Friday, November 15, 2019
Why the world needs more rebels
Why the world needs more rebels Why the world needs more rebels âSo few want to be rebels anymore. And out of those few, most, like myself, scare easily.â ? Ray Bradbury Where have all the rebels gone?Think of any innovation that changed how any organization operates. Iâm willing to bet the driving force behind it wasnât conformity, but curiosity.Without rebellion, thereâs no change. Curiosity is the spark behind the spark of a great idea. Ignorance starts all fires someone asks a questions no one else dared before.Follow Ladders on Flipboard!Follow Laddersâ magazines on Flipboard covering Happiness, Productivity, Job Satisfaction, Neuroscience, and more!The companies that encourage rebel behaviors achieve better outcomes. If conformity is the enemy of innovation, why are rebels so scarce then?Maybe leaders donât know how to deal with troublemakers they feel threatened.Without Trouble, thereâs No ChangeâOriginality is the best form of rebellion.â ? Mike SassoCompanies are a living paradox. They want to be more innovative, yet expect their employees to conform to norms.Less than 10% of employees think their employer regularly encourages nonconformity.Organizations are not designed for innovation but to reward conformity. The more people respect the rules and whatâs expected of them, the better. The pressure to conform gets worse as we climb the corporate ladder.Half of employees feel the need to conform to their workplace norms, according to research by Francesca Gino, a professor at Harvard Business School. Even worse, more than half of interviewees think that no one in their organization questions the status quo.Conformity is a cultural thing it makes us feel accepted and part of the majority. Itâsâ nice to be agreeable too. However, what a vibrant, healthy world need is trouble.Saying ânoâ when everyone else agrees, is not being a contrarian. It requires courage to speak against groupthink. Nonconformism tr iggers creativity.Troublemakers are rare and brave they make the world a better place. According to professor Charlan Nemeth, we all benefit when someone else presents a thoughtful contrarian view.Disagreement neutralizes groupthink.âItâs a benefit regardless of whether or not dissenters hold the truth,â Nemeth explains in her book In Defense of Troublemakers. âMost people are afraid and they donât speak up. The research really shows us that, even if itâs wrong, the fact that the majority or the consensus is challenged actually stimulates thinking.âTroublemakers are not rebels without a cause they want to liberate humanity from mediocrity and injustice. They create a generous, better space for everyone.Mahatma Gandhi led the Indian people toward independence through non-violent resistance. Abraham Lincoln fought to abolish slavery in the U.S. Martin Luther King Jr. inspired a movement to overcome racism and segregation. The Suffragettes fought for womenâs right to vote.By trying not to offend others, we can cause more harm than good. Thatâs what Nemeth uncovered by studying juries, airline crews, businesses, and teams in general. Dissent provides clarity we make better decisions.When we worry, we lose our ability to engage in an honest conversation. As Nemeth said, âWe have to stop being polite if it means being dishonest about what we believe.âNonconformism is painful but essential. It stimulates us to think more broadly, deeply, and honestly.Rebels Are Agents of ChangeOrganizations misunderstand the power of rebellious people they see the trouble, not the possibilities.True rebels are not crazy or out of control. Their actions are not meant to defeat the current regime, but to improve it. They donât break the rules because they want to, but because they have to. Rebels want to lead people to a better future.In her new book, Rebel Talent, Francesca Gino shares the secrets of being a rebel in life and at work.Appleâs Steve Jobs, Pixarâs Ed Catmull, film director Ava Duvernay, magician Harry Houdini, and Walt Disney reminds us that rebels are all around us. As the behavioral scientist explains, you donât have to be born a Rebel we can all become one.Rebels know how to break the habits that hold us back they fight groupthink and routines.Companies must reframe their relationships with rebels they are not a threat but the best ally wise leaders can have.As Francesca Gino said, âTo be a rebel does not mean you have to be an outcast or a troublemaker. Effective rebels are people who break rules in ways that are positive and productive.âRebels fight limits they break, transform, and create beyond the norm.Since childhood, we are taught to conform. At school, we learn to choose certainty over doubt. Organizations teach people to do things in a certain way, not to question.Rebels defy groupthink they share five traits: novelty, curiosity, perspective, diversity, and authenticity.Innovative companies enc ourage rebel talent. They continually challenge employees to do new tasks or find new ways to operate. Embracing rebels generates better business results.So, why do leaders still want to shoot the messenger?Donât Kill the RebelâWith rebellion, awareness is bornâ ? Albert CamusNonconformity signals separate rebels from the rest.According to the Red Sneaker Effect, observers judge nonconformists as having a higher status than those who abide by the norms.Whether itâs a CEO who makes the rounds of Wall Street in a hoodie and jeans, a presenter who creates her own PowerPoint template rather than using her companyâs, or a keynote speaker who wears red sneakers nonconformists are considered superior.Why is it that only a few leaders encourage deviant behaviors?Research shows that just a few weeks of acting against the norms can boost our self-esteem. People who were encouraged to speak up, to be themselves, and express their own opinions feel more confident.When facilitating a team offsite, I witness this transformation directly. When people feel free from limitations, they not only liberate their true selves they become unstoppable. Performance, collaboration, and innovation boost when people donât feel the pressure to conform.Organizati ons silence troublemakers they see rebellions as a coup dâetat, not as the path toward betterment.Donât confuse behavior with intention. Resistance and unhappiness are a signal. Disengaged employees are not a disease, but a symptom.Complainers are not necessarily trying to boycott your company they speak on behalf of the group.Donât kill the rebels find out whatâs the message they are trying to tell you.Being rebellious is not an attitude but a habit. It requires courage to speak up when everyone else stays silent. Troublemakers have grown their confidence muscles by standing up against conformity.However, being a rebel is exhausting. Your team cannot rely on just a few voices. Itâs not fair to leave that responsibility to the usual troublemakers.Purposeful revolutions are contagious.Rebels have a strong reputation people respect their authenticity and passion. Itâs not easy to stand up against criticism. Generous troublemakers inspire others to speak up too. They tur n conformity into the new normal.How to Liberate the Rebel within Your Team1. Make it safe to be a non-conformistChallenging the status-quo requires more than drive. Organizations must provide a safe space for people to speak up.Southwest Airlines created a safe, high-engagement workplace by respecting human nature. It allowed employees to speak up and decide how to best do their work. They just had to follow one rule: be aligned with the companyâs purpose safety for everyone.A Fearless Culture is the foundation for dissent, honesty, and transparency. Remove the fear of retaliation make it okay to be a rebel.2. Allow people to be themselvesMost people are quite capable of creative thinking and problem-solving.The Chicago Public Library wanted to become more innovative. Working with them, we noticed that the team lacked creative talent. But, when coaching them, we realized many of the staff were writers, painters, inventors but outside work.The organization didnât need to hir e creative talent they just needed to let people bring their rebel spirit to work.3. Encourage people to break the rulesRules are meant to bring clarity and enable people. Unfortunately, most of them focus on telling people what they canât do, rather than liberating their best self.Hannah Vaughn Setzer was born with a rare cyst condition. Experts advised her parents that she wouldnât survive birth. She defied the doctorâs prognosis the 28-year-old woman has become a disability rights advocate and health blogger.Rebels donât let others define their limits they break the rules with intentionality and purpose, as I wrote here.4. Fail SmartMistakes donât just welcome breakthrough they are a necessary path toward innovation. You canât discover a new solution without failing. You must first find 10,000 ways that something wonât work, as Thomas A. Edison allegedly said.Foster happy accidents. Mistakes are lessons in disguise. Rebels welcome all the ideas that flow from a mistake-friendly culture.Donât fail fast, but fail smart. The point is not making mistakes out of stupidity or being in a rush but out of purpose.5. Turn Constraints into a SuperpowerLimitations drive innovation a tight budget makes some teams complain but gets others excited and focused. It was precisely a constraint what helped the U.S. Navy become an innovation hub in no time.It all started with a young aviator named Ben Kohlmann everyone described him as a troublemaker, disrupter, heretic, among other things. The key to his success? He recruited the black sheep.One man had been fired from a nuclear submarine for disobedience. Another refused to attend basic training. Others had yelled at their senior officers. They all had a track record of insubordination. But, the aviator saw their potential, not their flawsKohlmann succeeded because he built a nonconformist culture he brought the misfits and ârank-and-fileâ together. The sailors who had never shown a desire to ch allenge the status-quo were exposed to new ways of thinking. Collaborating with the rebels turned this hybrid team into a success.6. Encourage positive conflictDisagreement is uncomfortable. However, itâs the most effective way to drive alignment. Rather than forcing people to be on the same page, let them write that page.Nonconformism stimulates us to think it leads to better ideas and solutions. As Google CEO Eric Schmidt said, âWe run this company on questions, not answers.âRebels thrive in organizations that are lead with questions. Instead of seeing things as they are, they ask âWhat if?â or âHow might we?â7. Innovate from the fringesEveryone has the responsibility and ability to lead. People donât need a title to drive change they thrive in a culture that encourages positive rebellions.Innovation requires safe places in which to break the rules, make mistakes, and recoverâ"and then try it again, and again. Groups of rebels challenging common sense are not that bad. Make room for the fringes.Swedish Greta Thunberg was just 15-year old when she decided to cut class to fight the climate crisis. Her age didnât stop her from going on school strike at the parliament to get politicians to act.Rebels-at-heart enjoy navigating uncharted territory. Set your troublemakers free.Conformity drives repetition which promotes boredom, and disengagement. Thatâs why the world needs more rebels.The good news? You donât need to hire additional people. Liberate the troublemaker within your team. Start your innovation revolt design and build a rebel culture.Gustavo Razzetti is a change instigator who helps people and organizations create positive change. He advises, writes, and speaks on team development and culture transformation. Receive his weekly insights or follow him on LinkedIn. This article first appeared on Medium. You might also enjoy⦠New neuroscience reveals 4 rituals that will make you happy Strangers know your social class in the first seven words you say, study finds 10 lessons from Benjamin Franklinâs daily schedule that will double your productivity The worst mistakes you can make in an interview, according to 12 CEOs 10 habits of mentally strong people
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.