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Positive Principles Newsletter
July 2005 ___________________________________________
"Coming together is a beginning. Keeping together is progress. Working
together is success."
- Henry Ford
"Individual
commitment to a group effort, that is what makes a team work, a company
work, a society work, a civilization work."
-
Vince Lombardi
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This month's tip –
Ask yourself “What’s in it
for WE?”
“What’s in it for WE?” is a
question we ask ourselves. It is not a question we ask of other people. It
reflects a way of thinking that affects nearly all of our relationships and
interactions with other people. In this article, I will briefly address
three points that illustrate the importance of “What’s in it for WE?”
thinking to leadership, teamwork, and collaboration.
1) Effective
collaboration is one of the keys to your business/financial success.
I propose that few
great things come from the efforts of only one person. Consider these great
collaborations from the world of entertainment:
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Fred
Astaire and Ginger Rogers
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Elton
John and Bernie Taupin
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Paul
McCartney and John Lennon
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Bud Abbot
and Lou Costello.
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How about these
collaborations from the world of exploration:
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Capt
Meriwether Lewis and William Clark
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Sir
Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay.
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In business we can look
to:
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Bill
Gates and Paul Allen
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David
Abercrombie and Ezra Fitch
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James
Smith McDonnell and Donald Wills Douglas
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William
Proctor and James Gamble
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Richard
Warren Sears and Alvah Curtis Roebuck.
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Which of these people
would have achieved the same level of success had they attempted to go it
alone? I think few of them would have been as successful.
2) How you think determines how others react
to you.
I wrote some thoughts on
this topic in both the
March and
April editions of Positive Principles.
This month I’m expanding the thought to include the impact our thinking has
on our ability to form strong and lasting business relationships with
people.
In summary, here is my point. People know how you are
thinking about them because your thinking impacts your word choice, your
tone, and your body language. The better you get at focusing your thoughts
on mutual benefit, the more your words, tone and body language will reflect
that thinking. As your external behaviors reflect more “What’s in it for
WE?” thinking, people will be more receptive to working collaboratively with
you.
3) If you ask the wrong
question, you’ll get the wrong answer.
This statement is the primary thought behind this
month’s tip. I have heard this statement, or some variation of it, applied
to sales training, conflict resolution, and communication training. In QBQ!:
The Question Behind The Question, John Miller discusses this statement as it
applies to personal accountability. This month I hope you will apply it to
your thinking regarding all of your interactions with other people.
There are two basic types of questions you can ask
yourself when you work with others. You can ask yourself “What’s in it for
ME?” questions or “What’s in it for WE?” questions.
“What’s in it for ME?” questions focus on the benefit
to you alone. They sound like:
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How can I get them to do business with me?
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How can I
get people to refer other people to me?
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How can I
sell them my product or service?
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Why don’t
they understand me?
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Why don’t
they listen to me?
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What’s
wrong with them?
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How can I
get my employees to do what I want them to do?
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How can I
get them to work harder?
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Why don’t
they get more done?
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Why
aren’t they helping me?
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“What’s in it for WE?”
questions focus on mutual benefit. They sound like:
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How can I
add value to this relationship?
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What can
I do to help this person?
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Who do I
know that can help this person?
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What can
we do together that we can’t do separately?
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How do we complement each other?
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How can I communicate my ideas more
clearly?
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How do I make myself the kind of person
that people want to follow?
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(Download your copy of
“What’s in it for WE?” questions
here.)
As I said in the opening
paragraph, “What’s in it for WE?” is a question we ask ourselves that
reflects a way of thinking about other people and our relationships with
them. Learn to ask “What’s in it for WE?” questions, and you will
demonstrate “What’s in it for WE?” behaviors. When you demonstrate “What’s
in it for WE?” behaviors, you will form mutually beneficial, collaborative
relationships. These relationships will then form the foundation for your
success.
So for now, I encourage you
to remember this month's tip . . .
Ask yourself “What’s in it for WE?”
Have a great day,
Guy Harris
The Recovering Engineer
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