JobDig -> HR & Management -> Managing -> A Glimpse at Blitz The Ladder's Blitz Approach

A Glimpse at Blitz The Ladder's Blitz Approach

By Todd Rhoad
Bookmark
What do you do when you’re running late to work?
Vote
Getting poll results. Please wait...

In a recent online survey, business professionals identified numerous barriers to achieving the career success they desire. Listed among the 14 barriers identified were fear, risk, embarrassment, no opportunities, too difficult to shine, no real hard skills to market, can’t market own abilities, competition and don’t network effectively. Do these problems resonate with you? In working with others to help them achieve success in the workplace, these barriers are often identified as the detriment to achieving the things they want. But why? Are these barriers even real? Many times they are not. My mother-in-law has always been terrified of tornados. So much so that just the mention of the word causes her stress. Yet, she’s never had any real, close experiences with a tornado. Maybe our minds create similar effects on us in the workplace. Are these barriers ‘real’ or are they something we just perceive as a barrier?

 

In my book, Blitz the Ladder, I show you a team-based strategy with a few methods for achieving your success by simply managing perception. This includes your self-perception and how others perceive you. Before you can maximize the usefulness of my methods, you must understand your beliefs and how they affect your perceptions.

 

While the world we live in is a physical world that we see and touch, we tend to live in the perceived world in our minds. Everyone sees things differently, so they have different experiences. Even though we see the same things, we don’t take away the same meaning, or perception. This meaning is attached to the experience, which eventually becomes our beliefs. My kids, for example, are learning to form their own perceptions. Earlier, they would question me a million times a day, “why?” Once I explained what they saw, they attached this meaning to it. Hopefully, as they grow older, they will continue to question it and modify the meaning as they learn more. Eventually we quit questioning why and our beliefs become fixed.


Looking back at the list of barriers, respondents had identified ‘too difficult to shine’ within their organization. Is it really too difficult? Maybe they tried a few times and it only resulted in failure so they attached the meaning that it is just too difficult. Then, these past experiences become the knowledge of our beliefs. Once theie belief is fixed; that is, it’s too difficult, their behavior will follow. If they try to outshine the competition again, they may simply cease to question the result, accept it as failure. Eventually, they will quit trying. Outshining others when you fail to try really is difficult.


There is another downside to this cycle. Not only do you perceive your efforts as failure, others may perceive the same thing. Your manager may see that you don’t try very hard to complete your goals. He/she may not know that you don’t try hard because you think it won’t get you anywhere even if you do a great job. Not only does your perception hurt you, the perception of others will limit your potential as well (to some extent).


Once you realize that some of your beliefs may be incorrect and that you can change them, my team-based approach really propels you forward. In my Blitz Approach, you select a few people to become part of your team. Each member creates a strategy map to define and outline their career goals. This is a critical step. If you can’t define what you want, then nothing will work. Assuming you can, you share your map with your team and they share their map with you. The team works to define the best way to achieve the goals within the organization or wherever it may be. Then, they help each other reach their goals. This includes performing tasks, influencing people, training each other or acting as a coach or mentor.


This approach is beneficial in that your team members help you correct a lot of your mis-perceptions on the things that are holding you back. Having multiple perspectives on events is a much better way to ensure you are establishing the correct meaning to what you perceive. You have a team of people that you share your thoughts and ideas with to obtain more clarity into the possibilities and barriers. Hitting a barrier is not so difficult if you have others to reinterpret what you see or if it’s real, find a way around it. This keeps you from experiencing the same thing over and over by trying the same things and getting the same results. It’s also a good way to ensure the meaning attached is positive and supports your efforts.


The biggest benefit from the team-based approach is that you can also adjust the meanings and beliefs that others have about you. Everyone has the ability to misinterpret what we experience. If you are not seen as a high performer that deserves more kudos, then you have your team design the new image and create it. Naturally, it is a little complicated to create an image of yourself that your actions don’t support. There must be continuity in what people perceive. In other words, you don’t want to paint yourself as someone you really aren’t. The positive side to this is that you can modify what people see. Your team can create several experiences that conflict with what the people you wish to influence already believe. This is an effort to force them to question it. Once they question it, you have the ability to change its meaning by providing experiences that define it the way you want it. Your team members play their most important role in these situations.


In building this technique, research indicated that many individuals failed to achieve success because managers weren’t really looking at them. Their abilities and efforts went unnoticed. Managers simply know very little of what their people do. While there are many reasons for this, it’s important to know that their beliefs about you are based on limited information. This can be good or bad. Therefore, for those you seek to influence in hopes of gaining favor, you must learn what they think about you. Again, this is easily done by using your team members.


In one organization, our friend David wanted to gain an opportunity to lead a project. Upon hearing that a new line of business was being entertained by management, we had David’s team interact with the responsible managers several times in several different situations to provide a picture of the person they wanted to lead this project; that is, David. We mentioned his name as the best candidate in as many situations as we could such as meetings, at lunch, and walking to the parking lot at the end of the day. Any situation had potential to achieve our goal of gaining visibility for David. Now, David never said a word. All good things were promoted by his team. A few weeks later, David was a project manager for the first time. His team continued supporting him through the project, especially on tasks he had difficulty with. His experience was a huge success.


This approach not only focuses on you but also your efforts to help your team members succeed as well. The opportunities you encounter may not be right for you but could be for a team member. Once you get a team member is a position of authority, it can get a little easier to promote the efforts of the other team members. Each level up on the rung provides more visibility and access to success. Of course, the rules of the game change at each level but this won’t slow you down. You’ll have several sets of eyes that can identify the differences and have to benefit from them.


The two biggest lessons to take from the book are that you must be careful to ensure your perceptions aren’t hurting your performance and you can create a much better image of yourself that will drive you and others to make you more successful. It’s all in your head and your team. The book, Blitz the Ladder, walks you through building your strategy map to reaching your goals and building your team to fuel the journey.

RSS
Company: Blitz Team Consulting
Email: todd.rhoad@blitzteamconsulting.com
Website: http://blitzteamconsulting.com

Todd Rhoad is the Managing Director for Bt Consulting, an independent consulting company in Austin, TX. Having made many mistakes over the past 20 years, he focuses on helping others avoid them. As a consultant, he also helps organizations with executive coaching, providing him another avenue to learn about how companies operate. Putting these experiences together, Todd releases his first book, "Blitz The Ladder," this year. It is an innovative technique for gaining success in the ever-changing organization using a team-based approach.
Matching Categories
Follow JobDig on Twitter
Send to a Friend Print Page
See More Top Jobs…