Pulse September 2019 | Page 56

conversations With marcus Buckingham continued you go inside a company that has a “great culture”— Google, for example— you should be able to find that culture. You should be able to ask people some questions about their experiences and find two simple things: first, that there is a consistent experience of working at Google, and two, that that experience is measurably different from the experience at another company. But we can’t find that. It doesn’t exist. What we find instead is that the experience of people at Google varies massively between which team they’re on at Google, and that there’s far greater diversity inside Google than between Google and another company. Once someone joins a company, how long they stay—and how productive they are—depends on the team they’re on, not the size or type of company. So, if you’re running Canyon Ranch spa + fitness in the Venetian, for example, you have 400 staff. But you don’t actually have 400 people—you have 40 teams of ten. As the leader of team-leaders, do you know what happens on your best teams? Do you know some of the rituals and practices of those teams? Do you know who your best leaders are? Size doesn’t matter, because it’s all about teams. Think about all work as teamwork. P: So, in the end, why do we tell ourselves these lies about work? B: Mainly because we don’t like mess. We spend a lot of our time trying to tidy the world up, and, on some level, we are just annoyed by the sheer variety of human beings—the fact that they’re motivated by different things, build relationships differently and have different levels of energy. One of the brilliant things that the best leaders under- stand is that the power of human nature is that each human’s nature is unique. And teams are a really wonderful way to make use of that uniqueness. That’s what teams are for: to capitalize on the fact that different people on the team can complement each other. When you peel the lies back, what you get is wonderful diversity. And I don’t mean diversity of gender and race and age, necessarily—although you do get that—I mean diversity of motivation, thought process, relationship building, sense making, personality. 54 PULSE ■ SEPtEmbEr 2019 P: What’s your one tip to improve engagement? B: There are three secrets to engagement: attention, attention and attention. That’s what drives engagement: do you pay attention to me and my work? My tip would be to check in with each of your people once a week, every week, for 15 minutes. Just ask two questions each week: what are your priorities this week, and how can I help you? Don’t offer a to-do list—you’re not checking up on people, you’re checking in with people. We have a ton of data on this that show if you do this every week, your engagement is twice as high as if you do it every other week, and so on. Frequency trumps quality when it comes to engagement. n QuIck QueStIonS: hometown: “Los Angeles.” favorite vacation destination: “Avignon, in the south of France, in late June when all the lavender is out.” Personal motto: “ABC – always be curious.” favorite color: “bLUE.” favorite food: “Penne all’amatriciana. When it’s made well…you can’t even speak to me.”