STRENGTHS: THE NEXT GENERATION
Q&A with author Tom Rath
(From the Gallup Management Journal; interviewed by Jennifer Robison)
Last
month, StrengthsFinder 2.0 hit the bookstores. Book browsers, no doubt,
had many questions, and among them was probably "Didn't I already read a
book about this?"
Well, actually, yes. But the topic was worth
revisiting for two reasons. In the six years since the release of Now,
Discover Your Strengths, more than 2 million people have taken the
Clifton StrengthsFinder assessment, which means billions of people have
not yet had the opportunity. The second reason is that Gallup
researchers just haven't been able to let the topic rest. Over the past
decade, they've done more surveys, more interviews, and more studies;
they've prodded and poked and analyzed. And they realized that there's a
lot more to understanding human talent than most people know. Those who
are familiar with the StrengthsFinder assessment know that it is
designed to uncover certain key talents -- patterns of thought, feeling,
and behavior that can be productively applied. These patterns are
categorized into 34 broad themes -- such as Achiever, Ideation, and
Relator -- and those themes indicate and predict one's innate and unique
talents. Those talents, when multiplied by the investment of time spent
practicing, developing skills, and building knowledge, can become
strengths. Some of this is just common sense; it seems intuitive that
your performance will be better if you're doing what you naturally do
well. But some of it seems counterintuitive and runs directly against
conventional wisdom: No amount of training will help you excel in your
areas of weakness. You can't do anything you want to do -- or be
anything you want to be -- because you're just not going to be good at
everything. But if you work with your talents, you can be extraordinary.
StrengthsFinder has resonated with the business community because
there's a direct link between talent development and performance. In
this interview, Tom Rath, author of StrengthsFinder 2.0, discusses what
Gallup scientists have learned since the publication of the first book,
what more there is to discover about your talents, and why it's bad to
focus on your employees' weaknesses, but simply cruel to ignore them
completely. GMJ: Why the new book?
Tom Rath: StrengthsFinder 2.0
is an effort to get the core message and language out to a much broader
audience. We had no idea how well received the first strengths book
would be by general readers -- it was oriented more toward managers --
or that the energy and excitement would continue to grow. More than two
million people have taken the StrengthsFinder assessment, and each
month, the number of people learning about their talents goes up. But
readers keep asking us: "Now that I know about my strengths, what do I
do next?" So we went back and surveyed hundreds of them and asked them
how they apply their talents. Then we whittled their suggestions down to
the ten best ideas for each theme. We also added more than five
thousand Strengths Insights to version 2.0 that allow us to offer more
individualized theme descriptions than we could before. So, instead of
general descriptions of your top five talent themes, in 2.0, you get a
talent profile so unique that you're unlikely to share even a sentence
with someone else. And as I said, the first book was really written for a
business audience. People have had trouble retrofitting the theme
descriptions if they are in non-management roles, but they've tried.
This book helps readers apply strengths theory to any type of role and
gives them ideas to help them apply their talents in their daily life.
GMJ: It's been six years since the first book was published, and Gallup
has done hundreds of thousands more interviews. Have you discovered
anything new about talents and strengths? Have you altered your original
premise?
Rath: No, but we've seen more and more evidence that
demonstrates that focusing on your talents is important. We did a survey
in 2004 that examined what happens when your manager ignores you,
focuses on your strengths, or focuses on your weaknesses. We found that
if your manager focuses on your strengths, your chances of being
actively disengaged go down to one in one hundred. However, if your
manager primarily focuses on your weaknesses, your chances of being
actively disengaged are 22%, and if your manager ignores you, that
percentage rises to 40%. GMJ: Why such a high rate of disengagement
among those who are ignored?
Rath: It basically mirrors the
psychology of raising kids -- being completely ignored is the worst
possible psychological state. You would actually feel better if your
manager went from ignoring you to focusing on what you do wrong all the
time, because then at least she's paying attention to you. GMJ: Did your
new research turn up anything that surprised you?
Rath: We've
talked a lot about how strengths can help you be more of who you are,
and you get more out of your best players, and all of that. But in the
last ten years, we've also found that it's a good strategy just to wipe
out the extreme negativity in the workplace. I get this question almost
every time I talk to a group: "What do I do about that one person who
just drags everyone down every day?" My glib answer was to get rid of
the person. I always thought there were some people who were just
destined to be disengaged in their jobs because that was their
personality, and no matter how hard managers tried, there wasn't much
they could do with some of those people. But the data from the last five
years would suggest that much of that epidemic of disengagement is
fixable. More than I ever would have guessed, it helps tremendously if a
manager starts by focusing on someone's strengths. You may not take
someone who's actively disengaged and make him into your most engaged
employee, but it will help get him out of that mindset where he's
scaring off colleagues and customers. GMJ: So is that the business case
to be made for putting people in roles that play to their strengths?
Rath: I think it's the secondary business case. The main business case
is that people have a lot more fun and get a lot more done if they're
able to spend time in areas where they have some natural talent. I think
that's a fundamental principle that hasn't changed much at all. The one
thing that we were clear about in StrengthsFinder 2.0 is that the
American dream ideal that "You can be anything you want if you just try
hard enough" is detrimental. This is especially true when people buy
into it hook, line, and sinker. You may not be able to be anything you
want to be, but you can be a lot more of who you already are. [Taking]
StrengthsFinder is just a starting point; it's step one of a hundred in
figuring out the areas where you have the most potential for growth.
GMJ: What is the most challenging aspect of your ongoing strengths
research?
Rath: While hundreds of people in our organization
continue to research this topic each year, our greatest challenge might
be incorporating the new research while making the message even more
succinct and applicable to a wider audience. So while we have hundreds
of new case studies and meta-analyses about strengths -- and about
employee engagement and business outcomes -- we tried to stay as close
as we could to the basics. GMJ: The Clifton StrengthsFinder assessment
has always categorized talents into thirty-four themes. Have you ever
considered adding or subtracting any, or refining them further?
Rath:
Yes, we looked at that extensively as we started to review our plan for
the updated version of the assessment. We found that so far, the
thirty-four themes have done a good job of describing much of what we've
learned since releasing the first version of the assessment. If enough
people had made a case about a specific theme that didn't exist, we were
open to adding that theme. I think we probably will continue to
investigate whether there are themes that emerge that we haven't yet
picked up on. But there wasn't a real strong case for any additions at
this time. GMJ: What would you most like to accomplish with
StrengthsFinder 2.0?
Rath: Our big goal and mission as a company
is to help people do more of what they do well. We've topped two
million completed StrengthsFinder assessments, and it's not too hard to
imagine that number getting to twenty million soon. An organization that
exists to help people has a responsibility to get better and better. By
reaching beyond our initial audience, we help people get the latest and
greatest research. But we also hope it helps people live better lives.
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