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Five Tips on Teamwork

by Alan C. Fox 1 Comment

A few months ago I wrote a blog entitled “Life is a Team Sport.”  This is a crucial subject, and as 2015 draws to a close I’m sharing five tips on how to create and maintain an effective team in 2016 and beyond.  The acronym is TEAMS, which stands for:

TogetherTEAMS-PeopleTools-1

Encouragement

Allegiance

Management

Strength

Together.  For the past four years my family has sponsored the five-person Fred Fox Wind Quintet at the University of Arizona. We have all attended a number of their concerts, and the quintet traveled to Los Angeles to perform at both my father’s 100th birthday party in 2014, and my own 75th birthday party in 2015.  At every performance I have been impressed by their precision.  Five musicians, each playing a different instrument –flute, oboe, clarinet, horn, and bassoon – a team that makes wonderful music together.

Encouragement.  For the past twelve years I have served as a Board member of Bright Prospect, a charitable organization in Pomona, California.  We enable disadvantaged students to attend and graduate from college.  The critical factor of their success, however, is not their ability as students.  It is the encouragement they receive to stick it out. For most, this is the first time they have lived away from home. Bright Prospect organizes “Crews,” consisting of all the other Bright Prospect students also attending that college. The members of these crews encourage and support each other. The office in Pomona also keeps in touch to provide additional support, notably including even more encouragement.

Allegiance.  I still remember from elementary school more than sixty years ago the words which we recited at the beginning of each school day, “I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America and to the Republic for Teams-armsin-2-peopletoolswhich it stands.”  To this day I regard myself as a member of a team, a nation, which has now grown to more than three hundred million people of diverse regions, religions, and outlooks.  And this team needs chefs as well as teachers, steel workers as well as philosophers, and seniors as well as toddlers.  We are a unified team because of our allegiance which transcends our individual differences.

Management.  Every team needs supervision, but not necessarily from just one person.  For example, think of your family.  In many households one partner, or both, handle the money, the grocery shopping, and the social calendar.  All of these aspects of life have to be attended to for the team (in this case the family) to succeed.  It’s called management.

Strength.  There’s a saying: “In unity there is strength.”  Any one of us could easily break a matchstick, but how about twenty matchsticks glued together?  Businesses, sports teams, and armies draw their strength not just from their numbers, but from working toward the same goal.  On October 7, 1916, Georgia Tech (coached by John Heisman) beat a pick-up team from Cumberland College by the most lopsided score in the history of college football 222 – 0.  Rumor has it that after everyone else on the team had scored a touchdown the Georgia Tech center asked for his turn.  When he received the ball his teammates, as a prank, failed to block and the center was tackled for a loss. On the next play his teammates did block, and he scored his touchdown. This illustrates my point: no matter the abilities of one individual, every member of a team contributes to its overall strength.

Each of us is a member of many teams. That’s what life is about.  As a member of a family, a business, or a nation, we each must pull together for the benefit of all.

Alan

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Positive Words, Positive Thoughts for the New Year

by Alan C. Fox 4 Comments

NewYear-PeopleTools-2016-1It’s time to start thinking about an even better year in 2016.  One of my most productive habits is to think positively.  Being positive includes using positive words.

For example, I have always told my children “you get to go to school today,” rather than “you have to go to school today.” When I was practicing law if I told a client the structure they proposed for a transaction wouldn’t work, I always followed with, “and here is how you can accomplish what you want to do.”

We all make prophecies, if only to ourselves.  Those prophecies tend to be self-fulfilling.  We often say to ourselves, “I’m not good at interviews so I probably won’t get the job,” or “She’s so attractive that I don’t think she would ever go out with me.”  My success is greater when I tell myself, “I’m improving at interviews, practicing every day, and I will get the job.”  Or, “She is super attractive and other guys are probably scared to ask her out.  I have a great sense of humor and I’ll bet she would be thrilled to have dinner with me.”

When I’m talking to others I pay close attention to the words I use.  I never say, “I won’t leave to pick you up until I’m sure you’re ready to go.”  That’s negative and feels like an accusation.  Instead I say, “I’ll be happy to pick you up as soon as you’re ready.”  This is the identical message, but with a far more positive tone.  Listen to yourself when you talk.  Be sure you are delivering your content in a positive way.

In negotiating I often say, “I’ll be pleased to respond to your offer as soon as I receive your financial statements,” rather PositiveYear-PeopleToolsthan, “I won’t respond to your offer until I receive your financial statements.”  Again, the same content but delivered in an encouraging way.  I want everyone on the other side of a negotiation to warm up to me and want to do business with me. The words, “I will,” are far more effective than, “I won’t,” in getting others to root for my success.

I used to ask my friend Harry to go to football games with me, but his initial answer was always, “I don’t know.  I think I may have to work that day.”  Even though, in the end, Harry often joined me, I became tired of chasing him and waiting for an answer.  My new friend Trevor says, “Thanks for asking.  I’d be delighted to join you.”  Now I always ask Trevor first.

A few weeks from now, when you make your New Year’s resolutions, stick with “I will” rather than “I won’t.”  Tell yourself, ‘I will be positive,” rather than “I won’t be negative.”  Also, you might decide that your bias in the New Year will be to say “yes.” Shonda Rhimes wrote a book on this – Year of Yes.  It worked for her.  It will work for you.

Have a great new year.

Alan

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Grab My Attention – It’s up to You

attention-seeker-peopletoolsMy friend David has directed many plays in many theaters.  I sat next to him one day at The Whitefire Theater in Sherman Oaks, California, while he auditioned actors for his next production.  One aspiring actor after another took the stage to perform.

Shortly after the second actor began to audition, David turned to me and resumed our conversation.  I was uncomfortable because we were both ignoring the actor, but I was a guest and, as such, followed his lead.

But when David turned to talk to me during the performance by the third actor, then the fourth, I felt compelled to say something.

“David, these actors are auditioning for a job.  Shouldn’t we at least listen to them?”

“Alan,” he said, “I want actors who will hold the attention of the audience.”  David had won several acting awards earlier in his career, and presumably knew what he was talking about.  “I want an actor who carries a sense of danger, so I don’t know what he or she might do next.”

“But we’re not being very polite.”  I hate rejection and was identifying with the actors, not the director.

“If an actor doesn’t hold my attention,” he said, “they don’t belong in my play.”

When the fourth actor finished his piece David turned to dismiss him with a curt, “Thanks.  We’ll let you know.”  I was uncomfortable because it seemed to me the actor was, understandably, disappointed.  I was thankful that, although I acted in a few plays in high school, I wasn’t very good and was never tempted to become an actor.  In retrospect I would have hated the ordeal of auditioning three or four times a day, being repeatedly rejected, and even if I was selected, in a day or a month I would be back on the street, auditioning again.  Ugh!

That audition was many years ago, but I have carried with me from that day to this two ideas. One is that it is up to the actor heart-walk-peopletoolsto grab my attention. I agree with my director friend on that point.  I don’t, however, agree with his treatment of the individuals auditioning for him.

We are all on stage for each other at many different times in our lives and I believe we have an obligation to be compassionate. Even when the one auditioning (or applying for a job or trying to sell me an insurance policy) might not have grabbed my attention, I owe him or her the polite consideration of my notice for a brief moment of time. And if they don’t succeed in grabbing my attention, I can let them know as directly and kindly as possible. It might be my turn on stage next time.

So while you will still need to get my attention to get the part. I will treat you respectfully even if you don’t.  It might still be up to you to grab my attention, but it’s up to me to be kind.

Alan

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