![]() Bringing a fascinating new perspective to personal branding and the contribution of individuals, too, is Adam Grant. Grant is the youngest full professor at the Wharton School and has been recognized as Wharton’s single-highest-rated teacher, and one of Malcolm Gladwell’s favorite social science writers. Before taking up a career in academia, Grant was the advertising director at Let’s Go Publications, an All-American springboard diver, and a professional magician. In his best-selling book Give and Take, he examines how being generous with our time and expertise impacts on our personal success. Grant identifies three groups of people – givers, takers, and matchers. Givers are inclined to give their favors generously, while matchers look for a quid pro quo. Takers, on the other hand, are in it for themselves and only help others if there is something more in it for themselves. Interestingly, his research indicates that the most successful people are often givers – but givers also run the risk of being doormats for others. Grant’s studies have been highlighted in a number of other bestselling books, including Quiet by Susan Cain, Drive and To Sell is Human by Dan Pink, and David and Goliath by Gladwell. He talked with Des Dearlove. How did you get interested in the subject of give and take? I thought that was backwards. And you found that people who give back are more successful? So good guys can finish first which is a life affirming discovery. So, how did you go about researching it? What sorts of small favor are we talking about? Somebody making an introduction, not necessarily expecting anything in return? Other big categories would be knowledge sharing, mentoring, helping, providing feedback, and teaching skills. Sometimes, it’s as simple as showing up early or staying a bit late to support your colleagues. And, when you looked at people’s profiles, you found that there were three distinct types, the givers, the takers and the matchers. Can you say just a little bit about each of those? A fairly typical taker would be somebody who ends up claiming all of the interesting, visible, important projects, leaving the grunt work for everyone else, and still manage to walk away with the lion’s share of the credit. At the other end of the spectrum, we have these people that I call givers, and I’ve been really working to redefine giving as not just about philanthropy or volunteering, but as you said, these everyday acts of helping others with no strings attached. The givers are the people who will volunteer to provide help, make introductions, share knowledge, be mentors, without asking for anything in return from the people that they help. And then, in the middle we have most of us – matchers. In the majority of our interactions, most people operate like matchers, trying to keep an even balance of give and take, quid pro quo. If I were a matcher, and I were to do you a favor, I would expect an equal one back, and if you did me a favor, I might feel like I was in debt until I had settled the score. If most of us are in the middle, then there are more matchers than the others? How does it breakdown between the three groups? And if we’re givers in one part of our lives are we predisposed to be givers in all areas? Or might we be givers at work, and takers in another scenario? If you were to ask people who were parents, for example, think of the last time that your kid asked for a ride to school or football practice, not many parents would say “What have you done for me lately?” to their children. With families and friends, people like to help and rarely keep score. But in the workplace, a lot of people worry that other people are takers, and so they say it’s a dog eat dog competitive place: if I don’t put myself first nobody else will. So are there rules of thumb for spotting the three types? Are there dead giveaways in these situations or is it just a case of figuring out after a few interactions where somebody is? Agreeable people tend to be warm and friendly and nice, and welcoming and polite, whereas more disagreeable people are likely to be critical, sceptical, and challenging with others. Most of us associate these personality traits with giving and taking: if you’re a nice guy — if you’re agreeable — I will assume that you’re a giver, and if you’re a little bit more tough and gruff in your interaction, I might assume that you’re a taker. Yet when you look at the data, the correlation between agreeable-disagreeable and giving-taking, is basically zero. Agreeable and disagreeableness is about your outer veneer, whereas giving and taking is about your inner motives, your intentions. Agreeableness is what we sometimes call charm? The people we have to watch out for are the agreeable takers who I call the fakers. They’re nice to your face but perfectly willing to stab you in the back. As individuals, do we select a strategy — do we decide ourselves? I’m going to be a taker, or I’m going to be a giver, or are we predisposed to one or the other? And, there are plenty of people who make deliberate and intentional choices to shift the level of trust they have depending on who they are dealing with, and how independent they are. So it is something that goes beyond your personality. That’s good news, there’s hope for all of us. So if we were going to adopt a strategy, how do we ensure that we’re the ones that rise to the top rather than the ones that just end up being the doormat? The givers actually do less of that, but they really focus on paying it forward, allowing whatever you contribute to spread. As far as the how is concerned, the basic advice is to be a specialist, not a generalist when you give. The givers who try to be all things to all people end up spreading themselves really thin, and it’s not very efficient or energizing to help in hundreds of different ways. Successful givers focus in on one of two ways of helping that they’re uniquely good at, and that they enjoy. Specialized giving is less distracting and exhausting, and they can develop a reputation as somebody who has a distinctive skill set that they’re willing and able to share. The third part is the when. Failed givers are the people who are willing to drop anything at any time to fulfill a request, whereas successful givers block out time in their calendar to get their own goals accomplished, finish their own work. They have separate windows set aside to be helpful. So this is a managed process. It is strategic giving. It isn’t just default, all the time, unthinking giving. Nice as that may be, it’s probably not that effective in the long run anyway? Now, this doesn’t sound like good news for takers, because if we’re matchers or we’re givers, the people we want to avoid are the takers, presumably? What would be your advice then to someone coming into the worlds of work, in terms of career networking, and how they get on? One way to test the water is to do what the serial entrepreneur Adam Rifkin calls “the five minute favor.” If you’re motivated to give, to be helpful and make a difference—which most people are—you don’t have to be Mother Theresa or Ghandi. In fact, that’s not sustainable for most of us. Instead of worrying about getting sucked into extremely time-consuming acts of helping and giving, you should look for ways to add high value to others, at a low personal cost. If you can add a few more five minute favors to each week, it’s a great way to contribute more value to other people without making a personal sacrifice. And do you practice this personally? Do you have a plan that you follow? Through writing Give and Take, I learned to be a lot clearer about my own priorities: family first, students second, colleagues third, everybody else fourth. When somebody reaches out, I know that I’m going to respond faster when it’s a student than a colleague. That’s why I became a professor — to help and inspire students, not to make a difference for fellow professors. When somebody reaches out who doesn’t fall into one of those first few categories, I ask myself: is this really the best use of my time, or can I refer you to a book or another person, or a resource that can answer your question better than I can? There’s no doubt that there are some very selfish people that do get on in life. What sets the alarm bells ringing with you? Also, takers often will give first, and then make a bigger ask later. A lot of us have learned to have an alarm go off when we just meet somebody, and all of a sudden they’re over-eager to help us. Sometimes, because they’re charming or because they manage to ingratiate, we get fooled by them. That’s something we have to be careful about. Third, over time, takers give off more of a transactional impression. Initially takers are quite charming, because they know that’s what they need to do to get ahead. But you will find that you only hear from them when they want something. Are there lessons from this for organizations? Are there things that organizations can do, culturally, or the CEO can do, to try to ensure that a greater percentage of the population play the giving game, rather than the taking game or the matching game? The nice thing is that, if you’re a giver, an ask feels like helping when it’s on behalf of someone else. So, what’s next for you? What are you working on? Can the tiger change its stripes, and what are the conditions that produce those kinds of shifts? Any early signals or clues so far? You spent time working as a magician? Are there parallels with what takers do? How did you get interested in magic and do you still practice it? It’s a useful party trick to have, and do you still classify yourself as an introvert, or would you see yourself now as an extrovert? How does that fit with being a teacher and giving speeches as a thought leader? It’s out of my normal personality zone, but it’s very much congruent with my values. So it’s authentic? |
|
来自: learnmachine > 《管理与企业家》