Motivation by Intimidation: Success or Insecurity?
by Barry Maher
Published on this site: July 7th, 2004

The strategy I call, "changing the scale" should be
about gaining perspective, getting a better look a reality, not
obscuring it. Too frequently using an inappropriate scale can hide
the reality behind a situation. Mass murderer Joseph Stalin knew
this well. "When one man dies, it is a tragedy," Stalin
said. "When thousands die it is statistics."
An estimated 136,986 individuals died the day Stalin died. Most
of them better than he was - more successful at being human beings.
Numbers don't die. Numbers don't go hungry, numbers don't suffer.
Individuals do. One by one.
Numbers are meaningless unless put into a scale, a context. Is
$30,000 a lot of money? For a second-hand Yugo or a Rolls Royce?
In a book called Filling the Glass, I couldn't possibly omit the
next story. In 1990, Congressman Jim Rogan was a Deputy District
Attorney. He was assigned to prosecute a highly publicized local
trial. A man had tossed down ten beers then climbed into his car
and killed two women and two children.
After all the evidence had been presented and both the prosecution
and the defense had made their cases, the time came for Rogan to
give his final summation. Slowly, he rose from his chair. He picked
up his briefcase, and without saying a word, walked over to the
jury box. He opened the briefcase. He took out glass and a can of
beer. He put the glass on the rail of the jury box. Then he opened
the can and filled the glass. He took out a second can and a second
glass and did the same thing. Then a third. He kept pouring until
ten full glasses and ten empty cans lined the rail.
He looked at the accused. He looked at the survivors of the crash.
He looked at the jury. Then he snapped his fingers and sat down.
Without ever uttering a syllable.
The jury returned a guilty verdict in under 45 minutes.
In What They Don't Teach You at The Harvard Business School, Mark
McCormick relates one of my favorite examples of changing the scale.
It happened at Ford Motor Company in the 1950s. Robert McNamara
was head of the company, and their finance people were telling them
they needed to close yet another plant in order to cut costs. At
a meeting of top executives, no one wanted another closure yet nobody
wanted to stand up to the numbers men.
Finally, one senior executive asked, "Why don't we close
down all the plants and then we'll really start to save money."
That remark and the perspective that came with it turned the meeting
around. The plant remained open.

Speaker and consultant, Barry Maher provides "real
world tactics and reality-based motivation" for increasing
personal productivity AND job satisfaction. This article is adapted
from his book, "Filling the Glass: The Skeptic's Guide to Positive
Thinking in Business" which Today's Librarian honored as "[One
of] The Seven Essential Popular Business Books." Sign up for
his free email newsletter at www.barrymaher.com
or contact him at 760 962-9872 or [email protected].
Copyright 2004, Barry Maher. Used by permission.

|