Today we Americans will join together as one people to consume
the remains of our ancestral totem animal: the turkey.
Yes, I know, you thought that the great American totem was
the bald eagle… but, have you ever tried to eat a roasted bald eagle?
At Thanksgiving we express our gratitude for a bountiful harvest.
We are especially grateful for the bounty that God gave us… on credit. As long
as God, that is, the Fed keeps the credit flowing we are going to be just fine.
We Americans are a grateful lot. We love Thanksgiving,
perhaps above all holidays.
Thus, this is a good time to ask how well we show gratitude
in our everyday lives.
As the old saying goes, once is not enough. Saying thank-you one day a year does not make you an individual of sterling character. It means that you like a good party.
To build character you need to learn to say thank-you often,
sincerely, under the appropriate circumstances. Unfortunately, it is easier said
than done.
Sue Shellenbarger explained yesterday that American business
is suffering from a gratitude deficit. Everyone knows, in the abstract that
good management requires frequent expressions of gratitude.
And yet, we are far more likely to say thank-you to friends,
family and neighbors than we are toward the people we work with.
Shellenbarger writes:
The
workplace ranks dead last among the places people express gratitude, from homes
and neighborhoods to places of worship. Only 10% of adults say thanks to a
colleague every day, and just 7% express gratitude daily to a boss, according
to a survey this year of 2,007 people for the John Templeton Foundation of West
Conshohocken, Pa., a nonprofit organization that sponsors research on
creativity, gratitude, freedom and other topics.
Everyone knows that frequent injections of gratitude,
especially from the person in charge create a better office culture.
But when you ask why it is expressed so infrequently, the
answer seems to be that people do not know how to do it. They fear getting it
wrong.
In Shellenbarger’s words:
Some
bosses are afraid employees will take advantage of them if they heap on the
gratitude. Other managers believe in thank-yous but are nervous about appearing
awkward or insincere—or embarrassing the employee they wish to praise.
In truth, getting gratitude right is far more difficult than
you think. Saying it the right way to the right person at the right time with
the right feeling is a very difficult task.
The best way to understand the problem is to follow
Shellenbarger as she outlines the wrong ways to express gratitude.
Relying on consultant Bob Nelson, Shellenbarger outlines the
wrong ways to express gratitude.
First, if a manager expresses gratitude in a rote exercise
offered to the staff at a designated time, regardless of whether anyone has
done anything to deserve it, his expression will sound insincere.
Second, if a manager offers gratitude promiscuously, it will lose its meaning. When a manager who has never allowed the words thank-you pass his lips reads an
article one day and decides to offer effusive expressions of gratitude to
everyone all the time, regardless of whether it was deserved, his words will
ring hollow.
Third, if a manager qualifies his gratitude by saying that your
work was riddled with mistakes he is taking back what he is giving.
Fourth, if the expression is too little too late, it becomes less significant. If the
manager waits too long before saying thank-you it will appear to be an
afterthought, thus, insincere.
Fifth, if the manager is using thank-you to manipulate an
employee, his gratitude is self-interested. If he has an ulterior motive to expressing gratitude-- like trying to
induce the person to work late-- than his gratitude is insincere.
Those are the wrong ways to express gratitude.
Unfortunately, no one ever learns how to get it right without getting
it wrong a few times.
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