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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Sunday, July 22, 2001 |
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Not like sheep
IT is a Tuesday morning early in November. I am sitting at a
small round cherry table in a Starbucks coffee shop in southeast
Denver. Out one window, I see the tall skinny black letters of a
Gap store. Out another, I see a Walgreen's Drugs. Behind me is an
Embassy Suites.
Although I am very aware of being in Colorado since I live here,
I am startled by the recognition that this same setting - from
the reggae music playing in the background to the herd of sport
utility vehicles in the parking lot - could be in any large city
in the United States and even, perhaps, a few overseas. In fact,
I recently received an e-mail from an editor in Taipei who said
she was writing to me from a laptop computer in her local
Starbucks.
I worry a great deal about the homogenisation of culture that is
underway in our society. Regardless of what city in which we
live, we can visit the same restaurant for lunch, listen to the
same moralising talk show hosts on our car radios, and overhear
the same kinds of dreadful cell phone conversations as I am right
now. (Does the woman next to me really think that I cannot hear
her complaining into her phone about the neighbour's dog?)
To a point, the uniformity that surrounds us is fine. After all,
culture is created by the blending of values, likes, dislikes,
institutions and customs and the more uniform those things are,
the stronger the culture is. Furthermore, as pack animals, most
human beings have a natural bent toward social conformity and
assimilation. We pay attention to what is "cool" because we do
not want to risk being shunned by the fellow creatures we rely
upon for our sense of identity.
So why do I worry about all this sameness? Because I am afraid it
is becoming harder and harder to be an original in modern
society. Being an independent thinker who eschews contemporary
fads requires far more courage than most of us possess. I, for
one, spent all of last weekend looking at slate tile for a
fireplace I am remodelling simply because I learned that slate
tile is "in". After two days of hauling around tile samples I
have finally admitted to myself that I do not even like slate.
Could I have spent the weekend in a more creative and gratifying
way? No doubt.
While the fear being perceived as "different" is prevalent in
society overall, it is pandemic in organisational life. We may
say we value originality and innovation, but in reality, it is
too risky for individual employees to make any kind of far-out
suggestion. What if the pack, disagrees with your idea? Where
does that leave you the next time everyone is planning a get
together after work?
Because of this fear, instead of devising our own creative
solutions to vexing organisational problems, we seek other
examples to follow. We want to know how Starbucks keeps its
coffee shops fully staffed when low-wage service workers are
among the hardest to find. We want to know how Sears measures
organisational effectiveness. We want to know what Hewlett
Packard has to say about managing diversity.
I am not suggesting there is no merit in the best practices
movement. We do learn from good examples just as we learn from
bad ones. But the kind of corporate tourism wherein executives
tour the country looking for great ideas to copy has gone too
far. In a highly competitive, rapidly changing marketplace,
copycats do not stand a chance. Only those who risk being out
front with new and highly original ideas have an opportunity to
succeed. Think about automated teller machines, compact discs and
pagers. Nobody asked for this stuff, but some visionary thinkers
took the risk, developed their ideas and created new profitable
markets in the process.
There is a great cartoon by Gary Larson that shows a group of
sheep grazing in a field. In the middle of the herd, one sheep is
standing up on his back legs. With his front legs raised in the
air, he proclaims: "Wait! Wait! Listen to me! We do not have to
be just sheep!"
It is a great image for managers to keep in mind. As you begin to
think more strategically about how to manage people in your
organisation, you have to be willing to stand up and challenge
conventional wisdom. Instead of wondering how other companies
have solved their problems, you have to take a look at the
uniqueness of your own organisation and ask yourself if the
solutions you propose make sense for your particular group of
employees.
Doing so will not only increase your chances of success, but it
will also probably feel a lot better to you as an individual.
Why? Because there is a real paradox at work here. Even though we
all work very hard to fit in - and our culture encourages it - we
also like to think of ourselves as unique individuals. As Malcolm
Forbes once said: "There are no exceptions to the rule that
everybody likes to be an exception to the rule."
The trick lies in having the courage to actually be one.
SHARI CAUDRON
The writer is an award-winning journalist and corporate
communications consultant based in Denver. E-mail her at
OTCHindu@aol.com
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