Felix Dennis on talent..
If the talent is trying to make itself irreplaceable – like say, only one person knows how something works and they do not like documenting it or training others. It shows insecurity of the person who does not want to lose the job, which is bad for the organization as well as for the person.
Bad for the organization because, if the person either wants to quit or cannot turn up for work, a crucial piece of work cannot be completed.
Bad for the person because, though the person might think he/she is crucial for something work and cannot be fired, they are making themselves tied up to the work and hence cannot be promoted to better opportunities.
A talent should learn and grow. And then to teach others and make them grow. And keep repeating the process. If there is not much you can learn to grow, then quit and join some place where you can.
Some companies find even more innovative ways to tap the energy of youth. If you can find younger talent (like, just out of high school) who cannot afford college education and spend money to train them in essential theory and practical work requirements (like it is done in vocational schools), you have a lot more time to extract labor out of the youth. Of course, such a talent will initially be paid slightly less (since the company has to spend money to train them), but they would be happy anyway, because they would not have got the opportunity to earn even this much, had they followed their own paths. It is a win-win situation, at least in the short term. Longer term, the talent needs to keep acquiring relevant skills and if required, some certifications, to improve their careers.
Actually talent does not diminish as much as Felix/Degas portrays. Experience counts. But in the IT field, fresher talent is relatively a lot cheaper and one does not need to retain many costly, experienced people. Just a few would suffice to guide fresher, cheaper talent which has better stamina, an urge to learn new stuff, working like crazy to move up in career.
Most older talent prefer to stay in the comfortable zone, to lead a contented life. To keep earning the same salary with small raises every now and then (mostly the salary is just adjusted for inflation – it is not actually a raise). These kind of people are more likely to be less innovative.
As organizations grow very large and at some point stabilizes the employee count at some level, there is a high possibility that most of their employees get into this mode. My guess is that the average age of IBM employees > average age of Microsoft employees > average age of Google employees.
Not all talent enters the comfort zone as it ages, but most do.
Yes, until a point. After which the talent either..
* jumps ship for a better salary (and of course with better opportunities to prove themselves and to run the show) (very good) or
* dares to build a ship on its own. (crazy !!)
Just in case you do not already know: I am crazy.
Ship building commences on Oct 1, 2008.
(The quotes are from Felix Dennis’ book How to Get Rich: One of the World’s Greatest Entrepreneurs Shares His Secrets)
September 25, 2008 at 11:47 am |
hi.
Your writing holds a lot of truth. Still, when would I know I have reached a comfort zone? How can I break the cliche? Thank you.
September 25, 2008 at 12:38 pm |
“Still, when would I know I have reached a comfort zone?…”
When you think, that you are doing enough for what you are paid.
And more so, when you think you are doing a lot more than others who are paid equally or even worse, paid more than you (either within your own company or outside).
That can make you reduce your work, to match the pay.
You believe what you earn is sufficient for you, with the regular nominal pay hikes. “Why should I work more, when they can’t compensate me better ?!”, you ask yourself ? You may start spending more time on unproductive stuff like those “other” people usually do, ending up in that category yourself.
And, thus starts the path of self-destruction.
“…How can I break the cliche?”
Either ask to be compensated well, if you are really doing some remarkable work. If that is not possible, either quit and join some place where your work is better valued or just start out on your own.
September 25, 2008 at 3:17 pm |
One more case you missed. The comfort zone itself is sometimes unattainable. Indian companies usually overload their workers. It happens in call centers – Six sigma.