{"id":4021,"date":"1989-11-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1989-11-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-70-no-6-nov-dec-1989-people-in-organizations\/"},"modified":"2022-11-27T02:29:49","modified_gmt":"2022-11-27T02:29:49","slug":"vol-70-no-6-nov-dec-1989-people-in-organizations","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-70-no-6-nov-dec-1989-people-in-organizations\/","title":{"rendered":"Vol. 70, No. 6 &#8211; Nov.\/Dec. 1989 &#8211; People in Organizations"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">&#8216;People are our most valuable asset&#8217; has                     become more than a clich\ufffd for organizations in which more                     work is done by fewer workers. To capitalize on that asset,                     the human factor should rank first among managerial priorities                     &#8230;<\/p>\n<p> We tend to think of organizations as being inanimate. We                     speak of organizational &#8220;structures&#8221; and &#8220;systems&#8221; as if an                     organization were a building or a machine. Actually, it is                     more like a warm- blooded creature. For it is first and foremost                     an assemblage of living, breathing human beings.<\/p>\n<p>It could be as big as a multinational corporation or as                     small as a corner store; it could be seeking profits or not,                     as in the case of a government department, social agency or                     public institution. Whatever form it takes, an organization                     brings people together to work towards common purposes. And                     each of these persons has a unique set of feelings, thoughts                     and attitudes.<\/p>\n<p>So anyone who works for a business or similar organization                     must cope with other personalities. Employees are enmeshed                     in a complex web of relationships. Bosses must deal with subordinates                     and vice- versa; subordinates must deal with each other on                     their own level; middle managers must deal with people below,                     above, and sideways. All of these individuals must &#8220;live&#8221;                     together for a considerable portion of their waking hours.<\/p>\n<p>As even the most happily-married pairs will attest, it is                     not always easy to live with anybody. People are awkward,                     inconsistent and unpredictable. They have prejudices, sensibilities,                     foibles and weaknesses. They see things through their own                     preconditioned perceptions, which might not accord with reality.                     They have their justifiable pride and sometimes quite unjustifiable                     egos. They do not always say what they mean, or mean what                     they say.<\/p>\n<p>If human relations are delicate anywhere, they are especially                     so in the workplace. This is because work is so important                     to people and their dependents; it has a crucial effect on                     how they will live out their lives. Thus they are extraordinarily                     touchy about what happens to them in their jobs; normal men                     and women who will laugh off a personal fault in a neighbour                     will spend restless nights brooding over the same fault in                     their working colleagues. Such is the intensity of work relationships                     that they can breed a mild form of paranoia. &#8220;He&#8217;s out to                     get me&#8221; and &#8220;he&#8217;s got it in for me&#8221; are commonly-heard expressions                     when workers talk in private about their supervisors or managers.<\/p>\n<p>Although there may be bad blood among workers on the same                     level, the most harmful problems in human relations are usually                     between superiors and subordinates. In many cases these are                     the product of a mutual inability to communicate. After a                     lifetime of listening to contending parties, the great American                     judge Louis D. Brandeis wrote : &#8220;Nine-tenths of the serious                     controversies which arise in life result from misunderstandings,                     result from one man not knowing the facts to which the other                     man seem important, or otherwise failing to appreciate his                     point of view.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Unfortunately, the potential for such misunderstanding seems                     to be built into the system. One of the complaints most frequently                     expressed in surveys of employees is that their bosses don&#8217;t                     keep them informed about matters that affect their work or                     careers. To paraphrase Judge Brandeis, one party knows facts                     that are important to the other, but refuses or neglects to                     share them until they burst forth as disagreeable surprises.                     There could hardly be a better formula for ensuring that people                     will put forth the minimum of effort necessary to hold their                     positions. Someone who feels left out of a group is not likely                     to care much whether it meets its objectives or not.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;Without a free, full flow of information and ideas up and                     down the organization there cannot be co-operation and understanding,&#8221;                     wrote Scott Cutlip, professor of management at the University                     of Wisconsin . The flow of information downward is impeded                     by the hierarchical structure of management. Certain information                     is deemed to be for management&#8217;s eyes only; like military                     officers and bureaucrats, managers place an exaggerated value                     on confidentiality. The ego-building properties of status                     also come into play &#8211; to know something that their subordinates                     don&#8217;t know gives managers a glorious sense of sitting among                     the corporate gods.<\/p>\n<p>Status can also stand in the way of arriving at the best                     decisions. In their 1976 book <em> New Ways of Managing Conflict<\/em>                     , the distinguished management studies team of Rensis and                     Jane Gibson Likert wrote: &#8220;&#8230; Leaders often strive to maintain                     and exploit status. When this happens, members of each group                     learn that it is best for them to listen only to the leader.                     They say &#8216;yes&#8217; to the leader&#8217;s solution without exploring                     other possibilities. There is no search for better, more creative                     solutions.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>The situation, not the boss, decides                   what                   has to be done<\/h3>\n<p>Status owes its existence to power, and some managers and                     supervisors are all too ready to wield that power to the indirect                     detriment of the organization. It makes them feel big and                     strong to give orders and have them obeyed. In discussing                     what she called &#8221; the law of the situation,&#8221; Mary Parker Follett                     wrote: &#8220;One <em> person <\/em> should not give orders to another                     <em> person<\/em> , but both should agree to take their orders                     from the situation. If orders are simply part of the situation,                     the question of someone giving and someone receiving does                     not come up.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>One of the prime tenets of the law of the situation is that                     the situation does not &#8220;belong&#8221; to any particular individual.                     There is a natural tendency to personalize issues; the media                     does it all the time, as in &#8220;Bush&#8217;s deficit.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>When discussing problems at work, it is wise to separate                     the issues from the personalities: it is not Jane&#8217;s problem                     or Joe&#8217;s problem, it is simply <em> the <\/em> problem. A proposed                     solution is not Jane&#8217;s or Joe&#8217;s, but one of <em> our <\/em> proposed                     solutions. In the first instance, no one is made to feel he                     or she is to blame for a situation; in the second, no one                     is made to feel rejected if his or her ideas are turned down.<\/p>\n<p>Managers of the old school might wonder why they should                     concern themselves with such tender feelings. What does it                     matter if a person feels persecuted or rejected as long as                     the work gets done? The answer is that the work does <em> not                     <\/em> get done as well as it could be. When people are discouraged,                     they simply do not perform at their best.<\/p>\n<h3>An atmosphere of openness makes it                                       difficult to cheat<\/h3>\n<p>&#8220;The very essence of all power to influence lies in getting                     the other person to participate,&#8221; Henry Overstreet wrote.                     &#8220;Influence&#8221; and &#8220;participate&#8221; are key words in the modern                     management vocabulary . The old school subscribed to management                     by authority, which meant that decisions were made at the                     top and dumped from above on the people who would eventually                     put them into effect. The new school subscribes to management                     by influence, which means that decisions are made with the                     participation of all concerned.<\/p>\n<p>Management by influence cuts two ways. In an atmosphere                     of participation, subordinates can, so to speak, manage the                     manager. There is nothing manipulative about this: when both                     sides implicitly agree that they are not in competition, it                     is automatically agreed that the subordinate is free to call                     some of the shots. Both submerge their egos in the search                     for the best course of action. To carry this off, they must                     keep in mind that they are in a symbiotic relationship &#8211; that,                     like it or not (or like each other or not) they have to work                     together to do their own jobs properly.<\/p>\n<p>To a large extent, the nature of the relationship is determined                     by the subordinate&#8217;s approach: &#8220;If you treat your boss like                     an omnipotent parent, you can expect him to treat you like                     a small child. If you expect your boss to solve your problems,                     the less freedom you can expect him to give you. In short,                     behaving like a responsible adult is the surest road to being                     treated like one,&#8221; the American management consultant Michael                     le Beouf wrote.<\/p>\n<p>If both parties behave like responsible adults, they form                     a partnership in which they both build on their individual                     strengths and compensate for each other&#8217;s weaknesses. It is                     the old story of two heads &#8211; or two sets of judgments and                     competencies &#8211; being better than one.<\/p>\n<p>Far from fearing that they might be usurped, well-adjusted                     managers realize that to coach subordinates to become more                     independent is to improve their own positions by producing                     better results for their particular operations. Of course,                     the giving of more responsibility entails a degree of risk;                     there could be foul-ups when an inexperienced person first                     tackles an unfamiliar assignment. But it is worth it in the                     long run, because there are bound to be days when the subordinate                     has to step in and do all or part of the boss&#8217;s job.<\/p>\n<p>On the other side, covering off a boss&#8217;s weaker points can                     brighten a subordinate&#8217;s career prospects by adding to his                     or her experience and capabilities. &#8220;You don&#8217;t have to like                     or admire your boss, nor do you have to hate him. You have                     to manage him, however, so that he becomes your resource for                     achievement,&#8221; Peter Drucker advised.<\/p>\n<p>Regardless of the career considerations involved, a smooth                     working relationship between the boss and the &#8220;bossee&#8221; saves                     wear and tear on the psyche. When the two have worked out                     a <em> modus vivendi<\/em> , they are not carrying frustrations                     and resentments home with them. Both are happier in their                     work when they can rest assured that they can rely on each                     other for support.<\/p>\n<p>Regrettably, there are times when such support is nowhere                     to be found in the hard world of business or public service.                     The only thing some ruthlessly ambitious bosses can be counted                     upon to do is let you down.<\/p>\n<p>If everyone were honest and forthright, if everyone lived                     up to commitments made, it would be a joy to work with other                     people. Anyone who has spent time in an organization, however,                     knows that the reality is not nearly so ideal. Some people                     are scheming and sneaky, ready to put down their colleagues                     in their climb towards their personal ambitions. Some are                     unreliable, some lazy, some incompetent, and will cheat to                     cover up their deficiencies.<\/p>\n<p>These unpleasant facts of life will never be eliminated                     as long as people take short cuts to advance their careers,                     but their worst effects can at least be ameliorated by developing                     an atmosphere of openness in which it is difficult to act                     deviously. From the organization&#8217;s point of view, this might                     save money and improve productivity by preventing people from                     spending their time playing personal power games instead of                     getting down to work.<\/p>\n<p>If there are many sins of commission in working relationships,                     there are as many or more sins of omission. Some managers                     consistently make and implement decisions without involving                     those who have to carry them out. They are, they will say,                     too tied up with immediate problems to consult or inform the                     people affected. They do not stop to think that many of those                     immediate problems are back-lashes from previous decisions                     which were made without checking out the consequences with                     all concerned.<\/p>\n<h3>Managers should beware being cut off                   by                   their office walls<\/h3>\n<p>The former head of the Union Pacific Railroad, William M.                     Jeffers, used to tell a story on himself about losing touch                     with the grassroots. One day a veteran locomotive engineer                     who had known Jeffers on his way up came to see him with an                     idea for adjustments on some new equipment. Preoccupied with                     corporate affairs, Jeffers responded vaguely. As the old railroader                     was about to go out the door, he turned and said: &#8220;Bill, don&#8217;t                     ever get so damn busy that you haven&#8217;t got time to think!&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>It is difficult to convince some bosses that working with                     people should be given the highest priority. Perhaps because                     human relations are hard to quantify or control, they would                     rather work with figures or paper or plans. They believe in                     consultation just so long as it is with others of roughly                     the same status. Their office walls have cut them off from                     what is going on out there where the basic work is done.<\/p>\n<p>One of the most tattered clich\ufffds in business is &#8220;people                     are our most valuable asset.&#8221; The current trend towards downsizing                     is rendering that almost literally true. When there are fewer                     employees , each becomes responsible for a greater share of                     an organization&#8217;s money. In the old days, it didn&#8217;t matter                     much if a pick and shovel worker walked off the job because                     he couldn&#8217;t get along with the foreman. But think of the financial                     implications of having a $200, 000 machine lying idle because                     its skilled operator has quit and can&#8217;t be replaced right                     away.<\/p>\n<p>It is commonly assumed that the more technology an organization                     deploys, the less the need for humans. This is true only in                     the most superficial sense. The fact is that the utilization                     of these expensive facilities in such a way that they fully                     justify the investment made in them can only be accomplished                     by well-motivated people. Anyone who discounts the human contribution                     to productivity need only think of what happens to production                     when a union instructs its members to &#8220;work to rule.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>The community spirit can apply to organizations,                   too<\/h3>\n<p>&#8220;The race advances only by the extra achievements of the                     individual . You are the individual,&#8221; the American poet and                     editor Charles Towne wrote. So it goes with the organization.                     It only moves forward through that little extra which individual                     employees have to give &#8211; or withhold. That extra can no longer                     be elicited by slave -driving or one-sided calls for loyalty.                     Among the present tough- minded generation of workers, outstanding                     effort will be not be volunteered unless it is demonstrably                     deserved.<\/p>\n<p>It can be elicited, however, by organizing human relations                     in a way that offers individuals the opportunity to meet their                     full potential . This recognizes the difference between today&#8217;s                     workers and those who have gone before them: on the whole,                     people in western societies today are better educated, more                     self-confident, more assertive, and more conscious of their                     rights than any in the past.<\/p>\n<p>For organizational managers, this implies promoting a regime                     of participation, support, fairness, trust and candour. It                     means encouraging people at all levels to contribute their                     ideas on the premise that &#8220;none of us is as smart as all of                     us.&#8221; This should not be difficult to do, because it corresponds                     with many fundamental psychological needs.<\/p>\n<p>Deep down, people want to identify with a group, to make                     a contribution, to express themselves and exercise their creativity.                     They want to strive together with others to meet goals. They                     want to feel good about their jobs, because this translates                     into feeling good about themselves.<\/p>\n<p>To conservative managers brought up in the produce-or-be-fired                     tradition, it may seem almost a heresy to say that one of                     the aims of an organization should be to make employees happy.                     But more and more, a happy shop is a successful shop as the                     emphasis in business swings towards the delivery of quality.                     True quality cannot be achieved by people who take their jobs                     for granted because they feel taken for granted themselves.<\/p>\n<p>Conservative managers might protest that, by letting workers                     have a say in what&#8217;s to be done, you create an uncontrollable                     free-for-all . But participation is not anarchy. People do                     not object to controls as long as they know why the controls                     exist.<\/p>\n<p>Participants in any enterprise instinctively recognize that                     &#8221; somebody has to be boss,&#8221; but bossing has now become less                     a matter of supervision and more a matter of leadership. Leadership                     may be defined as the ability to stimulate and co-ordinate                     the efforts of a group.<\/p>\n<p>Real leaders do more proposing than imposing. They decide                     in broad terms what should be done, then make plans for how                     to do it &#8211; plans which can always be changed in the light                     of overlooked considerations or events. They then attempt                     to build a consensus among their followers on the course of                     action to be taken in the knowledge that the less support                     and commitment they have behind them , the less likely they                     are to meet their objectives. Consensus, incidentally, should                     not be mistaken for unanimity.<\/p>\n<p>Organizations have been compared with communities, in which                     not everyone agrees with his fellow citizens or with the leadership,                     but everyone recognizes the desirability of contributing to                     the general welfare. In a well-run community, the individuality                     of each member is respected, and each is offered a voice in                     community affairs. The members need not love their neighbours,                     but they are willing to work with them peaceably once a policy                     has been determined.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;We require individualism which does not wall man off from                     the community; we require community which does not suffocate                     the individual,&#8221; wrote the American historian and presidential                     advisor Arthur Schlesinger. Change the word &#8220;community&#8221; to                     &#8220;organization,&#8221; and you have the key requirements of organizational                     management today.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[76],"class_list":["post-4021","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-76"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Vol. 70, No. 6 - Nov.\/Dec. 1989 - People in Organizations - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-70-no-6-nov-dec-1989-people-in-organizations\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Vol. 70, No. 6 - Nov.\/Dec. 1989 - People in Organizations - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"&#8216;People are our most valuable asset&#8217; has become more than a clich\ufffd for organizations in which more work is done by fewer workers. 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To capitalize on that asset, the human factor should rank first among managerial priorities &#8230; We tend to think of organizations as being inanimate. 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