Search
Recommended Products
Related Links


 

 

Informative Articles

Conversation With A Newbie
I've been inspired to write this short piece to answer THE most common questions I hear. It takes the form of a fictional discussion. NEWBIE: "How do I make money on the Internet?" ME: "You need to sell `something` to `somebody` - and of course...

The Fastest Way to Ruin Yourself
I don’t know many people who would admit to wanting to ruin themselves, but there are a lot of people who are doing everything they can to accomplish that very goal. They certainly don’t see it that way, but if you look at the way they live, you...

The Perfect Internet Product - A Cookbook?
So you've decided to go into business for yourself on the internet. You've heard it's the perfect way to supplement your income with little or no investment. But what will you market to achieve fame and fortune? Actually it all depends upon...

What Does It Take To Make Money Online?
What a loaded question! Let’s narrow that down a bit and take it from the perspective of someone who wants to work from home and make money online in a home business. That will make it an easier question to answer. Let’s assume you’ve...

Why Ebay Is The Best Place To Make Your First $1000 Online
I’d like to begin with a question – and I’ll bet the answer is going to surprise you (it sure did surprise me!). Q. What percentage of the worlds population do you think is online? A. Under 1%! Just think about that for a second – 99% of...

 
Google
Birds of a Feather May Be Turkeys


Birds of a feather do flock together. It's true. Given a choice, most of us will seek out people who think like we do, people with whom we feel comfortable, those we won't quarrel with. Visit any company cafeteria and you will notice that the people at the tables will be in groupings from the same discipline, department or ethnic group.

As a general rule, relationships do not usually thrive when there are profound differences in values, abilities, temperaments or lifestyle. Differences attract, but – more often – they repel. Individuals sometimes get involved in relationships with unlike individuals, occasionally even conflict-ridden ones. These may be exciting for a while – but unless the principals agree on core values, such relationships become artificially polite or unravel over time.

Ways to work together. This general rule, however, needs fine tuning when it comes to science, engineering and business. Skillful managers often deliberately create teams comprised of very different kinds of people. They are willing to forego the comfortable, easy feelings associated with clone-like groups in order to bring diverse skills to bear upon a problem. Such a team might include designers, engineers, physicists, marketing people, social scientists and lawyers.

Managing diversity is not easy. Accountants, engineers, computer specialists, lawyers, psychologists and marketing people do not speak the same occupational language. Each field has its argot, its own version of alphabet soup. Specialization always produces groups with proprietary feelings about concepts and terminology. Even if two members of a team are engineers, there will still not be one-to-one correspondence. They will have some problems with vocabulary if one is an electrical engineer


and the other is a mechanical engineer. But those vocabulary problems are minuscule compared with the ones that occur when accountants talk to engineers or designers. A skillful manager will be needed.

Cultural chasms need bridging. The differences go beyond vocabulary: values, goals and objectives many be different too. As more businesses globalize, team members are more likely to come from different cultures. They will differ not just in the way they approach a technical or marketing problem, but in the way they view the world. We will have more of this, not less. Unfortunately, what we know about managing diversity is more an art than a science.

If managing diversity is so difficult and so potentially stressful -- even disrupting -- is it worth doing? Absolutely. Warm, comfortable, birds-of-a-feather groupings may actually be dysfunctional in business, science and engineering.

If you want to do the job right, consider choosing people with different languages, experiences and perspectives. The group may be hard to manage and the outcomes difficult to predict, but such a strategy offers the potential for unexpected brilliant solutions. When everybody behaves as a clone, someone is probably unnecessary and the group may come to resemble a flock of turkeys.

Gene Griessman, PhD is an Atlanta-based motivational speaker, author and time management expert. His books include Time Tactics of Very Successful People and The Words Lincoln Lived By: 52 Timeless Principles to Light Your Path. To learn more about Dr. Griessman's products and speaking engagements visit him online at www.presidentlincoln.com.


abe@mindspring.com