Wednesday, 14 May 2014

I've tried it before and it didn't work.

Working with a broadcasting organisation, I found out that growth is now getting difficult and companies that has been around are finding equally challenging to survive like the new kids on the block. Maybe their challenges are different but it can be equally damaging. 

When an organisation has been around for long, there can be many employees who has stayed for long. When these employees do not upgrade their knowledge and skills, they tend to be looking at new things in an old way. So you keep hearing "I've tried this before and it didn't work". Well maybe we would have tried it before and it didn't work, but I think lets try it again and see if it works this time. 

Times has change. Technology has change. Ways of working has change and why is it that the way we think still hasn't change? We must be proactive towards trying more things, even if it means that we will not be getting the answer...yet. 

If you want to or if you don't want to, it's really up to you. Here, I would like to suggest to you why do some want to try it again and to see if it works. 

Take it personal
Some take challenges personally. There is just this desire to try out and see what happens. Some call it passion, some call it drive and some call it ownership. Whatever you might call it, they take it personally.  

Look for the reward
I don't think people just do things for the sake of just doing it. Most working adults want something in return. It might be in the form of money, benefits or recognition. It's not bad, it just makes achievement taste sweeter. 

Learn lessons fast
Many things are happening and it's happening faster than before therefore I think the learning must also be done faster. That doesn't mean school time must be cut it half. I meant when we work, we need to keep our eyes wide open so that we can observe, analyse and we can ask the right questions to the right people whenever we see something that we don't understand or something that we are experiencing. 

So, the next time you hear someone telling you 'I've tried it and it didn't work", tell them, they need to know what it takes to try, so then they can see it work. 

Friday, 9 May 2014

Emotions are data, too.

Hardly a day goes by that I don’t meet it, the struggle with emotions at work.

The misunderstood colleague, filled with frustration, attempting not to show it; the executive wondering how to confront her team’s lack of enthusiasm; the student hesitating to confess his affection to a classmate. 

It has been two decades since emotional intelligence became a cornerstone of managers’ self-improvement projects. Meditation has broken into the C-suite. Alpha males and females extol the virtues of mindfulness. And still we remain unsure about what to do with emotions at work.

One moment we do not have enough emotion, the next we have too much.  We want work to ignite our passion but we don’t want our passions to affect our judgment. We want cool heads and warm hearts—as long as they remain apart.

The pursuit of passionate equanimity in the office might look like a valid remedy for the consuming pace of business in our day and age. I’d like to argue, however, that it might be a symptom as well—of a work culture that views emotions in ways that keep us struggling with them in the long run.

We have come to regard emotions as assets—precious or toxic as they may be—rather than asdata. Therefore we focus on managing them, which often means trying to exploit, diffuse, or sanitize them, far more than staying with them long enough to discern their meaning. And when we do the latter, we usually interpret them as revealing something about their owners alone.

Treating emotions this way, as spillovers of our inner worlds, leaves us with acute, even obsessive awareness of them—and yet limited insight.

Not because we’re neglectful of our emotions, incompetent at managing them, or simply, hopelessly human. Not because emotions are neither always conscious nor easily named. Not just, at least.

It is because our emotions at work are more than echoes of our history, expressions of our virtues and neuroses, or shadows of our longings. While those always play a part, emotions are seldom ours alone.

What you and I feel at work has as much to do with what we are doing, and what others expect of people in our roles—and of someone who looks like us—as it does with our own inner lives.

We readily accept that work shapes how we act and how we see ourselves, that others’ expectations subtly corner us. We rarely think the same may be true of our emotions — even private ones — as well.

But if we play a part at work, more or less willingly, a part more or less fitting with the person we believe we are, why should we not feel that part as well?

What if emotions were another element in our role’s unwritten script, which our history merely prepares us for and our aspirations only make us more willing to perform? What if the assumption that emotions are ours—alone—to mind and tame made us more likely to torment ourselves than to question how that script casts us and who its authors and intended audience are?

Take an energetic executive who was wondering if he had become depressed when I met him, shortly after a big promotion. He had been asked to turn a division around, and had relished the challenge at first.

Months later, however, his reviled predecessor was thriving in another company while he himself was deeply dispirited. Despite his good progress, he could not exorcise a lingering fear of failure with the usual enthusiasm and determination, and worried that it might be catching up with him.

Reflective as he was, he could easily link his fear and shame to certain disappointments of his youth. What he found harder was to see that his feelings also spoke of something broader than his unresolved sense of inadequacy. They reflected the status of his division, whose problems were blamed for everything that threatened the company’s viability in the marketplace.

His well-disguised fears and old sensitivities made him a perfect match for the position, psychologically speaking. They made him more likely to carry the sense of inadequacy on behalf of other executives, who could thus feel blameless for the company’s difficulties, than to challenge the arrangements that evoked it.

Taking a more systemic (and less conformist) view of emotions, as sources of intelligence about the work and culture of our organizations, does not make us any less responsible for them. Quite the contrary, it calls for us to use the insight we gain for more than improving our effectiveness or achieving peace of mind.

How would we go about extracting systemic insight from our emotion? Here are three questions to get us started.

How do we show (which) emotions?

Stop asking whether you show enough emotions. Ask how you show them. We are always expressing emotions, even if we are not talking about them. Particularly when we are not talking about them. There are no emotions we express more than those we are trying to hide, especially from ourselves.

(It’s when we believe that we have no emotions that emotions can most easily have us.)

It is not always unpleasant emotions that we deny—or hide in plain sight. I know workplaces where aggression is acceptable while needs for comfort and recognition make people uncomfortable. So fighting, for all it is bemoaned, becomes a safer form of intimacy—a way to connect and show that one cares.

Silencing emotions breeds mistrust and loneliness. Acting them out without talking about them safeguards the status quo. Silence makes it harder to recognize, make sense of, and challenge the division of emotional labor, so to speak, that keeps us feeling the same way over and over again.

Who gets to feel what?

Emotions are seldom distributed equally. They are often bundled with certain roles.

Consider hope and despair, confidence and concern, pride and shame, poise and agitation, vocal outrage and silent contempt. The former in each pair is usually assigned to, and expected of, people in powerful and visible roles. The latter is consigned to those in less powerful and visible ones, to nurse on behalf of those who must avoid them.

“Be yourself” and “get a grip” are common ways we are nudged into those places, as both often translate into, “Feel and show more of what I expect you to.”

This runs counter to the common belief that our emotions are what funnel us into different roles, and that by managing those emotions we make ourselves more suitable for certain assignments.  In fact, our roles often elicit our emotions. And we don’t often realize that until, when we move on from one role to the next, the emotions we felt dissipate, only to capture our successors.

Needless to say, such divisions of labor, never explicit but respected by most, do not bode well for problem solving, mutual understanding, and collaboration.

What is the purpose of these emotions (and who benefits from them)?

Assume that which emotions are silenced and which are voiced, and who gets to feel and express what, is neither random nor affected by our character alone.

The heartless CEO, the guilty working mom, the ambitious middle manager, the frazzled assistant. Consider them assignments, albeit unconscious ones.

Then you have a lens to examine what purpose, and whose interests, those assignments may serve—what they enable, what they avert, who they protect—and what everyone, including you, gets out of them.

It may be safety, righteousness, approval, achievement, or relief. It may be the illusion that everyone gets what they deserve rather than what they can afford.

It may be the familiarity, if not comfort, of experiencing what we are used to—within and around us. A sense of knowing our place and what it feels like.

Interpreted that way—tied to ourselves in a role, in context, doing work—emotions can help us learn about and manage more than just ourselves. They give us hints about what keeps us in our place, how we may change places, and even what it might take to change the whole place.

When you find yourself thinking, “Here I go again,” because you sense that you are getting caught up in a familiar pattern, ask where in your past that pattern comes from, what it says about you, and how you may ease its grip. But don’t stop there. That’s only half the work. Ask also what evoked those emotions here, in these circumstances, now.

Unless we use our self-awareness to examine the system more dispassionately, reflection is just another form of withdrawal. Unless we turn our hard-earned equanimity into resolve to change our surroundings as much as ourselves, the struggle with emotions never ends. Any practice to manage them becomes at best a coping mechanism—at worst an instrument of the status quo.

We can’t be saner, or at least freer, until we stop sanitizing emotions. We can’t make workplaces fairer if we lock people into managing them alone.

Yes, emotions are personal. They are just not all about us.

 by Gianpiero Petriglieri. 

Thursday, 1 May 2014

Are Electronic Cigarettes a Public Good or Health Hazard?

In an article published in the HBR’s Working Knowledge, Michael Blanding discusses about some insight when the e-cigarette had an influx in the market. Although the actual plan was to reduce the smoking population, unfortunately it gave rise to other concerns. 

According to John A. Quelch “They provide the dubious pleasure of nicotine without all the cancer-inducing toxins associated with tobacco”

“The very fact users could control the amount of nicotine they ingested led to worry that e-cigarettes would cause smokers to take in more nicotine, rather than less. Even more worrisome, e-cigarettes could provide a gateway for young people to start smoking tobacco cigarettes, or even lure ex-smokers back to the habit.”

“How many nicotine addicts is it worth the risk of creating to have one tobacco smoker quit?"
Read the article at http://hbswk.hbs.edu/item/7449.html

Wednesday, 30 April 2014

The Confidence Gap.

http://www.theatlantic.com/features/archive/2014/04/the-confidence-gap/359815/
By Katty Kay and Claire Shipman. 

Evidence shows that women are less self-assured than men—and that to succeed, confidence matters as much as competence. Here's why, and what to do about it.

"Women applied for a promotion only when they met 100 percent of the qualifications. Men applied when they met 50 percent" 

"Some observers say children change our priorities, and there is some truth in this claim. Maternal instincts do contribute to a complicated emotional tug between home and work lives, a tug that, at least for now, isn’t as fierce for most men. Other commentators point to cultural and institutional barriers to female success. There’s truth in that, too. But these explanations for a continued failure to break the glass ceiling are missing something more basic: women’s acute lack of confidence."

"Do men doubt themselves sometimes? Of course. But they don't let their doubts stop them as often as women do "

Friday, 25 April 2014

Addicted to sugar? Concerns and alternatives.

Addicted to sugar? You’re not alone. And you need to know what it’s doing to your heart.

It’s ironic, really, that sugar is so often associated with love and matters of the heart — from Grandma’s famous cookies to boxes of chocolate on Valentine’s Day. But the truth is that sugar is hurting your heart. On average, American adults get 15 percent of their daily calories (based on a 2,000-calorie diet) from added sugar. That’s far more than the 100 calories per day for women and 150 calories per day for men that the American Heart Association recommends. Although questionable food choices account for some of the excess sugar intake, a much greater part of the problem is the hidden sugar in products such as ketchup, salad dressing, cereals, breads, granola bars, spaghetti sauce, and even tonic water, all of which contain lots of added sugar. The resulting excess sugar consumption increases your risk of developing many chronic illnesses, including heart disease. To reduce your sugar intake, check food labels carefully, looking for hidden sugars like the “oses” (fructose, sucrose, dextrose, etc.), corn syrup, nectars and evaporated or concentrated juices. Do your very best to avoid foods that contain added sugar, and focus instead on fresh fruit, dried fruit, nuts or veggies for more nutritious snacks.

Adopted from Cleveland Clinic. 

Sunday, 8 December 2013

A day in Semenyih.

Today, it was a busy day in Semenyih. On a normal day, you would see 5 ton lorries going in and out of town but today it was 2-wheels 26'ers, 27.5's and 29'ers on mountain bikes. It's the 2 years once, PCC ride 'no race, just fitness' ride and fitness it was. 

Moving thru the unforgiving hills with some beautiful down hill tracks, today's 50 km ride was a rewarding  and a unforgiving one. Here are a list of winners and losers for the event. 

WINNERS 
1. The cardiovascular and respiratory team. 
If you don't train, don't even think of joining this event. It will torture you. As you roll uphill, it will take you to a corner and in your mind, you are hoping it's gonna flat but suddenly the terrain gets more steep and it brings your morale down. 

2. The 'Bitch'
Route 2 has it's name "The Bitch". I think the reason why they give it that name is because she screws your brain, and without a doubt she was very successful in doing that. 

3. The riders who consistently trains. 
Let me tell you, if you don't train consistently, you will not finish this ride. Despite training, many riders chickened out, (even myself). Therefore, if you don't train and if you can complete it, you have a blessed muscular system. 

LOSERS
1. Riders with big tummy.
I don't think it's aerodynamic to cycle with a big tummy. So, for those with one, its time to trim it down. Cycle more, take fat burner or go for calorie restriction. Whatever it is, do something. 

2. Smokers. 
I maybe wrong with this however this is what I observed. When you have 2 riders of the same fitness levels, the smoker is pressured more, especially during a climb. Well, if you ask the surgeon general, he will probably tell you the same and back it up with a published report. 

3. Those who consume lot's of protein bar. 
I observed a group of cyclist of about 5 riders, who slowly but surely was slowing down, getting tired and eventually went flat at the 10km point. I think each of them would have consumed 2 protein bars by that time, hoping to get some energy. What they didn't realize is that the protein bar wasn't the best choice. They should have focused more on rehydrating themselves or having a power gel instead. The focus should be to replenish water, glucose and sodium and not protein. 

Well, whatever it is, it was a ride that will get some to come again while some to not go for it again, while for me it all depends on my schedule on that time.  



Sazali(middle-the guy who got me into this sport) and gang and myself preparing ourselves to go to the starting point. 


Kips(the other guy who got me into this sport) getting his bike ready for the event. 


7.45am sharp all riders flag off. 


Other road uses had to wait in line for the cyclist to pass. There was very little involvement from the traffic police  


Poor head trail due to long wait. 


Others bored waiting in line while joking "Mari Tolak Basikal" 


Dedicated to my buddies who runs.  


Cyclist were enjoying their power stick due to massive bottle necks.  


A beautiful view overlooking Broga Hill. 


Mari Tolak Basikal. 

A clear blue sky to assist the riders view.


"The Bitch" 

A rider who literally got out from his seat after seeing the hill above.  

A beautiful view as I was on my way to Check Point 2. 

Thursday, 5 December 2013

How we see things is the way we see things.


We were conducting a S&M tower with a group of employees from a full service airlines. During this module, participants were told to build a tower with limited resources given. 
During this time, the best team was a group that consists of engineers, pilots and managers. It was interesting to see how they work together to complete the task. Apparently, their job made them view things in a certain way. 
For the engineers, 'tower' was the center of the activity. The tower tensile strength must be able to withstand all the forces. It shouldn't to be too long or too short however just nice was also something equally challenging. For the pilots, 'time' was the center of the activity. You can have all the ideas or have all the resources you need but if you don't complete it in time, you get nothing. Timing is so crucial that whenever we have pilots in the house, they will keep reminding their teams on the balance time. 'Guys... 10 more minutes'... 'Guys... 5 more minutes' and it went. For the managers, getting the engineers and pilots together was their main task. The managers were living up to their role, literally, managing so that they can come to an agreement and a successful tower can be built. By the way, the end results was fantastic. They joined the ranks of those in the hall of fame by coming up with a tall, freestanding strong tower. 
Looking back, how we see things is really made up largely from what we have been doing and that determines what we have been seeing. So, in this day in age, in developing a high performance working culture, we would probably need many ways of seeing things. Many ways of seeing things help us in providing information to manage the uncertainty we face. However, no matter how much information you can have, the time taken to complete a task is equally important, for time is really an essence.