The classic reference to the Taoist approach is Lao Tsuâs sixth-century-B.C. work, Tao Te Ching. It gives directions for achieving the Taoist state of being. Hereâs one from Chapter Sixty-six:
Why is the sea king of a hundred streams?
Because it lies below them.
Therefore it is the king of a hundred streams.
If the sage would guide the people, he must serve with humility.
If he would lead them, he must follow behind.
In this way when the sage rules, the people will not feel oppressed:
When he stands before them, they will not be harmed.
The whole world will support him and will not tire of him.
Because he does not compete,
He does not meet competition.
Related Quotes
Chinese philosopher Lao-Tzu, author of the Tao Te Ching, wrote, âThe Sage holds on to the One and in this way becomes the shepherd of the world. He does not show himself off; therefore he becomes prominent. He does not put himself on display; therefore he brightly shines. He does not brag about himself; therefore he receives credit. He does not praise his own deeds; therefore he can long endure. It is only because he does not compete that, therefore, no one is able to compete with him.
Lao Tsu in his Tao Te Ching shares an invaluable piece of wisdom: âThe world is ruled by letting things take their course. It cannot be ruled by interfering.
Zhang finds another beacon in the writings of Immanuel Kant, the nineteenth-century German philosopher whose âcategorical imperativeâ holds that we must never regard human beings as mere tools. In a long-ago meeting with the authors, Zhang echoed this belief when he laid out his aspirations for Haier: âWe want to encourage employees to become entrepreneurs because people are not a means to an end but an end in themselves. Our goal is to let everyone become their own CEO.
Lessons for Leaders to Live By:
1. Focus on the Journey, Not the Destination
âThe journey is the rewardâ is ancient Chinese wisdom that, thanks perhaps to Steve Jobsâs affection for it, youâve probably heard before...
2. Link Little Things to Big Things...
3. Put âGrease Peopleâ and âGunk Peopleâ in the Right Places ...
Even if your organization is well designed in other ways, friction problems will fester and flare up if the right people arenât in the right roles. To avert such troubles, skilled leaders work to put âgrease peopleâ in places where friction ought to be low and âgunk peopleâ in places where friction ought to be high. Research on personality and culture reveal differences in responses to rules, risk, and monitoring that can help you figure out where people (including you) fall on our grease-gunk continuum:
Grease People
Gunk People
Rules: âUnbureaucratic personalitiesâ or âChaos Muppetsâ who ignore, bend, defy, and remove rules, norms, and traditions.
Rules: âBureaucratic personalitiesâ or âOrder Muppetsâ who follow, create, and enforce rules, norms, and traditions.
Risk: Comfortable with taking chances, focus on the upside of trying new things. Encourage others to take risky actions.
Risk: Uncomfortable with taking chances, focus on what can go wrong, hesitate to try new things. Discourage others from taking risky actions.
Monitoring: Scrutinize others lightly. Quick to trust others and assume good intent. Downplay and encourage errors, setbacks, and rule breaking.
Monitoring: Scrutinize others closely. Wary about trusting others and assume bad intent. Call out and punish errors, setbacks, and rule breaking.
So, if your organization is plagued by vigilantes who make you jump through hoops akin to âSay, âI am filthy,â five timesâ consider how they are treated. Are they ignored or underappreciated? If so, firing them isnât the answer; their replacements will probably act the same way. Try what Larryâs boss did and show them some respect...
4. The Best Friction Fixers Are Friction Shifters...
Leading friction shifting in your team or organization also requires sending clear signals that itâs time for more or less friction, making sure your intentions are understood and shape behavior. You may believe that others hear your message, but as chapter 4 shows, people, especially those with a lot of power, often have a dim understanding of how others interpret and respond to their decisions, orders, and suggestions. Organizations muddy the waters further by pummeling people with confusing, conflicting, and excessive informationâmaking it tough to distinguish âsignalâ from ânoise.â That means, to trigger friction shifting, a leaderâs job is to craft simple and crisp signals that itâs time to work in grease or gunk mode...
Paul told us, when you take charge of a troubled company, âyou have to assess the situation rather than act quickly. Everyone wants you to do something, so the first thing you say, very calmly, is, âWeâre not going to do anything today.ââ During his first months on the job, Paul hit the brakes and asked âeach of the top eighty people in the company to write a two-page document that answered, first, âWho are you? What are you responsible for?â And then: âWhat issues do you believe are most pressing? What would you do if you were me?ââ After speaking to all eighty and figuring out what was broken, who the best (and worst) people were, and what was required to fix BHP, Paul let his charges know that it was time to shift gears and start those changes, which, in just a few years, turned the company around...
5. Friction Fixing Is Fueled by Civility, Caring, and Love
A related leadership lesson weâve implied is that friction fixing is accelerated by shared civility, caring, and love. When such emotions pervade an organization, people form stronger bonds, develop trust, focus on the best qualities of colleagues and customers, and devote more energy to helping others and less to satisfying their selfish needs. Civility, caring, and love reflect a rough hierarchy of collective compassion. As Christine Porath documents in Mastering Civility, when organizations are plagued with rudeness, it causes employee commitment, cooperation, and coordination to plummet...
As Peter Drucker said, âIt is a law of nature that two moving bodies in contact with each other create friction.â But civility can help bring out the best in people because, as Drucker put it, âmanners are the lubricating oil of an organization.â When employeesâand the customers and citizens they serveâtreat one another with outward respect, it helps everyone avoid open warfare and backstabbing, resolve (or at least tolerate) tensions, and be more amenable to collaboration. Christineâs research confirms that when civility is pervasive, employees get more done; they go the extra mile to help others and enjoy better physical and mental health. Christine dissects how leaders build civil cultures by modeling desired behaviors, hiring, rewarding, and promoting people for civility, and developing programs that spread respectful actions. She shows how seemingly small interventions pack a wallop. Like the upswing in civility at Ochsner Health in Louisiana. It was sparked partly by the âOchsner 10/5 way,â which means if an employee is within ten feet of a colleague or patient, the employee is expected to make eye contact and smile. And to say hello if the employee is within five feet. Every organization (and family) would be more civil if we all followed Christineâs advice when we encounter a difficult person: âBefore shutting down, saying no, or displaying frustration, try to appreciate where the other person is. You might even go one step further and ask yourself, How can I help them?â Caring is a more powerful form of collective compassion than civility. It entails deeper empathy and concern than surface civil behavior. In caring cultures, people feel obligated to help others avoid and overcome obstacles âthey expect one another to take that extra step Christine suggested.
This phrase, âflexible control,â describes the reconciliation of strength and submission. The Tao Te Ching recommends wu-wei: achieve things by not trying to achieve. But another quality helps turn masochism into flexible controlâintelligence. You have to know when and how to surrender, even to whom to surrender.