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Archive for October, 2008

Persuasive Technology and the Microwave Oven

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

By William Seidman

Last week we met with some PR folks. Like so many people we talk with, they were compelled to categorize us. We were a “training system,” a “knowledge management system,” a “project management system.”

It’s human to categorize – but what we do at Cerebyte is both “all of the above” and “none of the above.” Remember heating food before microwave ovens? In the old days, the pot was either on the stove or in the oven. It took a while, but eventually the container got hot. Then along comes the microwave oven – which heated food nearly instantly without also heating the container.

It didn’t make sense so we had to find out how this worked! Today no one thinks twice about the way microwave ovens work – they don’t want to, and don’t need to.

Using the microwave analogy, we want to create images of what people experience with our system – which is, in fact, persuasive technology. We’d love to be the “microwave” of personal and organizational change. People won’t need to know how or just why it works – just that it DOES work. At Stanford University there’s some exciting research into captology, the design, theory, and analysis of persuasive technologies.

Why Stop at Positive Deviance?

Sunday, October 19th, 2008

By William Seidman

Why stop at positive deviance?
Positive deviants – “star performers” – bring value to any organization. Their knowledge and, often, passion can spread to others and have a marked positive effect. But what’s the value of knowledge that isn’t spread around? Not much. We focus on positive deviants and we find that passionate commitment to a greater social good is a core element of the reason they are PDs.

Capturing the passion and communicating that passion is the key to getting others to initially respond. Finally, for others to really learn and practice the positive deviance content, people have to have a focused set of experiences that cause the new positive deviant knowledge to be internalized.

Affirming Your Values to Reduce Stress: Much More than Cheerleading

Friday, October 17th, 2008

 
By William Seidman

Stephanie West Allen is a tremendous source of good information about neuroscience and mediation, and has also written about the relationship between affirming one’s values and reducing work stress.

A research report that really aligns with our findings, “Affirmation of Personal Values Buffers Neuroendocrine and Psychological Stress Responses,” details the impact of personal affirmations on stress levels. The study was conducted at UCLA and UC Santa Barbara by Psychologist J. David Creswell, et al.

The research found that stress is reduced when people affirm their values before doing a stressful activity. Work is very stressful for many people, which is why we have people begin by affirming in writing and verbally their commitment to creating some type of greater good from their work. This creates engagement and stress visibly decreases. It’s a motivator, too.

We’ve also found that review of a passionate statement from the positive deviants by a user of the system creates engagement, which reduces stress, and also seem to positively motivate people. Can a mirror neuron effect occur solely though contact with positive deviant language?

By William Seidman

Stephanie West Allen is a tremendous source of good information about neuroscience and mediation, and has also written about the relationship between affirming one’s values and reducing work stress. 

A research report that really aligns with our findings, “Affirmation of Personal Values Buffers Neuroendocrine and Psychological Stress Responses,” details the impact of personal affirmations on stress levels. The study was conducted at UCLA and UC Santa Barbara by Psychologist J. David Creswell, et al.

The research found that stress is reduced when people affirm their values before doing a stressful activity.   Work is very stressful for many people, which is why we have people begin by affirming in writing and verbally their commitment to creating some type of greater good from their work. This creates engagement and stress visibly decreases. It’s a motivator, too.

We’ve also found that review of a passionate statement from the positive deviants by a user of the system creates engagement, which reduces stress, and also seem to positively motivate people. Can a mirror neuroneffect occur solely though contact with positive deviant language?

 

 

 

High Employee Turnover? Support – and Retain – Your Employees

Tuesday, October 14th, 2008

By William Seidman

Employee turnover flummoxes good (and not so good) companies. This is an interesting article on the problem, with a number of fixes that might help to retain employees. Healthcare and better scheduling might work to keep some people in a company, but the impact is rarely a sustained one. The primary cause of employee turnover is bad management – a vast area. Unclear expectations, insufficient tools and training, and insufficient support and feedback from the manager are problems that, if you fix them, you fix the problem.

We used our approach in a national fast food chain. It had much higher turnover than retail. We were able to reduce turnover as well as increase revenue for this company.

Don’t Panic – Optimize Your Attitude and Your Company

Wednesday, October 8th, 2008

By William Seidman

In the midst of chaos, maybe more now than ever, attitude matters. How you handle yourself and your company in the midst of worldwide financial turmoil now matters a lot. The tendency is for companies to react by immediately and drastically cutting costs, because costs are controllable and cutting them appears to solve part of the problem quickly. This can be destructive, though : don’t destroy the assets and capabilities you need for recovery.

A better way to think about the current downward spiral is to remember that instability requires optimization. Reducing costs may be part of that optimization, but so is improving productivity. If you haven’t already, identify your best people and commit to cutting costs and improving productivity. Optimization and a positive attitude are complementary.

Thinking About More Than Money

Tuesday, October 7th, 2008

By William Seidman

It might seem impossible, at this moment in our financial history, to think about more than money. But recently I conducted wisdom discovery with some great people: Lee Brower and his team from Quadrant Living; Albert Perkins and Michelangelo “Miki” Domine from CNRG Corp, and Ron Nakamoto from Strategic Financial. Our focus was to develop a program to make Quadrant Living’s program available and accessible to a wide range of people.

Quadrant Living has been very good at getting people with money to think about more than just money, by guiding them to increase the value they place on family, education, and contributions to their community. Cerebyte and QL share a positive focus and both stress gaining value from assets you or your organization already has.

 
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