- Building Positive Attitudes:
- 4 Positive Employee Behaviors That Will
Lead You To Guaranteed Success
- By Dr. Alan Zimmerman
If you're a manager, you can't
afford to have negative, non-performing employees on your payroll.
3M discovered that. When management laid off the bottom 10% (their
poorest performers) at one facility -- their productivity skyrocketed
up 18%. When they laid off another 10% (the next poorest set
of performers) -- productivity went up another 4%. 3M learned
that negative employees not only produce less, but they also
they cost more.
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Negative employees destroy morale
and turn off customers by talking negatively. It's like the manager
who asked his new secretary, "Why don't you ever answer
the telephone?" She said, "Why should I? Nine times
out of ten it's for you!"
Negative employees do just enough
to get by. They don't have a lot of drive, and they don't take
a lot of initiative. They may even say, "I've just got 7
more years, 3 months, and 2 days, and I'm out of here."
In other words, they've got a lousy work attitude.
So, how does an employee with
a good positive attitude behave?
Here are 4 Characteristics of
a Positive Employee That You Should Look For In Yourself - And
Your Team:
1. Positive employees know
hard work is good for the soul.
Most people know it's good for
the company. They know it's good for the customer. And, they
may even know that it's even good for the country. But only the
winners know it's also good for the soul. |
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Best-selling author Rabbi Harold
Kushner says it so well. He says: "Work hard, not solely
because it will bring you rewards and promotions, but because
it will give you a sense of being a competent person. Something
corrosive happens to the souls of people who stop caring about
the quality of their work...and begin to go through the motions."
2. Positive employees decide
to enjoy their work no matter what.
Certainly, no job is perfect,
and there's always room for improvement. There's always something
to complain about. In spite of that, winners decide they're going
to like their work. It's a decision they make, not a feeling
they have if everything is going well.
Your job may not be fun. It may
not even be meaningful. But if you're a winner, you're going
to enjoy your work no matter what. I know it sounds a little
harsh, but I've often told my audiences, if you think your job
stinks, if you think employment is bad, try unemployment for
a little while.
3. Positive employees see
the good in every situation.
Like anyone else they can see
what's wrong with a situation, but positive employees don't get
stuck on that point. Winners keep themselves motivated by seeing
the good in any situation and focus on how they could make it
better.
By contrast, negative employees
focus on a minor annoyance and let it ruin everything. It's like
the person who was chosen to attend my two-day program, "The
Journey to the Extraordinary." Even though her company paid
for the trip and program, the hotel was very nice and the training
was excellent, her only comment about the entire event was the
fact that the chairs in the training room were uncomfortable.
I'm sure they were. But her focus on the uncomfortable chairs
kept her from experiencing the transformation everyone else was
experiencing.
Of course, positive employees
who see the good in every situation may annoy the losers in the
company. The losers may see these positive people as Pollyannaish
or blind, and they may be disgusted with those people who aren't
wallowing in the negativity with them. So be it.
4. Positive employees ask
how they can do more than is expected.
Every business manager knows
the cardinal rule in business is to under-promise and over-deliver.
Positive employees are never satisfied with merely getting by
or doing the bare minimum. They know if they were to do that
they couldn't possibly feel good about themselves.
Positive employees find out what's
expected and do their best to exceed those expectations. Whether
it's dazzling a customer with better service than she's ever
experienced before or surprising a coworker by offering extra
help positive employees focus on how they can do more, not less.
Concluding Thoughts
If you're trying to assemble
a top-notch team, look for these characteristics. And if you
want to move ahead in your career, display these four positive
employee behaviors. They always work! |