Thursday, November 14, 2019
10 ways to spot a truly exceptional employee
10 ways to spot a truly exceptional employee 10 ways to spot a truly exceptional employee A recent international study surveyed more than 500 business leaders and asked them what sets great employees apart. The researchers wanted to know why some people are more successful than others at work, and the answers were surprising; leaders chose âpersonalityâ as the leading reason.Follow Ladders on Flipboard!Follow Laddersâ magazines on Flipboard covering Happiness, Productivity, Job Satisfaction, Neuroscience, and more!Notably, 78% of leaders said personality sets great employees apart, more than cultural fit (53%) and even an employeeâs skills (39%).âWe should take care not to make the intellect our God; it has, of course, powerful muscles, but no personality.â â"Albert EinsteinThe problem is, when leaders say âpersonalityâ they donât understand what theyâre referring to. Personality consists of a stable set of preferences and tendencies through which we approach the world. Being introverted or extroverted is an example of an important personality trait.P ersonality traits form at an early age and are fixed by early adulthood. Many important things about you change over the course of your lifetime, but your personality isnât one of them.Personality is distinct from intellect (or IQ). The two donât occur together in any meaningful way. Personality is also distinct from emotional intelligence (or EQ), and this is where the study, and most leaders for that matter, have misinterpreted the term.The qualities that leaders in the study called personality were actually emotional intelligence skills. And unlike your personality, which is set in stone, you can change and improve your EQ.Exceptional employees donât possess God-given personality traits; they rely on simple, everyday EQ skills that anyone can incorporate into their repertoire.Leaders donât need to go searching for these skills either (though it doesnât hurt when you find them); their duty is to help everyone on their team harness these skills to become exceptional.Just consider some of the EQ skills that leaders and managers commonly mislabel as personality characteristics. These are the skills that set exceptional employees apart.Theyâre willing to delay gratificationOne thing an exceptional employee never says is, âThatâs not in my job description.â Exceptional employees work outside the boundaries of job descriptions. Theyâre neither intimidated nor entitled; instead of expecting recognition or compensation to come first, they forge ahead in their work, confident that theyâll be rewarded later but unconcerned if theyâre not.They can tolerate conflictWhile exceptional employees donât seek conflict, they donât run away from it either. Theyâre able to maintain their composure while presenting their positions calmly and logically. Theyâre able to withstand personal attacks in pursuit of the greater goal and never use that tactic themselves.They focusStudent pilots are often told, âWhen things start going wrong, donât forge t to fly the plane.â Plane crashes have resulted from pilots concentrating so hard on identifying the problem that they flew the plane into the ground. Eastern Airlines Flight 401 is just one example: The flight crew was so concerned about the landing gear being down that they didnât realize they were losing altitude until it was too late, despite alarms going off in the cockpit. Exceptional employees understand the principle of âJust fly the plane.â They donât get distracted by cranky customers, interoffice squabbles, or switch to a different brand of coffee. They can differentiate between real problems and background noise; therefore, they stay focused on what matters.Theyâre judiciously courageousExceptional employees are willing to speak up when others are not, whether itâs to ask a difficult (or âembarrassinglyâ simple) question or to challenge an executive decision. However, thatâs balanced with common sense and timing. They think before they speak and wise ly choose the best time and place to do so.Theyâre in control of their egosExceptional employees have egos. While thatâs part of what drives them, they never give their egos more weight than what is deserved. Theyâre willing to admit when theyâre wrong and willing to do things someone elseâs way, whether itâs because the other way is better or itâs important to maintain team harmony.Theyâre never satisfiedExceptional employees have unparalleled convictions that things can always be better- and theyâre right. No one is ever done growing, and there is no such thing as âgood enoughâ when it comes to personal improvement. No matter how well things are going, exceptional employees are driven to improve, without forgetting to give themselves a healthy pat on the back.They recognize when things are broken and fix themWhether itâs a sticky desk drawer or an inefficient, wasteful process affecting the cash flow of the entire department, exceptional employees donât w alk past problems. âOh, itâs been that way forever,â simply isnât in their vocabulary. They see problems as issues to be fixed immediately; itâs that simple.Theyâre accountableIf youâre a manager trying to decipher a bungled report, âItâs not my faultâ is the most irritating phrase in the English language. Exceptional employees are accountable. They own their work, their decisions, and all of their results- good or bad. They bring their mistakes to managementâs attention rather than hoping no one will find out. They understand that managers arenât out to assign blame; theyâre out to get things done.Theyâre marketableâMarketableâ can mean many things. Inside the organization, it means âlikeable.â Exceptional employees are well liked by co-workers. They have integrity and leadership skills (even if theyâre not in an official leadership position) that people respond to. Externally, it means they can be trusted to represent the brand well. Manager s know they can send these employees out to meet with clients and prospects without worrying about what theyâll say or do.They neutralize toxic peopleDealing with difficult people is frustrating and exhausting for most. Exceptional employees control their interactions with toxic people by keeping their feelings in check. When they need to confront a toxic person, they approach the situation rationally. They identify their own emotions and donât allow anger or frustration to fuel the chaos. They also consider the difficult personâs standpoint and are able to find solutions and common ground. Even when things completely derail, emotionally intelligent people are able to take the toxic person with a grain of salt to avoid letting him or her bring them down.Bringing It All TogetherTake notice of whatâs not mentioned: coding skills, years of experience, business degrees, etc. These things matter, but they wonât make you exceptional.What other qualities make people exceptional? Please share your thoughts in the comments section below, as I learn just as much from you as you do from me.This article first appeared on Linkedin. You might also enjoy⦠New neuroscience reveals 4 rituals that will make you happy Strangers know your social class in the first seven words you say, study finds 10 lessons from Benjamin Franklinâs daily schedule that will double your productivity The worst mistakes you can make in an interview, according to 12 CEOs 10 habits of mentally strong people
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