You are not logged in. Login Now
 0-24   25-49   50-74   75-99   100-124   125-149   150-174   175-199   200-224 
 225-249   245-269   270   271-295   296-320   321-345   346-370   371-395   396-420 
 421-445   446-470   471-480        
 
Author Message
1 new of 480 responses total.
cmcgee
response 270 of 480: Mark Unseen   Dec 13 23:38 UTC 2006

My question to you is:  what have you done that makes other staff members look
good?

Nothing in your statement gives any information about your people skills. 
In order to help build a new culture within staff, everyone on staff is going
to have to cultivate their people skills, and their ability to demonstrate
their EQ.  "Not play political games" often translates into "not consider
other people's values when making decisions".  

"I speak THE truth" is an impossible statement.  "I speak MY truth clearly"
is possible.  Strength and talent are not sufficient to make you a good
addition to a team.  In fact, teams that work well together don't need strong
geniuses as members in order to be successful.  

There is a book out, "The Wisdom of Crowds".  Much of the research in that
book demonstrates that organizations that spend time and money searching for
the planet-level expert have worse outcomes than those which put a good team
on the problem.  

My experience with over 175 engineering teams, selected from the University
of Michigan engineering school, confirms that "wildflowers" need to learn how
to value EVERYONE's contribution to the solution, not just their own.  Hence
the question: What have you done that makes other team members look good?

Many engineers hold a belief system that they must be heros and work alone
to solve problems in order to be respected.  Cred is not earned that way. 
Another good book is "How To Be a Star Engineer" which is longitudinal
research done at Bell Labs.  The people who were most respected as engineers
were not the Lone Rangers.  

I'm hoping that the Grex staff can begin to incorporate some of this new
information into the way they solve problems.
 0-24   25-49   50-74   75-99   100-124   125-149   150-174   175-199   200-224 
 225-249   245-269   270   271-295   296-320   321-345   346-370   371-395   396-420 
 421-445   446-470   471-480        
Response Not Possible: You are Not Logged In
 

- Backtalk version 1.3.30 - Copyright 1996-2006, Jan Wolter and Steve Weiss