The Self We Think We Are

June 26, 2008
Marshall Goldsmith’s Amazon blogTue, 2008-06-24 15:49
Marshall Goldsmith at ISB India 2007As a Ph.D. student at UCLA in the early 1970s, I had a self-image of being “hip” and “cool.” I believed I was intensely involved in deep human understanding, self-actualization, and the uncovering of profound wisdom. Early in my Ph.D. program, I was one of thirteen students in a class led by a wise teacher, Bob Tannenbaum. Bob had come up with the term sensitivity training, had published the most widely distributed article to appear in the Harvard Business Review, and was a full professor. He was a very important person in our department at UCLA. He is also a great guy.In Bob’s class, we were encouraged to discuss anything we wanted to discuss. I began by talking about people in Los Angeles. For three full weeks I gave monologues about how “screwed up” people in Los Angeles were. “They wear these $78 sequined blue jeans and drive gold Rolls Royces; they are plastic and materialistic; all they care about is impressing others; and they really do not understand what is deep and important in life.” (It was easy for me to be an expert on the people of Los Angeles. I had, after all, grown up in a small town in Kentucky.)

One day, after listening to me babble for three weeks, Bob looked at me quizzically and asked, “Marshall, who are you talking to?”

“I am speaking to the group,” I answered.

“Who in the group are you talking to?”

“Well, I am talking to everybody,” I replied, not quite knowing where he was headed with this line of questioning.

“I don’t know if you realize this,” Bob said, “but each time you have spoken, you have looked at only one person. You have addressed your comments toward only one person. And you seem interested in the opinion of only one person. Who is that person?”

“That is interesting. Let me think about it,” I replied. Then (after careful consideration) I said, “You?”

He said, “That’s right, me. There are twelve other people in this room. Why don’t you seem interested in any of them?”

Now that I had dug myself into a hole, I decided to dig even deeper. I said, “You know, Dr. Tannenbaum, I think you can understand the true significance of what I am saying. I think you can truly understand how ‘screwed up’ it is to try to run around and impress people all the time. I believe you have a deep understanding of what is really important in life.”

Bob looked at me and said, “Marshall, is there any chance that for the last three weeks all you have been trying to do is impress me?”

I was amazed at Bob’s obvious lack of insight! “Not at all!” I declared. “I don’t think you have understood one thing I have said! I have been explaining to you how screwed up it is to try to impress other people. I think you have totally missed my point, and frankly, I am a little disappointed in your lack of understanding!”

He looked at me, scratched his beard, and concluded, “No. I think I understand.”

I looked around and saw twelve people scratching their faces and thinking, “Yes. We understand.”

Suddenly, I had a deep dislike for Dr. Tannenbaum. I devoted a lot of energy to figuring out his psychological problems and understanding why he was confused. But after six months, it finally dawned on me that the person with the issue wasn’t him. It wasn’t even the people in Los Angeles. The person with the real issue was me. I finally looked in the mirror and said, “You know, old Dr. Tannenbaum was exactly right.”

Two of the great lessons I began to understand from this experience were (1) that it is much easier to see our problems in others than it is to see them in ourselves, and (2) even though we may be able to deny our problems to ourselves, they may be very obvious to the people who are observing us.

There is almost always a discrepancy between the self we think we are and the self the rest of the world sees in us. The lesson I learned (and strive in my professional work to help others understand) is that often the rest of the world has a more accurate perspective than we do. If we can stop, listen, and think about what others see in us, we have a great opportunity. We can compare the self that we want to be with the self we are presenting to the rest of the world. We can then begin to make the real changes needed to align our stated values with our actual behavior.

I have told this story at least three hundred times, and I have thought about it more frequently than I have told it. Often when I become self-righteous, preachy, holier than thou, or angry about some perceived injustice, I eventually realize that the issue is not with the other person or people. The issue is usually in me.

Today I work mostly with executives in large organizations. I help them develop a profile of desired leadership behavior. Then I provide them with confidential feedback, which allows them to compare their behavior (as perceived by others) with their profile of desired behavior.

I try to help them deal with this feedback in a positive way, to learn from it, and (eventually) to become a good role model for the desired leadership behavior in their organization. Although I am supposed to be a “coach,” very little of my coaching involves “sharing my wisdom.” Most of it involves helping my clients learn from the people around them.

In this way, the lesson I learned from Bob Tannenbaum has not only helped me in my personal life; it has helped shape the course of my professional life.

Life is good.

Marshall

www.MarshallGoldsmithLibrary.com

www.MarshallGoldsmithFeedForward.com

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Here are some videos you can watch:

Are You a Commitment Killer?

Advice for your boss (example of feedforward)

Build a Great Team

Suck Ups

My newest book, What Got You Here Won’t Get You There , is a New York Times best seller and a #1 business book in both America (The Wall Street Journal, USA Today) and Germany (FT). It is a ‘top 5′ bestseller for all business books published in 2007 on www.amazon.com ; and is the year’s #1 best seller on leading people. It has already been named as one of the ‘2007 business books of the year’ by the Institute for Management Studies, Soundview Executive Book Summaries and getAbstract. It is currently being translated into 18 languages. I hope that you enjoy it!

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Marshall’s Upcoming Events

July 1, 2008 – San Diego – AST

July 8, 2008 – Webinar: “What Happy Coaches Know … The Science of Happinessfree – register online

August 1, 2008 – Dartmouth – Tuck Executive Progra

August 25-26, 2008 – Indian School of Business – Hyderabad

September 15, 2008 – New York – SHRM – contact Marshall if interested

Source: http://www.thinkingmanagers.com/guru-watch/marshall-goldsmith

DeBono\'s Guru-Watch Blog


Now, Indian CEOs hunting for coaches

June 25, 2008

MUMBAI: Coaches for CEOs are quite a rage in the West. The list of CEOs who hire coaches include the who’s who of American business, including former GE CEO Jack Welch, IBM’s Sam Palmisano and eBay’s Meg Whitman. CEO coaches like Ram Charan and Marshall Goldsmith have achieved superstar status.

In recent years, executive coaching has started to make its presence felt in India as well, with country’s top honchos seeking professional help. However, there aren’t enough professionals in India who are equipped to don the garb of a CEO coach. Sighting the opportunity, the Hyderabad-based Indian School of Business (ISB) plans to launch a study programme to train CEO coaches.

Says Deepak Chandra, assistant dean of the Centre for Executive Education, ISB, “Judging from our interaction with corporates and the feedback we got from some of our leadership programmes which involved individualised coaching for small groups of managers, we realised that there is a huge need for executive coaching in India.

Slated to be held in August, ISB’s executive coaching programme will be conducted by Goldsmith, one of the world’s best-known executive coaches. Goldsmith has been ranked by the Wall Street Journal as one of the world’s Top 10 executive educators.

The programme will be open to senior professionals who want to become CEO coaches. “We are looking at both independent coaches as well as people within the company, like senior HR leaders and CEOs, who need help on coaching,” says Chandra.

Usually CEO coaching focusses on three aspects: Behavioural coaching, organisational change and strategy. ISB’s programme will focus only on affecting behavioural change.

The idea being that the behaviours that have made a leader successful may not be the same behaviours needed for future success. So Goldsmith will explain why leaders who are becoming successful can also face difficultly when they need to change, and he will give tips to participants on methods of coaching. The programme will initially start with a batch 30 execs.

While executive coaching is seen as a fad by some, no one can deny the value that comes from hiring one. Says Satish Pradhan, executive V-P, group HR, Tata Sons, “The fact is that a CEO is very lonely. And having someone who can share that space, be realistic and provide guidance is extremely important.”

However, there are possible pitfalls too. Says Pradhan, “The risk that you run with an executive coach is that they can also become like Linus’s comfort blanket: nice to have, functionally of no value, but just leaves you with a good feeling. But that is worthwhile too.”

There is a second risk too which stems from who gets to become a coach. Says Pradhan, “In a managerial context, a coach is someone who can actually process-enable rather than content-enable a manager. But at a CEO level, content becomes important: so have you walked in similar shoes for a period of time to know what hurts and what doesn’t? That ‘been there and lived through some of it’ becomes a very important part of the ability of the coach to help the CEO.”

So in a sense, this is really more of a kind of “mentor coach” rather than a “coach coach”. “It is difficult to think of someone who has had less width of experience to be able to coach a CEO than someone who has a much wider experience,” says Pradhan

Source: Now, Indian CEOs hunting for coaches
28 Jun 2007, 0019 hrs IST, Neelima Mahajan,TNN http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Now_Indian_CEOs_hunting_for_coaches/articleshow/2155177.cms


Marshall Goldsmith Loves Using Extended DISC

June 22, 2008

Source: Marshall Goldsmith Embraces Extended DISC


exdmg

Extended DISC was first introduced to the Indian Subcontinent through Dion Lawrence in 2007 and the first training programmes were given in August 2008 by visiting Australian trainer Denis McCarthy who is an authority on Extended DISC. He trains and accredits Indian HR practitioners, coaches, consultants and anyone else who may be interested in using the tools.

Enquiries about future training dates should be addressed to the Extended DISC India office in Bangalore. Contact details can be found on their website at http://www.int-a1.com/extendeddisc-india or by emailing extendeddisc.india(at)int-a1.com

Denis was introduced to Extended DISC by Marshall Goldsmith after reading his 2000 book on “Coaching for Leadership: How the world’s greatest coaches help leaders learn” hailed by Warren Bennis as “the single best collection of writings and writers on executive coaching”. Dr Marsall Goldsmith was listed in Forbes magazine as one of the five top executive coaches and in Human Resources magazine as one of the world’s leading HR consultants. He is a Wall Street Journal “top ten” executive educator and is University Professor at Alliant International University’s Marshall Goldsmith School of Management, which was named in his honor in 2006 (for more on him go here).

Reference links:

Marshall Goldsmith Partners LLC. : Executive Coaching and Training
www.marshallgoldsmith.com/

Marshall Goldsmith Library
www.marshallgoldsmithlibrary.com/

Marshall Goldsmith Blog
www.marshallgoldsmithlibrary.com/blog/

Harvard Business Online’s Marshall Goldsmith
discussionleader.hbsp.com/goldsmith/

Featured Services & Tools Featured Services & Tools
http://www.marshallgoldsmithlibrary.com/html/marshall/resources-services.html
This is a great resource … Developed by Marshall Goldsmith and Extended DISC R&D Team, the FeedForward tool provides individuals, teams and organizations with suggestions for the future and to help them achieve a positive change in the behavior.

Marshall Goldsmith : What Got You Here Won’t Get You There
www.whatgotyouhere.com/html/Marshall_Goldsmith.htm
Dr. Goldsmith’s twenty-two books include: The Leader of the Future (a Business Week best-seller) and Coaching for Leadership.

Source: Marshall Goldsmith Embraces Extended DISC


Welcome to Fastest Growing HR Assessment System in the World.

March 20, 2008

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Extended DISC Graph & Diamond
And it’s all yours today for FREE. Just email us and request our FREE CD-rom whic contains the Extended DISC Professional Human Resources System 5.0 and several pdf files and powerpoint presentations on the software, how to install it, its numerous applications and other useful information.You are welcome to start using the software. Just email us to arrange an unlcock code. However, we encourage you to consider completing our online User Certification course. It is the equivalent of a two-day training course, but you have the comfort and flexibility of doing it in your home or workplace, and at a small fraction of the cost of the two-day training programme.For India we have a special pricing of only $295 USD, and this includes a Personal Analysis ($150 USD value), plus all the manuals, training powerpoints which you can use and adapt, case studies, newsletter archive, current newsletter subscription and online free support.
Some of you may be interested, or know other who would be, in becoming one of our State Representatives and earn some additional money in helping us to promote the Extended DISC software in your state. There is also the option of training to be one of our Extended DISC trainers for India.
I look forward to hearing from you and to being of service.
Sincerely yours

Dion Lawrence

Email: dionin7890@yahoo.co.in


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March 20, 2008

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