title and
its relevance to your career or business?
Take a few minutes and read the following and it will help you achieve
greater employee performance and improve accountability throughout your organization.
Remember when you were a
kid playing checkers with a friend? Here
are the rules if you have forgotten. We
flip a coin to see who gets to move first.
You win so it’s your move. After
you move, it’s now my move. The rules
are clear I can’t move again or twice. I
move – you move – that’s the way the game is played until one of us wins. OK got it?
Now, what does this have to do with employee performance?
Why not start playing
checkers with your new hires or even your current employees. Let me explain with a quick example.
When you are hiring a new
employee the game begins.
You pace the ad – your
move.
Now it’s their move - they
respond.
Your move – you schedule an
interview.
Their move – they show up.
Your move – you ask them
questions and discuss the position.
Their move they ask
questions.
Your move – you decide to
offer them the position.
Their move – they accept or
reject the job. Let’s say they accept.
Your move – you provide
them the support and training they need to be effective.
Their move – they take
advantage of the training and learn the skills the position requires.
Your move – you help them
continue to grow in the position.
Their move – they keep
growing.
The game moves on.
Here’s the issue – what if
after you move they stop moving. For
example you offer them the training they need but they fail to use the skills you
have given them that are necessary for success.
Back to checkers.
When it’s my move in the
checker game and I decide not to move for whatever reason - the game is
over. In order to complete the game
successfully we both need to keep moving when it’s our turn until someone
wins. See the connection here?
When one of us for whatever
reason stops moving the game is over. Now
back to the example. If the employee
fails to move after you have moved – the game is over.
So, how do managers cheat
at checkers?
Typically when the employee
fails to move when it’s their turn, for whatever reason, the manager moves
again. The problem is – it’s not their
move now – they are not allowed to move twice in checkers they have already had
one move so they are cheating when they move twice when it’s the other person’s
move.
Why do managers cheat at
checkers when it comes to the performance or behavior of their employees? Simple – as their supervisor they don’t want
to take responsibility for the failure of the employee so they just keep doing
more than they should – keep moving for the employee. Here is the fundamental flaw with this
approach. You get the behavior you reward. So if you keep moving when the employee
doesn’t move - what’s the message you are sending them? Not sure?
Simple – you are teaching them that they don’t need to move and
why? Because you will keep moving for
them even though it’s their move..
Want to play checkers
fairly with an employee? Explain to them
that as long as they keep moving you will too.
But when they fail to move when it’s their turn – the game is over.
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