From the Ask Tom mailbag –
Question:
You indicate the reason people do what they do is because they can. How does if-they-can relate to competence? And, if someone can-do, has the competence to-do, then how do we get them to do it? I am always looking for discretionary behavior.
Response:
Lot’s of questions embedded here. The first cause of underperformance is the lack of competence to perform. The accountability for this goes to the manager. It is the manager that determines the capability and skills required for the role. The manager is accountable for selecting the team member for the role based on their possession of that capability and skills. If the team member does not possess the requisite capability and skills, then that is poor selection on the part of the manager. This has nothing to do with discretionary behavior, this has only to do with competence.
If someone has the competence to perform, the only way for a manager to influence effective behavior is to make it necessary. The reason we don’t get the performance we want, and need, is because we do not make it necessary. If a person has the requisite skills and capability (competence) and the performance has been made necessary, then the only reason for underperformance is a matter of discretion. We can only assume underperformance occurs, is because underperformance was chosen.
The conditions for performance require –
- Competence
- Necessity
—–
For a more thorough discussion, please read Leadership: Thinking, Being, Doing by Lee Thayer
Dear Tom,
The reader asked a really good question, which is probably why you re-posted it. I ahve given this subject a great deal of thought over the last 40 years. If anybody can stand a 30 minute video on the subject, here is a link to YouTube.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Cftg8HEhOk
Best,
-h
Pingback: Discretionary Behavior | Management Blog | Career Advise