BOOK SUMMARY 354
Why We Work
·
Summary
written by: Ingrid
Urgoites
"If we want to help design a human nature that seeks and
finds challenge, engagement, meaning, and satisfaction from work, we have to
start building our way out of a deep hole that almost three centuries of
misconceptions about human motivation and human nature have put us in, and help
foster workplaces in which, challenge, engagement, meaning, and satisfaction
are possible."
- Why We Work, page 10
For the
past three centuries, we have focused on performance, productivity, and
efficiency in the workplace. We have accepted the idea that work is not
supposed to satisfy the worker, people work for money and division of labor,
routine, mechanized work is the way to make more money. Only highly educated
professionals should hope to find meaning, discretion, engagement, autonomy,
and opportunity to learn and grow in their work. In Why We Work,
Barry Schwartz challenges this view and elaborates on why it damages our
society.
The
Golden Egg
False
ideas twist reality
"However,
there are two things about idea technology that make it different from most
‘thing technology.’ First, because ideas are not objects, to be seen,
purchased, and touched, they can suffuse through the culture and have profound
effects on people before they are even noticed. Second, ideas, unlike things,
can have profound effects on people even if the ideas are false."- Why We
Work, page 67
Nature
will never create a Ferrari, and it would be extremely unlikely a play by Shakespeare
would ever be written by the computer generating random characters. Ideas, like
all inventions, are unique products of the human mind. Nature has a long
process which is never complete for testing and tweaking its creations. Human
brains work much faster, and we finish our inventions. We know when things made
of physical parts don’t work. Ideas can be deceptive, and it’s hard to
determine whether or not they work, we may believe them even when they are not
true. Then we invent more theories based on the false ones. All ideas, true and
false, shape our reality when we believe them.
Issac
Newton performed experiments where he used a prism to split visible light into
a spectrum. There were five distinct bands of color (red, yellow, green, blue,
and violet) but he thought the spectrum should match the scale of seven notes.
Newton added orange and indigo, which others identified as the mixing of two
bands. Newton was an expert. He made a spurious connection between light and
music, and we trusted him. We still see seven colors in a rainbow 300 years
later. This example shows how a false idea becomes accepted as true.
Gem #1
Presume
people work for more than a paycheck
"You
start out believing that people are basically lazy, don’t want to work, and
care only about their pay when they do. Based on this belief, you create a
workplace that is focused only on efficiency, with jobs that are mindlessly
repetitive, counting on the paycheck to motivate the workers. Lo and behold, in
an environment like that, all that matters to workers is their pay."- Why
We Work, page 75
If we
begin by supposing our employees only work for a paycheck, it is necessary to
have a structured work environment to keep them on task. Jobs are kept small,
straightforward and monotonous to be completed efficiently with little skill or
training. Supervision is hierarchical and punitive. Performance is
over-measured, and employees are paid according to key performance statistics.
Autonomous decisions made through discretion—even if they are in the best
interest of the company—may measure against an employee. By believing people
work only for pay, we create a work environment that validates that idea.
If we
begin by assuming our employees work for richer rewards of meaning, discretion,
engagement, autonomy, and opportunity to learn, we create satisfying work
beyond a paycheck. Teams are decentralized and self-managed giving them freedom
and choice. They provide extensive training with lots of opportunities to learn
and master more complex jobs. They measure performance, but they don’t over
measure. They trust employees to do their best work. They have a mission that
is more than words, and a central goal employees believe in. They support
employees as a team rather than individuals by providing pay and employment
security above the standard without relying excessively on personal rewards.
Gem #2
Realize
employee ability and promote development
"They
discovered that managers also seem to have either fixed or incremental theories
of employee ability. If managers had a fixed theory of ability, they were less
likely to notice changes in employee performance, and less likely to provide
feedback and coaching aimed at improvement, than if they had an incremental
theory of ability."- Why We Work, page 78
Schwartz
mentions the work of Carol S. Dweck, author of Mindset. She
talks about how children achieve things differently depending on their goal. If
their goal is performance (social recognition and rewards) they avoid
challenges and give up when they fail in search of easier goals. Children with
mastery goals (personal satisfaction of doing something well) work harder when
they fail, so they learn more and become smarter. Not surprisingly, adults at
work accomplish goals the same way.
Managers
who have a fixed idea of employee ability create a declining work environment.
They recognize and reward the good performers and don’t help poor performers
improve. Performance scores become what is important, and employees learn how
to reach the goal. When Mastery is not the goal, growth and learning are
unimportant. Employee potential is ignored at considerable expense to the
organization. Employees are left feeling unsatisfied with their work and work
only for a paycheck.
Managers
who foster improvement by providing additional training and support to
employees, especially poor performers, create a growth mindset in the
workplace. When managers encourage learning and tolerate error, employees feel
valued and form a deeper connection to the work and the goals of the
organization. They promote growth, not only personal satisfaction of their
employees but growth in the company. Employees become engaged and productive
instead of doing the minimum to reach a goal or giving up and moving on.
Even in
the most structured and mechanized jobs, there are those employees who see
beyond their job description and add challenges and variations to their work to
create value and meaning while doing almost any job. They may challenge
themselves to create quality human interactions or create beauty in other ways
that are not intrinsic to the job. These people don’t believe that work should
be done only for pay. There are also companies that have reexamined the
accepted idea that job satisfaction should be the price of productivity. They
allow for growth and learning, measure performance but emphasize good work, and
compensate team members equally because everyone helps the organization, they
value employees and their job. These individuals and organizations reject the
idea that we work for pay and build value into their lives and their companies
without sacrificing financial success. Our human nature defines not only who we
are, but it shapes our world. Isn’t it worth changing our minds about why we
work?
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