Wednesday, April 15, 2020
Adam Grants Originals Offers Surprising Career Insights
Adam Grant's 'Originals' Offers Surprising Career Insights Imagine youâre a thirtyish mid-level employee at one of the worldâs largest companies, and your billionaire CEO has made a decision you donât support. What do you do? For most people, the answer is not what sales and distribution manager Donna Dubinsky did in 1985: issue a challenge to the CEOâ"in this case, Appleâs Steve Jobs. To cut costs, Jobs planned to eliminate Appleâs warehouses and inventory and adopt a system of âjust in timeâ computer assembly. But Dubinsky saw big problems with the idea and gave her bosses an ultimatum: She wanted 30 days to develop an alternate plan, or she would quit. Taking a stand paid off for Dubinsky, in large part because she proved she had the companyâs best interests at heart. Her proposal to revamp distribution was acceptedâ"and she got a promotion. Dubinskyâs is one of many stories about unconventional career moves in Originals, a book out this week from Wharton School of Business management professor Adam Grant. Though Grant focuses mainly on entrepreneurship, the anecdotes and lessons could be valuable to anyone who has struggled against the status quo at work. Originals offers advice that might seem completely counterintuitive at firstâ"but can actually pay off big in a personâs career. Here are some insights that may surprise you. 1. The most original ideas can come from the most ordinary situations. Grant coins the phrase âvuja deâ (a twist on âdéjà vuâ) to describe moments when you spontaneously see an old problem in a new light. In one example, Warby Parker co-founder Dave Gilboa found himself questioning the high cost of his spectacles after a trip to the Apple Store. Why, he wondered, are glassesâ"which have existed for almost a thousand yearsâ"so expensive, while smartphones, a recent innovation, get cheaper year after year? That realization gave him and his co-founders the impetus to start discount spectacle company Warby Parker, valued at $1.2 billion as of April 2015. 2. Being your own critic can be a good thing. Taking down your own ideas can, weirdly enough, make you look smart. In the right context, doing so displays intellectual honesty and can get your audience to better trust youâ"and come on board with your plan. When Rufus Griscom approached investors in 2009 to ask for funding for Babble, an online parenting magazine and blog he started with his wife, he led with a slide listing the top five reasons to not invest in the business. That year, he garnered $3.3 million in funding. Negative thinking can make you more prepared for any and all outcomes; âdefensive pessimists,â as Grant calls them, anticipate what can go wrong in a situation and actively take steps to forestall errors. And studies show they perform just as well as optimists in professional situations. 3. Procrastination can lead to some of your best work. Youâve likely been told at some point in your career to always get a head start on major assignmentsâ"but thereâs actually a case for putting them off. Mulling over projects, rather than tackling them early and knocking them off in one sitting, can give you the breathing room necessary to perfect your ideas. Itâs called the Zeigarnik effect, named after a Russian psychologist who theorized that people have a better memory for incomplete assignments than finished ones. In other words, when you have a task looming over you, youâll keep thinking about itâ"and ultimately arrive at a more creative solution. Procrastination also leaves you more open to improvisation. Martin Luther King Jr., for example, waited until four days before his âI Have a Dreamâ speech before composing it. And the speechâs titular line wasnât even originally scripted: King included it after his favorite gospel singer, Mahalia Jackson, yelled âTell âem about the dream, Martin!â during the ad dress. 4. If you have a radical plan, it might be best to start small. The originator of any ideaâ"let alone an unconventional oneâ"risks turning off people who donât want their long-held convictions challenged. Thatâs why it is safest to present your most radical ideas in a way that will be more appealing to mainstream audiences, even if that means masking what you actually want. For instance, uBeam founder Meredith Perry was shut down repeatedly when she approached engineers and investors with her idea to build a transducer that would transmit power wirelessly. She had more success when she instead approached engineers individually asking if they could build separate parts that together would make up the whole of her system. 5. Lean in to your challenges. What if your weaknesses could be as valuable to you as your strengths? Grant gives the example of younger children, who are usually at a disadvantage relative to older siblings. âFaced with the intellectual and physical challenges of competing directly with an older sibling, the younger chooses a different way to stand out,â Grant writes. That spirit, he says, can carry over to their professional demeanor. Younger siblings also enjoy the benefit of older siblingsâ protective instincts, Grant points out, which may be why they tend to take more risks. Theyâre more likely to choose unconventional jobsâ"as comedians, for example (Stephen Colbert, Chelsea Handler and Louis C.K. are all youngest siblings). 6. Rules donât work as well as appeals to character. Research shows people are more affected if you say âdonât be a cheaterâ than if you tell them simply, âdonât cheat.â Creating rules can tempt people to break them, whereas appealing to your employeesâ sense of morality can be more effective. A study of children sharing marbles with their peers found that those who received praise for their character were more likely to repeat generous behavior in the future. Focusing on character traits rather than prescriptions âevokes a sense of self, triggering the logic of appropriateness: What kind of person am I, and who do I want to be?â Grant writes. 7. Itâs okay to be a little unprofessionalâ"in the right setting. Professionalism can make or break your career, and its importance canât be overstated: You never want to get caught, for example, bad-mouthing your boss. That said, there will likely be moments in your career when you and your colleagues need to blow off steamâ"and that can be healthy, when done correctly. Grant writes about a group of surgeons who regularly endured verbal abuse from their attending physicians. So at happy hour (outside of work, of course), they would pick an âAsshole of the Week.â It gave them an outlet for their stress and increased their sense of camaraderie. Twenty years later, the surgeons hold positions at the top of their fields, and have vowed to help stop the cycle of abuse by treating residents with more respect than they themselves received.
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