"Say not that I have found the the
truth, rather say that I have found a truth that
makes life meaningful for us."
Values motivate, ethics constrain. Because we
live in a society, we are not free to live our
values any way we want. Obviously society must
have some say in how we live our values. It is
through dialogue with each other, around our
values, that we can, hopefully, come to some
agreement as to how we can or should live our
values.
Before we begin this dialogue, we must firstly
know what values are important to us and to those
with whom we regularly come in contact. In an
organisational context, the following model is a
useful framework to guide this journey of values
discovery (click on thumbnail to view, use
browser's back button to return to the eZine - PDF
versions are provided so you can print out the
diagrams):

[PDF
Version]
Let's walk through this model step
by step. For a start, each of us has values that
lie behind the choices we make, the goals we set
for ourselves, and the life-style to which we
aspire (click thumbnail to enlarge):

[PDF
Version]
In the above diagram, people in
the organisation, have their own goals, desired
life-style, etc. They all have a reasonable idea
as to how far along the track to attaining those
aspirations they are. For the purposes of the
diagram, a person at position 3-4 is said to have
attained more of what they aspire to than a person
at position 1-2.
Now let's look at the
organisation:

[PDF
Version]
Each organisation has its own
values (quite often different from the values
shared by many people in the organisation). As
depicted in the above diagram, the organisation's
values lie behind the organisation's decisions
about its desired culture, targets, vision, etc.
We can depict the extent to which an organisation
is performing in meeting its targets, goals, etc.
with arrows on the diagram: As the organisation
lifts its performance from position 1-3 to
position 2-4 it has moved closer to achieving its
targets, etc. (i.e. it's performance level has
increased).
When we overlay the last two
diagrams, we get the model we started with:

Now the numbers 1, 2, 3 & 4
take on a new significance...
POSITION ONE:
This person is performing at an unsatisfactory
low level in the eyes of their organisation and
they have attained little in terms of their own
aspirations. They are likely to be sacked or leave
of their own accord.
POSITION TWO:
This person is performing well in the eyes of
the organisation but is personally gaining little
from the experience. They will perform well only
in the short term, and are likely to be highly
stressed and dissatisfied, and will probably leave
or worse still, become unwell.
POSITION THREE:
A person in this position is attaining all they
want in life through the organisation. The
organisation on the other hand does not consider
they are contributing enough. This person may
require feedback, coaching developing, training or
even repositioning. However, there is another
possibility. The person may be on the right track,
yet the organisation doesn't see it! In other
words, the person may be "ahead of their
time" and worth listening to.
POSITION FOUR:
This in the ideal situation. When there is a
match between an individual’s key values and
those of the organisation, this individual is
perceived to be be contributing and is also
personally attaining their desires, wants and
preferences. This is the condition in which
optimum fulfilment is achievable, and in most
cases results in high productivity and
profitability.
What position are you? 1, 2, 3 or 4?
We've set up a min-poll so you can compare
yourself with others (by the way, it's a totally
anonymous survey).
How do you get to Position 4? How do you
create an organisation where as most people are at
Position 4?
We'll answer these questions in the next
Minessence eZine. If you don't want to wait,
download the AVI LifeStyle Planner. It is designed
to facilitate the process.