Crucial Accountability: Tools for Resolving Violated Expectations, Broken Commitments, and Bad Behavior, Second Edition by Kerry Patterson & Joseph Grenny & Ron McMillan & Al Switzler & David Maxfield
Author:Kerry Patterson & Joseph Grenny & Ron McMillan & Al Switzler & David Maxfield
Language: eng
Format: mobi
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Education
Published: 2013-06-21T04:00:00+00:00
CHAPTER SUMMARY
Make It Motivating
Weâve carefully described the gap and are now listening to see if the problem is due to motivation or ability. In this chapter, we examined the motivational side of the model.
When the other person isnât motivated, itâs our job to make the right behavior motivating.
Consequences motivate. Motivation isnât something you do to someone. People already want to do things. Theyâre motivated by the consequences they anticipate. And since any action leads to a variety of consequences, people act on the basis of the overall consequence bundle.
Explore natural consequences. Begin by explaining natural consequences. Within a business context, this typically includes whatâs happening to stakeholders. Stakeholders include other employees, customers, shareowners, communities, and regulatory agencies.
Match method to circumstances. When people simply want to know, explain both what needs to be done and why. When dealing with someone who is pushing back, resist the temptation to jump to power. Search for consequences that matter to the other person.
Finish well. Finally, wrap up the conversation by determining who does what and by when. Then set a follow-up time.
Additional Resources
Struggling to âmake it motivatingâ? Refer to Appendix C, âWhen Thing Go Right,â for tips on motivating with praise. Also, visit http://www.vitalsmarts.com/bookresources and learn how you can submit your specific questions to the authors of Crucial Accountability.
Whatâs Next?
Letâs expand our skills to include the other half of our Six-Source Model. Letâs learn what to do when the other person is motivated but unable to act.
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