Goals Gone Wild

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Latest thinking

goals gone wild It turns out that having goal-oriented employees might not be the best thing for employers.

Modern management has gone overboard with some popular concepts, leading to some counterproductive results. Consider how the concepts of management-by-objective and goal setting, first popularized by Peter Drucker more than 50 years ago, play out in today’s organizations. Managers — especially human resources managers — have become increasingly obsessed with deconstructing each employee’s expected contribution into a detailed list of measurable milestones. The point of the exercise is ostensibly to provide motivation, but often the result is a paint-bynumber work force whose performance may be on target but not what is most needed.

The U.S. is the only one of 22 countries ranked highest in economic and human development that fails to guarantee long-term paid sick leave, and one of only three countries — Canada and Japan are the others — without a national policy requiring employers to provide shortterm paid sick days. Source: Center for Economic and Policy Research, 2009

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Q3.2010

As with any powerful drug, the help it provides depends on the dosage.

When Goals Are Too Specific Specific goals can be so narrowly focused that they blind people to other factors and concerns that may be equally or more important, the authors say. Precisely defined goals discourage people from looking at a problem from a variety of perspectives and foster a mind-set in which merely hitting one’s marks is good enough. The authors cite many examples of this, including Ford Motor Company’s attempt in the late 1960’s to compete in the small, fuelefficient car market. In response to the challenging goals of bringing a fuel-efficient, modestly priced car to market quickly, the Ford Pinto was developed, but at the expense of other important considerations that were not specified as goals, such as safety, ethical behavior and company reputation. In fact, a faulty design in the placement of the fuel tank and omitted safety checks resulted in Pintos igniting on impact and a multitude of lawsuits. Even after discovering the hazards, executives did not correct the design, calculating that doing so would have cost more than the lawsuits that were likely to be filed. Goal setting can also inhibit characteris-

Hal Mayforth

THE WALKING WOUNDED: COMING TO A COUNTRY NEAR YOU

For years, studies and practitioners have generally concluded that specific, challenging goals motivate employees, focus their efforts and provide clear, objective means for evaluating their performance. However, in their 2009 paper, “Goals Gone Wild: The Systematic Side Effects of Over-Prescribing Goal Setting,” four noted professors of management question that view. They present an impressive review of research and a wealth of examples to argue that while goal setting can improve performance, it can also degrade it by overly narrowing focus, weakening interpersonal relationships, corroding organizational culture and increasing risky and unethical behavior. “For decades, goal setting has been promoted as a halcyon pill,” write Lisa D. Ordóñez, a professor at the Eller College of Management of the University of Arizona; Maurice E. Schweitzer, associate professor of operations and information management at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania; Adam D. Galinsky, professor of ethics and decision in management at the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University; and Max H. Bazerman, professor of business administration at Harvard Business School. “We contend, however, that it has been over-prescribed and it has powerful and predictable side effects.”

T h e K o r n / F e r r y I n s tit u t e


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