Friday, November 23, 2007

Leading Clever People is Hard

There is desire by every organization to hire the "best and brightest" to innovate and contribute to the success of the company. In some industries, like drug companies, Research and Development is key the continuing growth of the company; without it, there would be no business and no competitive edge.

Hiring these people is hard; keeping them is even harder.

From HBR:

7 things that make clever people hard to manage:

1. They know their worth. The tacit skills of clever people are closer to those of medieval guilds than to the standardized, codifiable, and communicable skills that characterized the Industrial Revolution. This means you can't transfer the knowledge without the people.

2. They are organizationally savvy. Clever people will find the company context in which their interests will be most generously funded. If the funding dries up, they have a couple of options: They can move on to a place where resources are plentiful, or they can dig in and engage in elaborate politics to advance their pet projects.

3. They ignore corporate hierarchy. If you seek to motivate clever people with titles or promotions, you will probably be met with cold disdain. But don't assume this means they don't care about status; they can be very particular about it, and may insist on being called "doctor" or "professor."

4. They expect instant access. If clever people don't get access to the CEO, they may think the organization does not take their work seriously.

5. They are well connected. Clever people are usually plugged into highly developed knowledge networks; who they know is often as important as what they know. These networks both increase their value to the organization and make them more of a flight risk.

6. They have a low boredom threshold. In an era of employee mobility, if you don't engage your clever people intellectually and inspire them with organizational purpose, they will walk out the door.

7. They won't thank you. Even when you're leading them well, clever people will be unwilling to recognize your leadership. Remember, these creative individuals feel that they don't need to be led. Measure your success by your ability to remain on the fringes of their radar.

Saturday, November 3, 2007

Are you smarter than an Executive MBA?

http://forum.calgarypuck.com/showthread.php?t=49591

(Ironically this is on a Calgary Flames forum)

Pretty hard if you are not aware of the world around you.