See if you can figure out what these two situations have in common:
(1) John works for a high-powered investment bank. His work environment is always stressful, but this time he is really feeling the heat. His firm has had several bad quarters in a row. In a recent meeting with their boss, John and his team had been given a strict order: they needed to increase their contribution to the bottom line by 15 percent relative to the previous quarter. Seared in Johnâs memory were his bossâs parting words: âI donât care how you get there, just get there.â
(2) I returned home late one night after taking part in a basketball free-throw shooting contest open to all members of the Columbia University community. I was feeling pretty good about things. Out of the fifty contestants who entered, I tied for first (making twenty-two out of twenty-five shots), which necessitated an overtime round between the other top finisher and me. The other person shot better than I did in overtime, so I finished as the runner-up. The next morning at breakfast, my three sons, then ranging in age from five to eleven, asked me how it had gone. I decided to make this a teaching moment, as in, thereâs more to life than winning and losing. So I proceeded to tell them that I had tried as hard as I could, that I really enjoyed the experience, and, oh, by the way, that I had come in second out of fifty people. My sons brought me down to earth quickly: âSo, Dad, you lost!â they cried out, practically in unison.
At first blush these two situations seem pretty different from one another. But they also display a noteworthy commonality: our obsession with results. Indeed, several familiar expressions reveal the great importance we assign to outcomes, such as âThe bottom line is âŚâ or âAt the end of the day âŚâ Donât get me wrongâwe should care about outcomes. Obviously we would rather succeed than fail, win rather than lose, and make more money rather than less. The problem is that all too often our obsession with results blinds us to the reality that how we get there, the process, also makes a big difference.
How the process is handled really matters to those on the receiving end of decisions. Just ask Jay Leno, the longtime host of NBCâs The Tonight Show. Jay didnât take it well when NBC replaced him with Conan OâBrien in 2009. Why? Was it because, after being No. 1 in late-night TV, he resented being told that his services were no longer needed? Was it because, at sixty, he felt hurt that someone ten to fifteen years younger would be replacing him? It is hard to know the real reasons, but his more recent reactions to being replaced by Jimmy Fallon (who is even younger than Conan OâBrien) give us some clues. As he put it himself, âThe main difference between this and the other time is Iâm part of the process. The last time the de cision was made without me. I came into work one day and [was abruptly told], youâre out. This time it feels right.â
Part of Jay Lenoâs satisfaction the second time around was probably because NBCâs CEO, Steve Burke, made a point of meeting with Jay himself before any changes were announced. As Burke said after their meeting, âClearly our goal has been to make this a smooth transition. Jay deserves to be treated like someone who has done a wonderful thing for our company for two decades.â Another important member of NBCâs senior management team, Lorne Michaels (the creator of Saturday Night Live), agreed: âWhat has been key to this transition has been the absolute consideration for everyoneâs feelings by all involved. It has been a transparent process.â Jimmy Fallon also facilitated things by saying, âI have nothing but respect for Jay. If it werenât for him, I wouldnât have a show to be taking over.â1
The Jay Leno example illustrates three of the central points of this book. First, look at how differently Jay reacted to the exact same decision when the process was done well rather than poorly. As the old saying goes, itâs not only what you do, but also how you do it. Second, doing the process well often entails simple things like involving people in decisions, showing respect, and doing things transparently. Not exactly rocket science. Furthermore, doing the process well may not require much in the way of tangible resources. For Jay Leno, it only required a few key people to show him real respect; this cost very little time or money. Third, given how much the process matters, and given the simplicity of doing it right, you would think that processes would be handled well more often than not. Sadly and alarmingly, this is not the case.
Hence this book: I will be talking about how doing things in the right way can make lots of important differences. It can have positive effects on employeesâ productivity and morale, on the academic performance of chronically underachieving students, on how ethically we behave, and even on how we feel about ourselves. The saga of Jay Leno is anything but an isolated case. I also will discuss what goes into doing things in the right way. The specific elements that affected Jay Lenoâs satisfaction with the process are part of the story, but many other factors go into a high-quality process. I also will provide answers to the puzzling question of why doing things in the right way frequently fails to happen. After all, if something so simple and straightforward can have such positive effects, shouldnât it be done more often? What is getting in the way? By identifying the obstacles, we can figure out ways to deal with them, thereby unleashing the many benefits that result from doing things in the right way.
Mapping the Terrain
Throughout the book I will consider a wide array of situations in which two or more parties are interacting with one another, or have a relationship with one another, and are trying to complete some task or attain some goal. Most of my examples come from the workplace: for instance, how employees react to a significant change in their organization such as a merger or acquisition. I also will examine more microlevel workplace encounters such as one-on-one interactions employees have with their bosses. The bookâs contents are also relevant to people in authority positions, such as parents, educators, and politicians. Moreover, the importance of how things are done also applies to our encounters and relationships with others who are important to us (family, friends) as we go about our various life activities.
In all of these situations, Party A is taking some action toward Party B that, from Party Bâs perspective, consists of both a âwhatâ (outcome) and a âhowâ (process). For example, an organization may decide to introduce a new strategic initiative, leading to downsizing parts of its operations. Or a boss may give feedback to one of her subordinates about the latterâs recent performance. Or, on a more personal level, a spouse may make plans for the next family vacation. In all of these examples, based upon what Party A is doing, Party B can make a pretty good guess as to what the outcomes will be. Naturally, the more Party B perceives the outcomes to be favorable, the better she responds. For instance, Party B will embrace the organizational change, will support the boss, and will go along with her spouseâs suggested vacation spot.
In all of these situations Party A also is carrying out a process, which refers to how things are done. For example, in conducting the performance review, the boss may be very top-down, taking into account only her own views. Alternatively, the boss may be more open in her approach. For instance, if this particular organization uses â360-degreeâ feedback processes, the boss may consider the views of the employeeâs peers or direct reports, or even the views of the employee himself. Furthermore, the boss may conduct the performance review in ways that indicate how interested she is in her subordinateâs development, such as by conducting the review on its scheduled day rather than postponing and rescheduling it multiple times. And a wifeâs reaction to her husbandâs vacation recommendation also depends on whether she believes she made the suggestion in a timely fashion or listened to her reactions to his suggestion.
How things are done is especially important to employees during times of organizational change. Regardless of the nature of the change (e.g., whether the organization is downsizing or growing), the process must include a remarkably similar set of attributes for employees to embrace the change. I will have a lot more to say about the process of managing change in a later chapter. For now, suffice it to say that the pathway leading to the result is very important to people over and above the result itself.
Process + Outcome, and Process Ă Outcome
You have probably heard the expression âadding insult to injury.â It is a reminder of how we care about the process in addition to the outcome. Sometimes we donât like what was decided (a bad outcome: the injury), and at the same time we donât like how the bad outcome was decided or communicated (a poor process: the insult). We usually feel quite resentful when both of these things happen at the same time. For example, if a friend breaks a date with me that I was looking forward to (bad outcome), and, moreover, didnât call me beforehand to say that he would be unable to meet me and I found this out when I called him to finalize the plans (bad process), I experience a double whammy. This is usually even worse than suggested by the expression âadding insult to injury.â Many studies show that a more accurate expression of what people experience when they get a bad outcome accompanied by a bad process is âmultiplying insult times injury.â Usually the product of two numbers (e.g., 3 Ă 3) is greater than the sum of those same two numbers (3 + 3). So if the bad outcome produces three units of pain and the bad process also produces three units of pain, the net experience is not six units of pain but nine units. An analogy from the field of pharmacology may be helpful here. When a patient is given a new prescription (Drug A), he may be advised to evaluate how it may interact with another one that he is already taking (Drug B). There may be few problems with taking Drug A and Drug B separately. However, if those same drugs are taken simultaneously they may have harmful effects. In like fashion, we often experience the combination of a bad outcome and a bad process as an especially toxic mix.2
Regardless of whether the combination of a bad outcome and bad process is best described as âadding insult to injuryâ or âmultiplying insult times injury,â the experience of the process affects many things that employees and employers care about. For example, in the workplace the process affects employeesâ motivation, which is comprised of several elements. Much like a vector, motivation has both direction and magnitude. To be motivated means that employees will do some things and not others (direction) and that they will put forth effort in performing those behaviors (magnitude).
One illustration of how the process can affect the direction and magnitude facets of motivation comes from the well-established finding that employees tend to be more motivated and hence productive when they work on a task with a specific and difficult goal in mind than if they have (1) no goal, (2) a difficult but nonspecific goal, or (3) a specific but not difficult goal.3 For example, suppose you fell behind in your reading and decided to play catch-up one evening. Before starting to read, you set the challenging goal of reading sixty pages. What is likely to happen? Although you may not read as many as sixty pages, you are likely to read more pages than if you did not set a goal, or if you set a difficult but nonspecific goal (âas much as I canâ), or if you set a specific but less difficult goal, say, thirty pages. Why do specific, difficult goals have this effect? For one thing, goals provide direction. If your goal is to read sixty pages, then you pretty much know what you need to do: read. Anything other than reading will not get the job done. In the words of Steven Covey (the author of The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People), if you âbegin with the end in mind,â it is easier to know when you are (or are not) doing the things that will get you to where you want to go.
One situation in which people may be susceptible to losing focus is working at the computer. All too often, I go to my computer fully intending to accomplish the goal of making headway on some challenging activity, say, writing this book. (Note the nonspecific nature of this difficult goal: âmaking headway.â) Unfortunately, working at the computer lends itself to doing so many other things that are a mere few clicks away. For example, I sometimes tell myself that I will get to my writing âjust after I check my e-mail.â Upon emerging from my e-mail, sometimes hours later, I often find that I no longer have the energy to do what I initially set out to do. On the other hand, if I make the challenging goal more specific (âwrite five pagesâ), I am much more likely to remain on task. Why? If I wander over to âjust check my e-mail,â I know that this activity will be at cross-purposes with the specific goal I set for myself. In short, specific, difficult goals provide direction; they make it harder to veer off course.
The presence of a specific, difficult goal also affects the magnitude or intensity of our efforts. This often happens when we see ourselves making progress toward the goal. The perception of getting closer to our goal increases the effort we put forth to achieve it, a tendency known as the âgoal gradient effect.â Have you ever waited in a common area in a bank for the next available teller? My guess is that when you reached the point at which you were the next in line, each minute that you had to keep waiting felt interminable. Why? You were experiencing the goal gradient effect: the closer you were to your goal, the more motivated you were to get there, and therefore the more painful it was to not be there.
Of course, sometimes we may not be making progress toward the goal. We may have set a goal to read sixty pages, only to find two hours later that we have only read five pages, perhaps because we got involved in distracting alternatives (âjust checking e-mailsâ). In this instance, the negative feedback may motivate us to redouble our efforts to get going. The point is that goals set the stage for us to receive feedback about how we are doing, and it is the receipt of the feedback that leads us to increase the intensity of our efforts.
In much the same way that specific, difficult goals affect what we do (direction) and the intensity with which we do it (magnitude), so does a high-quality process. Throughout the book, we will consider how the quality of the process influences both the direction and magnitude facets of motivation. For example, how things are handled influences whether people choose to behave ethically or unethically (direction). The quality of the process also influences how much effort employees exert to further their organizationâs interests (magnitude).
What Goes into a High-Quality Process?
Assuming you are onboard with the idea that the quality of the process can make a big difference, letâs try to delineate the essence of a high-quality process. When people say âthe process was handled really well,â what do they mean exactly? There are a few ways to depict a high-quality process, as illustrated in a classic field experiment Ellen Langer and Judith Rodin conducted in a nursing home. At the beginning of the study, the nursing home administrator told all of the residents in a warm and friendly way that the staff wanted them to have a good experience living there.
From that point on, the participants were randomly assigned to one of two groups, a high responsibility group and a low responsibility group. Those in the high responsibility group were told that they had a lot of responsibility in how they wanted to live their lives whereas those in the low responsibility group were told that the staff would be taking care of and making decisions for them. For example, each individual in both groups was given a plant. Furthermore, the two groups were told that they would have the opportunity to see a movie on one of two nights during the following week. Those in the high responsibility group were asked whether they wanted the plant (all of them did) and were told that it was up to them to take care of ...