Recognize This! – There is tremendous power in recognition, acknowledgment and appreciation, if you give it properly and accept it properly.
I just watched a terrific I need to share with you. Given by Christopher Littlefield, founder of AcknowledgmentWorks, this short 17-minute video is well worth your time.
Christopher starts the video with this:
And ends with this:
In between he explains the data he gathered as a “street researcher” – 365 interviews with people he sat next to on planes or the subway – asking people, “What makes a good acknowledgment or compliment by a boss or supervisor?”
How We Sabotage Giving Recognition
Unsurprisingly, 9 out of 10 times, he got stories of bad praise practices instead, leading him to these three ineffective practices that breakdown trust and actually hurt our relationships and connections with others.
1) Give a compliment right before asking for something.
2) Sandwich feedback or criticism between two compliments. (As Christopher points out, “Any compliment followed by a ‘but’ is not actually a compliment.”)
3) Ridicule a person you don’t like who is being recognized when you’re not. (More wisdom from Christopher, “It’s time to give up the idea that someone else’s success is our failure. That’s just made up!”)
Or, as Christopher puts it: “That’s not recognition. That’s manipulation!”
How We Sabotage Receiving Recognition
And then there are the destructive practices we do to ourselves such as getting in mind our own definition of success and then being unwilling to accept compliments or praise for results (even very good results) that fall short of our own definition of success. So we divert the praise; we disavow it in some way. But there are real consequences for this learned behavior. Christopher explains:
Listen particularly around the 14-minute mark for a great story on just how powerful a difference this really can make.
How have you sabotaged recognition or seen others do so?