1. ACHIEVEMENT TUTORIAL
CORE POSITIVE IMMERSION ABSTRACTS



[1] THE PSYCHOLOGY OF ACHIEVEMENT
--- SIX KEYS TO PERSONAL POWER


Tape Source: (The Psychology of Achievement)



[2] PSYCHOLOGY OF WORK

Book Source: (Psychology of Work)



[3] THE STRATEGIC HEART --- USING THE NEW
SCIENCE TO LEAD GROWING ORGANIZATIONS


Book Source: (The Strategic Heart)



[4] WINNING DECISIONS --- GETTING IT RIGHT THE FIRST TIME

1) The three factors that determine outcomes or the "quality of achievement" are:

    (1) DECIDING --- the thinking and decision process

    (2) DOING --- implementation and other factors under your control

    (3) CHANCE --- uncontrollable factors, such as luck!

By definition, you cannot control the factors in the "chance" category --- although you can seek to move more factors under your control and leave as little as possible to chance!

The "outcome" in most real-world decisions depends not only on the quality of the decision process, but also on a mixture of implementation and chance that is difficult to disentangle. The closest thing to a guarantee of a "good outcome" is a good thinking/decision process followed by good implementation!

The outcome or "results" do matter --- but judging solely on results is a serious deterrent to taking risks that may be necessary to making the right decisions. Simply put, the way decisions are evaluated affects the way decisions are made!

The public would be better served, and their elected County officials, would be able to do a more effective job, if government customer service judgments were based on the quality of decision-making instead of focusing solely on outcomes or results!

2) A good decision-making process --- Dividing the decision-making process into four stages can provide a reliable guide for any decision process, since consciously or not, every decision-maker goes through them. They are:

    (1) Framing --- It determines the viewpoint from which decision-makers look at the issue and sets parameters for which aspects of the situation they consider important and which they do not. It determines in a preliminary way what criteria would cause them to prefer one option over the other.

    (2) Gathering Intelligence --- Intelligence-gatherers must seek the knowable facts and options and produce reasonable evaluations of 'unknowables" to enable decision-making in the face of uncertainty. It's important that they avoid such pitfalls as overconfidence in what they currently believe and the tendency to seek only information that confirms their beliefs.

    (3) Coming to Conclusions --- Sound "framing" and good intelligence do not guarantee a wise decision.Staff cannot consistently make good decisions using seat-of-the-pants judgment alone, even with excellent data in front of them. A systematic approach will lead to more accurate choices!

    It usually does so far more efficiently than hours spent in unorganized thinking. This is particularly true in group settings!

    (4) Learning from Experience --- Only by systematically learning from the results of past decisions can decision-makers continually improve their skills. Further, if learning begins when a decision is first implemented, early refinements to the decision or implementation plan can be made that could mean the difference between success or failure!

In real organizational life, the process is not quite as linear --- or distinct --- as these four stages suggest.

Sometimes, information discovered in the "intelligence-gathering" stage may inspire you to go back and reframe your decision. Moreover, a complex problem may entail a series of smaller decisions, each of which may involve several framing decisions, several intelligence-gathering efforts, and several coming-to-conclusion steps.

3) Deciding How to Decide --- The four decision stages consume almost all of good decision process. Expert decision-maker, however, know they must devote part of their time to making choices about the decision process itself, choices which can determine the character of the entire effort! Remember, "A problem well stated is a problem half solved" (John Dewey). The following general questions should be asked at the beginning of the decision-making process:

    (1) What is the crux of the issue that I am facing?

    (2) How do I believe decisions like this one should made?

    (3) How much time should I spend on each stage --- as a first guess?

    (4) Can I draw on feedback from related decisons and experiences that I have faced in the past to make this decision better?

    (5) What are my own relevant s trengths and weaknesses?

4) Worksheet --- Crucial Questions for "Deciding How to Decide" --- These questions are especially important in group settings since changing the direction of a group can be like turning a battleship --- slow and awkward!

    (1) What is the crux or primary difficulty in this issue? Which of the four stages in the decision process will be most important?

    (2) In general, how should decisions like this one be made --- such as alone or in groups, intuitively or analytically? Where do my own strengths and weaknesses lie? Where do I honestly need help?

      PHASE 1 --- "DECISION-FRAMING"

        1. The power of frames

        2. Creating winning frames

      INTERLUDE --- A --- Improving your options

      PHASE 2 --- GATHERING INTELLIGENCE

        4) Avoiding distortion and bias

        5) Intelligence in the face of uncertainty

      INTERLUDE --- B --- Technologies for aiding decisions

      PHASE 3 --- COMING TO CONCLUSIONS

        6) Choosing --- a "pyramid" of approaches

        7) Managing group decisions

      INTERLUDE --- C --- Implementing your chosen option

      PHASE 4 --- LEARNING FROM EXPERIENCE

        8) The personal challenges of learning

        9) Learning in organizations

        10) Bringing it all home --- the decisions of RealHome.com

Book Source: (Winning Decisions)



[5] ACHIEVEMENT AND SUCCESS

Successful achievement is NOT just a GOAL.

It is also a CONSCIOUS CHOICE and a RESULT!

Lasting success is due more to ACHIEVING A BALANCE between your work and non-work activities than due to driving ambition and extra long hours at work.

Successful organizations are the result of a clear, definite, pre-planned approach to your organization's MISSION!

Work Performance "Standards:"

    Know the difference between "Excellence Standards" and "Adequacy Standards"

Book Source: (The Achievement Challenge)



[6] MASLOW'S THEORY OF MOTIVATION AND HUMAN NEEDS

Maslow's Theory

Click on the triangle to see how each of your basic
"Human Needs" is related to your motivation:

Book Source: (How To Improve Human Performance)



[7] ACHIEVEMENT IN LIBRARIES
DEPENDS UPON EIGHT PSYCHOLOGICAL INSIGHTS OR PRINCIPLES


There are eight vital "insights" that reveal how to achieve balance in any organization. These are the "building blocks" of long-term vitality in a "turned on" organization.

    Insight 1) Build a strong foundation

    Insight 2) Make every customer feel special

    Insight 3) Have the courage to set bold goals

    Insight 4) Simplify, simplify, simplify

    Insight 5) Make technology your servant

    Insight 6) Measure well, act fast

    Insight 7) Unleash the power of people

    Insight 8) Lead with care

You can measure the long-term "vitality" of your organization by using the "Vitality Scoreboard" in the book!

Book Source: (Turned On --- Eight Vital Insights)



[8] LIBRARY ORGANIZATIONAL ANALYSIS

1) ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE --- key perspectives and tools --- Flexibility in analysis or problem solving can be gained from a modest number of concepts, perspectives and learned abilities. A useful framework for behavioral analysis of organizations can be gained from the "systems perspective," the contingency concept, ability to model, multiple perspectives for analysis and psychological knowledge.

    (1) Developing a systems perspective including understanding the basics of model development and analysis theory and research

    (2) Factors shaping organization structure and their relation to managerial strategy

    (3) Reckoning with technological change including influence of organization size and structural impact of change

    (4) The socio-technical complex --- performance and change

    (5) Organizational control systems --- concept of multiple criteria in organizational performance and key role of feedback as a component of a control system

    (6) Communications --- rationalizing a general model of a communication system and the internal factors shaping communication system characteristics

    (7) Computers, management and organization --- perspective on shifting roles and organizational functions emerging from computer-based change through systems analysis

2) BEHAVIORAL SYSTEMS --- motivation, leadership, social bases for work systems, and decision making

    (8) Motivation to work --- perspectives on motivation and a comprehensive motivation model including the role of learning and change

    (9) Leadership --- understanding the "situational basis" for leadership propositions and "contingency" approaches including the interrelationships of leadership and motivation

    (10) Social basis of work systems --- the human dimensions of work --- defining "organizational efficiency" based on "social performance" in the context of "role performance"

      The KEY QUESTION is --- Are high levels of combined organization performance, individual satisfaction and self-realization attainable?

    (11) Decision-making --- a behavioral perspective --- transition from bureaucracy's "bounded rationality" to "decision models" for organizations

3) APPLICATION --- Thinking through the bases for applying structural, systems and behavioral perspectives to organizational planning

    (12) Development of organizations and human resources --- a manpower planning perspective including models for organization development and the role of change agents including a quantitative model for career planning and change

    (13) Management of organization change --- establishing parameters for understanding organizational change and information requirements to support change management

    (14) Comprehensive application --- to review and summarize the major themes in the book --- review of major themes, concepts and relationships in the book including HOW TO USE the wide assortment of models, perspectives and approaches in the book

    (15) Toward the future --- institution niche, mission and impact on organizational issues including organizational issues associated with quality of work life and impact of minority employees on organizational change

Book Source: (Organization Analysis)



[9] FINDING AND KEEPING GREAT EMPLOYEES

PART 1 --- THE POWER OF "FOCUS"

    1) The great challenge

    2) The culture connection

PART 2 --- THE FOUR "CORE CULTURES"

    3) A culture of "Customer Service"

    4) A culture of "Innovation"

    5) A culture of "Operational Excellence"

    6) A culture of "Spirit"

PART 3 --- FINDING GREAT EMPLOYEES

    7) Best practices in staffing

    8) Staffing best practices in action

    9) Aligning staffing to core culture

PART 4 --- KEEPING GREAT EMPLOYEES

    10) Retention --- best practices

    11) Retention --- best practices in action

    12) Aligning retention to core culture

PART 5 --- GETTING AHEAD

    13) Leading the charge

      [1] Clearly embrace one core culture

      [2] Prioritize your alignment efforts

      [3] Obtain employee feedback on alignment

      [4] Create alignment initiatives

      [5] Implement alignment initiatives

      [6] Monitor and evaluate alignment initiatives

    Moving forward --- You must move forward! You face, on a daily basis, the great challenge of finding and keeping great employees!

    The longer you do nothing, the worse the "cycle of disconnection" within your organization becomes. Hiring simply for "job fit" is not sufficient to meet the challenge. There is only one option ---"ALLIGNMENT!"

    To gain long-term competitive advantage, organizations must provide deep, long-lasting, and purpose-driven focus so that applicants and employees can best connect to their company and their jobs.

    This book provides the "information tools" you need to move forward and create those powerful "connections" so that you can find and keep great employees through "allignment!"

Book Source: (Finding and Keeping Great Employees)



[10] INFLUENCE WITHOUT AUTHORITY

The need for employees at all levels of an organization to take initiative, seek responsibility, and find ways to gain the cooperation of colleagues and managers will only increase in the new millennium. When all employees are skilled in the forming of "aliances" and in the creating of "exchanges" where they can acquire influence by helping others achieve their goals, large organizations can become fast, flexible, focused and fit to their environments.

They can manage to be "agile" no matter what the size of their organizations because the talented people in them know how to do what is needed to create results:

    (1) Pay attention to what is really imporant --- what are the highest priorities --- to coworkers.

    (2) See even those with different interests and expertise as potential "allies" rather than as "adversaries."

    (3) Go out of your way to help one another, because that builds the "credits" to trade in.

    (4) Diagnose the needs of and take initiative towards fellow employees who won't "cooperate" rather than see them as "enemies" and writing them off.

    (5) Create "win-win" results, which lead to a cooperative, trusting work environment in which it is easier to make the "exchanges" needed to get work done through ongoing genuine "mutual influence."

Book Source: (Influence Without Authority)



[11] YOU CAN CREATE EXCELLENCE BY MANAGING
CORPORATE CULTURE, STRATEGY AND CHANGE IN THE NEW AGE


Book Source: (Creating Excellence)



[12] LIFE IN ORGANIZATIONS
--- WORKPLACES AS PEOPLE EXPERIENCE THEM


Book Source: (Life in Organizations)


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