Monday, August 1, 2011

ACHIEVEMENT MOTIVATION: TO "BE ALL THAT YOU CAN BE"

The Most Powerful Source of Motivation
The single most powerful source of motivation is – You! Your desire to realize your ambitions – however large or small. Your hunger to accomplish something, achieve something. Your interest in motivation itself. All these are signs of what performance psychologists like Brian Tracy have dubbed achievement motivation (AKA "self-actualization").

Psychologist Abraham Maslow, in his highly-influential Toward a Psychology of Being, showed that each human being is born with an innate drive to give meaning to our time on earth. It might be volunteering to raise money your favorite political party or playing in a local band on weekends. From this urge comes progress, art, invention, civilization.

Achievement motivation, this inborn urge to do and become "all that you can be," explains why you are excited by a challenging career, responsibility, growth, earned recognition, enjoyment of work itself. And why you become dissatisfied if opportunities for meaningful achievement aren't present.

How Achievement Motivation Can Work Against You.
Just as there's no upside to disincentives, there is almost no downside to self-actualization. A few psychologists have fretted over the possibility that people might become too obsessed with the quest for achievement, and lose sight of real-world, short-term goals. (i.e., you might get so hung-up trying to create the perfect painting for an art class project that you don't finish on time and get an "incomplete" instead of a grade.) But others have pointed out that situations like this are the result of other problems, like "perfectionitis," and aren't actually the result of achievement motivation.

How to Use Achievement to Ignite Motivation
Let's say you have to replace a washer to repair a leaky faucet. Unless you are a Zen plumber, it's hard to get excited about your achievement here. So, first focus on some activity you consider so fulfilling that you always try to do your best. It might be swimming, dancing, crunching numbers, or soliciting funds for the Red Cross. You will begin to experience the same desire to achieve and excel you normally feel then. When you do, direct it at repairing that leaky faucet.

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"Intrinsic motivation causes us to participate in an activity for our own enjoyment, rather than for any tangible reward that it will bring us. We are more apt to persevere, work harder, and produce higher quality work when motivation for a task is intrinsic rather than extrinsic."
Angela Wong

(Adapted from Motivation 101)

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

DOUBLE YOUR CREATIVITY #1: SOLVE IT WITH SIMULATION

The first of a short series of suggestions for boosting creativity, problem solving, and releasing your inner genius!


SOLVE IT WITH SIMULATION

The first time out to bat on her new job and Angelica had an important sales presentation to make. She now represented a server that designed and maintained websites for large manufacturers of consumer products. Furthermore, Angelica was pitching to an insurance company that had a history of being backward when it came to computers and new technologies in general. She knew they would be full of doubts and reservations. If she failed to respond to them all satisfactorily, the corporation was sure to pass on the idea of doing business through a website, and Angelica would lose the sale. Nevertheless, Angelica sailed through the presentation the same way she sailed through so many problems in life. She used a technique called Simulation (exactly how she used it will be explained at length in the book).
It’s how firefighters, the FBI, and other emergency service personnel acquire the skills to handle emergencies. It’s how corporations and government bodies test the viability of policies and proposals -- before putting them into practice. It’s the basis of those role playing games with “dungeons and dragons” that are the rage with kids today.
It’s as old as humankind, as cutting-edge as computer science.
It’s a process that can help you further develop your problem-solving skills -- and assess the up, and down, sides of potential solutions.
It’s called Simulation.

The term “simulation” derives from “similar to.” You don’t want to wait until an actual conflagration to train rookie fire fighters, and you don’t want to wait until a hostage crisis to prepare law enforcement personnel for rescuing hostages.
Instead, these organizations, along with athletes, business people, scientists, and others simulate the experience first. This can be a phony fire with dummies representing imperiled people, requiring rookie firefighters to assemble hoses quickly, follow all the proper steps and take all the precautions involved in putting out a fire, and protect themselves while rescuing those trapped within a building.
Today, computer programs help individuals and corporations simulate the stock market, the results of possible future economic and agricultural ups and downs, marketing strategies, how many people would be injured if a major tornado or hurricane struck their town, etc., etc.
In fact, several popular role playing games, like Dungeons & Dragons, SimCity, and Magic: the Gathering are based on these kinds of advanced simulation techniques.
But you don’t need expensive software, or fancy props, to apply the power of Simulation to your problems. You can get the same effects, without losing an erg of that power, with a simple pad and pen.

At its most basic, all Simulation involves two steps.

Step I:
1. Jotting down a sentence or two describing a dilemma.
2. Jotting down what it is you ultimately hope to accomplish or stand to gain by solving it.
3. Jotting down every possible solutions that occur to you, even when they seem extremely far out.

Step II.
1. Writing each of the potential solutions you’ve dreamed up as a heading on a page of its own..
2. Below each heading, list the probable sequence of events likely to follow putting that particular brain-child into practice. (Start at the beginning and list them right on through till they carry you -- or fail to carry you -- to your desired goal).
3. When a step could have either good or bad consequences, write each down -- under it, list a possible measure you might take to counter or prevent the negative consequences. Then continue on as described in #2.
4. If the first set of steps leading from one of your solutions to the desired outcome turns out not to work, go on to the next.

Simulation can be launching pad for:
 Solving problems and reaching decisions
 Determining the probable outcome
 Honing problem-solving abilities