Meltwater Group Blog header image 4

Entries from December 22nd, 2009


 

Puppy School: Not Just for Puppies

Posted December 22nd, 2009 By Guest Blogger  | No Comments

puppy-school

My brother and his girlfriend recently started taking their new dog to puppy school. They learned that the most effective way to train a puppy is to reward desired behavior, not disciplining bad behavior. Receiving no positive reinforcement for bad behavior, the dog is not really interested in being naughty. Anxious for praise and other small snack rewards has him on track to becoming a star pup.

When I heard this story I thought about the parallels to management. The times I’ve performed at my best have been when my manager has given me trust and plenty of positive reinforcement.

I received this right from the start at Meltwater. Having been vetted through the recruitment process where all my strengths and weaknesses were exposed and discussed, the people who recruited me made me feel accomplished even before I had proven myself in sales. From that trust and positivity grew an excitement for the job and a loyalty to the management team that undoubtedly contributed greatly to my early success as a Sales Consultant. Hearing that I was good made me believe I was good, and it inspired me to do more good things.

I’ve now had the opportunity to manage on a few different levels, and I see how the same holds true for the people I lead. When my approach is to give praise and offer support, I breed inspiration, results, and loyalty to myself and the company. When I point fingers and show doubt in my colleagues, I am met with…

more...

→ No Comments Category: Professional Advice

 

Wake Me Up, I’ve Been in Meetings All Day

Posted December 17th, 2009 By Kimling  | No Comments

boring meeting

I work in a high-energy team that is constantly seeking to cross action items off the collective to-do list. However, not everything runs efficiently. Let’s face it: no matter how effective your team is, there are certain activities that are just inefficient and drag down your highly-productive day –– I’m talking about meetings (wah waaah).

In a recent blog post, my colleague introduced some “novel” meeting ideas like keeping everyone standing and scheduling (not to mention sticking to) 30-minute meetings.

My team has a tendency to book one-hour meetings that somehow inevitably go into triple overtime. And I will confess right here on this blog: I get bored…FAST. (Don’t take it personally, Team)

So I came across a piece of advice recently that I think is realistic to stick to, even if you are in lengthy meetings:

Meetings, like Action Items, should have specific, actionable goals: Rather than “Discuss Project A,” think of more focused goals, such as, “Determine budget and workflow for Project A.”

From now on, when I create a meeting agenda or receive a meeting agenda, I’m going to seek a resolution or course of action for each action item. Hopefully, I won’t have to feign amusement ever again.

Share this post:


Digg It!

Twitter

Stumble It!

Add to Delocious

Add to Facebook

Add to Myspace

Add to google

Add to Technorati Favorites

Add to Reddit

RSS Feed

more...

→ No Comments Category: Professional Advice