Overview of Drive book

aravindsraamkumar 9,879 views 28 slides Apr 04, 2012
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About This Presentation

Presentation on Daniel Pink's book Drive.
http://www.amazon.com/Drive-Surprising-Truth-About-Motivates/dp/0143145088


Slide Content

DRIVE The Surprising Truth About What Motivates Us Aravind Sesagiri Raamkumar Ajai Loganathan

Agenda About the Author Introduction to DRIVE Part I – A New Operating System The Rise and Fall of Motivation 2.0 7 reasons why Carrot and Sticks(CAS) don’t work Circumstances when CAS actually work Type I and Type X Part II – The Three Elements Autonomy Mastery Purpose Part III- The Type 1 Toolkit Conclusion

Introducing Daniel Pink Daniel H. Pink is an American author and journalist. He received a Bachelor's degree from Northwestern University and a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School. He worked for Vice President Al Gore in the capacity of chief speechwriter between 1995 to 1997 He is the author of four provocative books about the changing world of work — including the long-running New York Times bestseller, A Whole New Mind , and the #1 New York Times bestseller, Drive . His books have been translated into 33 languages. Dan lives in Washington, DC, with his wife and their three children.

Eh, What’s DRIVE?

The Motivation Shift Rules and norms in society are made based on how humans behave and how the world works

A Reality Check American job market is primarily based on heuristic work. Heuristic: 70% jobs while Algorithmic:30% jobs Routine work can easily be outsourced and automated Very difficult to outsource jobs that involve right brained thinking Claim: Mismatch between what Science knows and what Business does

Carrot and Stick Method Enterprises all around the globe have been using this method to get work of their people. This is prevalent everywhere Many of our students take part in surveys only when there are cash gifts or other goodies in offer!!!

Duncker’s Candle Experiment functional fixedness!!!

Experiments… Sam Glucksberg of Princeton came to the conclusion that adding cash incentives results in the subjects taking, on average, 3.5 minutes longer to really see the solution. But this effect goes away if the problem is redesigned to be routine(mechanical) instead of requiring creativity ( ex:by taking the tacks out of the box in candle experiment).

Disadvantages of carrots and sticks method They can extinguish intrinsic motivation They can diminish performance They can crush creativity They can crowd out good behavior They can encourage cheating, shortcuts, and unethical behavior They can become addictive They can foster short-term thinking

But Carrots taste good too!(Some Advantages) Carrot and Stick method can work out if The employers offer rationale for why the task is necessary. A job that is not inherently interesting can become more meaningful if it’s a part of a larger purpose – I know it sucks, but got to do it! Acknowledge that the task is boring Allow people to complete the task their own way (poor man’s chance of autonomy).

Carrots can work for Creativity too “Now That” rewards – non-contingent rewards given after the task is complete, can sometimes work for more creative work. Guidelines for rewarding non-routine, creative work: Consider non-tangible rewards. Praise and positive feedback are much less corrosive than cash and trophies. Provide useful information. Give people meaningful information about their work. The more feedback focuses on specifics and the more praise is about effort and strategy rather than about achieving a particular outcome – the more effective it can be.

Type I and Type X  No No , its not typing I and X in Keyboard! Goal is to move from Type X to Type I

Distinctions b/w Type I and X Type I behavior is made , not born Type I’s almost always outperform Type X’s Type I’s don’t ignore money and recognition Type I behavior is a renewable resource Type I = The Sun, burns and it burns Type X = Coal, burns out eventually Type I behavior promotes greater physical and mental well-being

Pink’s Three Elements

Autonomy – its my way on the highway ROWE(Results-Only Work Environment) People don’t have schedules. They show up when they want. They don’t have to be in the office at a certain time – or any time for that matter. They just have to get their work done. How they do it, when they do it and where they do it is up to them. Autonomy Independence A Cornell University study on workers autonomy at 320 small businesses discovered that businesses that offered autonomy grew at four times the rate of the control-oriented firms and had one-third the turnover.

Mastery Motivation 2.0 (control) needed compliance while Motivation 3.0 (autonomy) demands engagement(Mastery). Start with Goldilocks Tasks… Mastery begins with “flow” – optimal experiences when the challenges we face are exquisitely matched to our abilities . In flow, Goals become crystal clear and efforts to achieve them are very black and white. People live so deeply engaged, that their sense of time, place and even self melt away. Flow is essential to mastery Flow doesn’t guarantee mastery Flow happens in a moment while mastery unfolds over months, years, sometimes decades.

3 Law s of Mastery

Purpose A third leg – purpose, which provides a context for its two mates, activation energy for living Work Volunteerism disengagement

Purpose offered in organization Companies use profits to reach purpose, giving employees control over how the organization gives back to the community might do more to improve their overall satisfaction than one more “if-then” financial incentive. Their goal is to pursue purpose- and to use profit as the catalyst rather than the objective. Emphasize more than self-interest, Change in pronoun “I” to “We”. In motivation 3.0 “We” wins. Stringent corporate policies led to unethical behavior, better approach to enlist the power of autonomy in the service of purpose maximization. e.g. Fixing some budget to charitable well-being,20% time with a purpose. The Good life Study conducted at University of Rochester, soon to be graduated students about their life goals. Profit goals – ill being, depression, anxiety Purpose goals – well being, Intrinsic motivation

is all about!!! Understanding the mismatch between what science knows and what business does – gap is wide, results are alarming. Things we consider “natural” – carrot and stick – not only ineffective in many situations but crush the high-level, creative, conceptual abilities, future economic and social abilities. The secret to high performance isn’t our biological drive or our reward-and-punishment but our third drive- desire to direct our own lives, to extend and expand our abilities and to live a life of purpose. We’re designed to be active and engaged and not to be passive and compliant. The richest experience in our lives are when we listen to our own voice-doing something that matters, doing it well, and doing it in the service of a cause larger than ourselves.

Tool Kit - Type 1 for Individuals Set a reminder on you computer or mobile phone 40 times a week (5 to 6 times a day). Each time the device beeps write down what you’re doing, how you’re feeling, whether you’re in “flow”. Record your observations, look at the patterns, and consider the following questions, Which moments produced feelings of “flow”? Where were you? What were you working on? Are certain times of day more flow-friendly than others? Restructure based on your findings. How might you increase the number of optimal experiences and reduce the moments when you felt disengaged?

repairing continues… Ask a Big Question? – orienting your life toward greater purpose e.g. She invented a device that made people’s lives easier She taught two generations of children how to read. What’s your sentence? Keep asking small question – to keep yourself motivated Ask yourself whether you were better today than yesterday? Did you do more? Less? Specifically, did you learn your ten vocabulary? You need not be a master by day 3, but is the best way of ensuring you will be one by day 3,000. So , before sleeping ask yourself “Was I better today than yesterday?” Take a SAGMEISTER – Stefan Sagmesiter takes Sabbatical once in 7 year. Self-performance review.

Moving closer to mastery Remember deliberate practice: is about changing performance, setting goals and straining yourself to reach a bit higher each time Repeat, repeat, repeat Seek constant, critical feedback Focus ruthlessly on where you need help Prepare for the process to be mentally and physically exhausting Take Blank three-by-five inch card, write your answer to these question; What gets you up in the morning? What keeps you up at night? Repeat it until you have crafted something you can live with.

Try implementing 20% time progressively (e.g. Google) Encourage peer to peer “now-that” rewards Conduct autonomy audit 3 steps towards giving control Involve people in goal-setting (individuals are interested in pursuing goals they had created) Use non controlling language (instead of “must” say “consider”) Hold office hours ( transparency within leaders and employee) Intrinsic Motivation, setup an environment that makes people feel good about participating. Give users autonomy. Tool Kit - Type 1 for Organizations

Paying people Type 1 way Ensure internal and external fairness Pay more-than-average (giving bonus at the initial stage and bypass if-then rewards and helps take money off the table Type 1 for Parents and Educators Apply autonomy, mastery and purpose while giving assignment. Have a FedEx day ( students to work on any problem to solve it). Give kids some allowance (helps them to save or spend money , offers them a measure of autonomy) Do not combine chores(understanding mutual family obligations) with money. Help kids see big picture , Why am I learning this? How is it relevant to the world I live in now? Apply what they are studying.

Check out these 5 schools Autonomy, mastery and purpose provided in these schools, Big picture learning – students in charge of their own education Sudbury valley school The Tinkering School Puget sound community school Montessori schools Turn students into Teachers Give an opportunity for students to teach, proves them a way towards mastery.