By CAROL DWECK
MINDSET FOR BUSINESS AND LEADERSHIP
Are
Leaders Born or Made? What Makes a Good Manager? Should Businesses Hire Talent—or
Mindset? The Mindset That Increases Creativity and Productivity.
In 2001 came the announcement that shocked the corporate
world. Enron – the corporate poster child, the company of the future—had gone
belly up. What happened? How did such spectacular promise turn into such a
spectacular disaster? Was it incompetence? Was it corruption?
It was mindset. According to Malcolm Gladwell, writing in
the New Yorker, American corporations had become obsessed with talent. Indeed,
the gurus at McKinsey & Company, the premier management consulting firm in
the country, were insisting that corporate success today requires the “talent
mind-set.” Just as there are naturals in sports, they maintained, there are
naturals in business. Just as sports teams write huge checks to sign outsized
talent, so too should corporations spare no expense in recruiting talent, for
this is the secret weapon, the key to beating the competition.
“Did mindset bring down Enron? Did it save Xerox?”
“Did mindset bring down Enron? Did it save Xerox?”
As Gladwell writes “This ‘talent mind-set’ is the new
orthodoxy of American management.” It created the blueprint for the Enron
culture and it sowed the seeds of its demise... But by putting their complete
faith in talent, Enron did a fatal thing. By creating a culture that worshipped
talent, they forced their employees to look and act extraordinarily talented.
Basically, it forced them into the fixed mindset. And we know a lot about that.
We know from our studies that people with the fixed mindset do not admit and
correct their deficiencies. And a company that cannot self-correct cannot
survive. Brutal Bosses:
When bosses become controlling and abusive, they put everyone
into a fixed mindset. This means that instead of learning, growing, and moving
the company forward, everyone starts worrying about being judged. It starts
with the bosses’ worry about being judged, but it winds up being everybody’s
fear about being judged. It’s hard for courage and innovation to survive a
company-wide fixed mindset.
Are Leaders Born or Made?
When Warren Bennis interviewed great leaders, “they all
agreed leaders are made, not born, and made more by themselves than by any
external means.” Bennis concurs: “I believe.. that everyone, of whatever age
and circumstance, is capable of self-transformation.” Not that everyone will
become a leader. Sadly, most managers and even CEOs become bosses, not leaders.
They wield power instead of transforming themselves, their workers, and their
organization.
Why is this? John Zenger and Joseph Folkman point out that
most people when they first become managers enter a period of great learning.
They get lots of training and coaching, they are open to ideas, and they think
long and hard about how to do their jobs. They are looking to develop. But once
they’ve learned the basics, they stop trying to improve. It may seem like too
much trouble or they may not see where improvement will take them. They are
content to do their jobs rather than making themselves into leaders.
Or, as Morgan McCall argues, many organizations believe in
natural talent and don’t look for people with the potential to develop. Not
only are these organizations missing out on a big pool of possible leaders, but
their belief in natural talent might actually squash the very people they think
are the naturals.
New Research on Mindset and Leadership
1.
Resaerchers
Laura Kray and Michael Haselhuhn have shown that people in a growth mindset
make better negotiators. They also found that when business school students
were taught a growth mindset they learned more skills and got better grades in
their negotiation course. Negotiators with a growth mindset were much more able
to push past obstacles and reach an agreement that benefited both sides.
2.
Peter
Heslin and Gary Latham found that managers with a growth mindset notice
improvement in their employees, whereas those with a fixed mindset do not
(because they are stuck in their initial impression). When people are taught a
growth mindset, they start to be sensitive to improvement.
3.
Peter
Heslin, Don Vandewalle, and Gary Latham showed that employees evaluated their
growth-mindset managers as providing better coaching for employee development.
When managers were taught a growth mindset, they were more
willing to coach employees and the quality of their developmental coaching
became higher. Also, managers with a growth mindset actually sought more
negative feedback from their subordinates. They wanted to learn how to improve
their management techniques and were not threatened by the idea of hearing some
negative things about themselves.
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