How Can Working With Mindsets Improve the Results You Get from Training?
Copyright (c) 2008 Kate Mercer
Have you ever wondered how someone you manage, or you yourself, can be remarkably effective in one situation, and completely at sea in another, similar one?
With one person, you are consistently persuasive, inspiring and eloquent, while with another you struggle to find the right words, make mistakes and feel uncomfortable and off balance. Or one of your team members has outstanding customer skills and creates great, long-lasting relationships with clients, while within your team he or she is abrasive and edgy, always reacting to things others say, and causing friction and upset. Surely, if you have a set of skills, you should be able to employ them consistently whoever you are dealing with and wherever you are? You would think so, if you believe the claims made by skills training courses and 'improve yourself' textbooks, but in our experience, there's more to it than that.
So What's Really Going On?
The secret lies, not in acquiring more skills, or going on more courses, but in exploring and shifting the mindset that underlies the skills. Taking the two examples we began with; if you are persistently more effective with one person or type of person than another, an honest assessment of your mindset will quickly reveal that you have very different underlying feelings about them. This may be caused by a number of things - maybe there's some 'baggage' or some unfinished business with the person you feel off balance with, that causes you to lose your natural eloquence and self expression. Maybe they simply remind you of someone from your past with whom you felt a similar lack of self-expression. Whatever the cause, until you deal with it head on, no amount of positive thinking or new skills will help - it will forever be as if you have one of your feet nailed to the floor!
In the second case, it's very likely that your team member has some underlying feelings about their place in the team or about other team members that prevent them using the people skills they routinely use in situations where they feel confident and on top of the situation. Again, it's pointless to set them targets for improving their behaviour, or send them on a course, without getting to the bottom of why they behave in this way.
But How Can You Shift a Mindset?
The usual perception is that people either have the right mindset or they don't, so if they aren't already effective in their job, the only practical way to change this is to change the job or move the person. But mindsets are not the fixed, immovable things most people think they are; they can change quickly - even in one conversation. To do this you need to bear in mind three key principles:
Mindsets are separate from the current situation. It's a myth that mindsets are directly caused by the circumstances of the current situation. We often hear "I could do a better job if they gave me the budget I asked for", or "we can't make the target in the current market environment". These views limit people's potential in direct proportion to the degree that they believe they are true. In every organisation, it will be possible to find someone who seems to 'buck the trend', to act as if the prevailing perception of the circumstances just didn't exist, and who produces levels of success that everyone else truly believes aren't possible. These people aren't buying into the prevailing mindset.
The skills to change mindsets are different from the skills needed to change situations. The skills to alter people's mindsets, their fixed perspectives about a situation, are things like listening, honouring and inquiring. The skills to alter situations include information gathering, analysis and presentation. Altering mindsets with information, analysis and presentation doesn't work - you won't change your feelings about your reduced budget if someone presents you with the logical case for cutting it! Mindsets soften when they are listened to and honoured, not criticised or 'proved inaccurate'. Once they are listened to, people are more open to other views, not the "right" or "better" ones, simply equally valid ones. When this is done skillfully, our experience is that people almost always naturally embrace a perspective that empowers everyone and is best for the organisation.
New mindsets are sustained through actions and results. When people embrace a new mindset, they always see new actions to take consistent with their new view; these could be conversations to have, commitments to make, things to stop doing, etc, and they will be immediately motivated to take action. It's crucial to take these actions quickly, and you should make every effort to support them and ensure that they are successful. Once enough steps are taken and results produced, the new mindset is sustainable.
Mindsets - the Key to Unlocking Potential
Mindsets are the key to unlocking the potential in you, your organisation and the people who work in it. 'Limiting' mindsets can quickly be shifted to 'empowering' mindsets, and the impact can be seen in objective results within a matter of months. The catch is that to do this, you need to be willing to work on yourself, manage your own mind, and let go of your own limiting mindsets. The bonus is that your organisation sees objective results along the way and you and the people in it achieve your full potential.
About the Author
At Shine Consulting, we work with leaders who are consciously engaged in designing their organisations to be places where people: - are consistently passionate, inspired and committed - produce results well beyond the predictable norm In short, organisations that really shine! http://www.shineconsulting.co.uk
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