Of
interest. Tai chi-ers MUST be committed
to growth. And that is what you
get! Tom
New
York Times
July
6, 2008
If You’re Open to Growth, You Tend to Grow
By
JANET RAE-DUPREE
WHY
do some people reach their creative potential in business while other equally
talented peers don’t?
After
three decades of painstaking research, the Stanford psychologist Carol Dweck
believes that the answer to the puzzle lies in how people think about
intelligence and talent. Those who believe they were born with all the smarts
and gifts they’re ever going to have approach life with what she calls a “fixed
mind-set.” Those who believe that their own abilities can expand over time,
however, live with a “growth mind-set.”
Guess
which ones prove to be most innovative over time.
“Society
is obsessed with the idea of talent and genius and people who are ‘naturals’
with innate ability,” says Ms. Dweck, who is known for research that crosses
the boundaries of personal, social and developmental psychology.
“People
who believe in the power of talent tend not to fulfill their potential because
they’re so concerned with looking smart and not making mistakes. But people who
believe that talent can be developed are the ones who really push, stretch,
confront their own mistakes and learn from them.”
In
this case, nurture wins out over nature just about every time.
While
some managers apply these principles every day, too many others instead believe
that hiring the best and the brightest from top-flight schools guarantees
corporate success.
The
problem is that, having been identified as geniuses, the anointed become
fearful of falling from grace. “It’s hard to move forward creatively and
especially to foster teamwork if each person is trying to look like the biggest
star in the constellation,” Ms. Dweck says.
In
her 2006 book, “Mindset: The New Psychology of Success,” she shows how adopting
either a fixed or growth attitude toward talent can profoundly affect all
aspects of a person’s life, from parenting and romantic relationships to
success at school and on the job.
She
attributes the success of several high-profile chief executives to their growth
mind-set, citing an ability to energize a work force. These include John F. Welch Jr. of General Electric, who
valued teamwork over individual genius; Louis V. Gerstner Jr. of I.B.M.,
who dedicated his book about I.B.M.’s turnaround to “the thousands of
I.B.M.’ers who never gave up on their company”; and Anne M. Mulcahy of Xerox, who focused on
morale and development of her people even as she implemented painful cuts.
But
Ms. Dweck does not suggest that recruiters ignore innate talent. Instead, she
suggests looking for both talent and a growth mind-set in prospective hires —
people with a passion for learning who thrive on challenge and change.
After
reading her book, Scott Forstall, senior vice president of Apple in charge of
iPhone software, contacted Ms. Dweck to talk about his experience putting
together the iPhone development team. Mr. Forstall told her that he identified
a number of superstars within various departments at Apple and asked them in
for a chat.
At
the beginning of each interview, he warned the recruit that he couldn’t reveal
details of the project he was working on. But he promised the opportunity, Ms.
Dweck says, “to make mistakes and struggle, but eventually we may do something
that we’ll remember the rest of our lives.”
Only
people who immediately jumped at the challenge ended up on the team. “It was
his intuition that he wanted people who valued stretching themselves over being
king of their particular hill,” she says.
People
with a growth mind-set tend to demonstrate the kind of perseverance and
resilience required to convert life’s setbacks into future successes. That ability
to learn from experience was cited as the No. 1 ingredient for creative
achievement in a poll of 143 creativity researchers cited in “Handbook of
Creativity” in 1999.
Which
leads one to ask: Is it possible to shift from a fixed mind-set to a growth mind-set?
Absolutely,
according to Ms. Dweck. But, “it’s not easy to just let go of something that
has felt like your self for many years,” she writes. Still, she says, “nothing
is better than seeing people find their way to things they value.”
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