Read Drive: The Surprising Truth About What Motivates Us Page 19


  12 Kennon M. Sheldon and Lawrence S. Krieger, “Understanding the Negative Effects of Legal Education on Law Students: A Longitudinal Test of Self-Determination Theory,” Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin 33 ( June 2007).

  13 William H. Rehnquist, The Legal Profession Today, 62 Ind. L.J. 151, 153 (1987).

  14 Jonathan D. Glater, “Economy Pinches the Billable Hour at Law Firms,” New York Times, January 19, 2009.

  15 Cali Ressler and Jody Thompson, Why Work Sucks and How to Fix It (New York: Portfolio, 2008).

  16 Tamara J. Erickson, “Task, Not Time: Profile of a Gen Y Job,” Harvard Business Review (February 2008): 19.

  17 Diane Brady and Jena McGregor, “Customer Service Champs,” BusinessWeek, March 2, 2009.

  18 Martha Frase-Blunt, “Call Centers Come Home,” HR Magazine 52 ( January 2007): 84; Ann Bednarz, “Call Centers Are Heading for Home,” Network World, January 30, 2006.

  19 Paul Restuccia, “What Will Jobs of the Future Be? Creativity, Self-Direction Valued,” Boston Herald, February 12, 2007. Gary Hamel, The Future of Management (Boston: Harvard Business School Press, 2007).

  20 Bharat Mediratta, as told to Julie Bick, “The Google Way: Give Engineers Room,” New York Times, October 21, 2007.

  21 See, for example, S. Parker, T. Wall, and P. Hackson, “That’s Not My Job: Developing Flexible Employee Work Orientations,” Academy of Management Journal 40 (1997): 899-929.

  22 Marylene Gagné and Edward L. Deci, “Self-Determination Theory and Work Motivation,” Journal of Organizational Behavior 26 (2005): 331-62.

  CHAPTER 5. MASTERY

  1 Jack Zenger, Joe Folkman, and Scott Edinger, “How Extraordinary Leaders Double Profits,” Chief Learning Officer, July 2009.

  2 Rik Kirkland, ed., What Matters? Ten Questions That Will Shape Our Future (McKinsey Management Institute, 2009), 80.

  3 Mihalyi Csikszentmihalyi, Beyond Boredom and Anxiety: Experiencing Flow in Work and Play, 25th anniversary edition (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2000), xix.

  4 Ann March, “The Art of Work,” Fast Company, August 2005.

  5 This account comes from both an interview with Csikszentmihalyi, March 3, 2009, and from March, “The Art of Work.”

  6 Henry Sauerman and Wesley Cohen, “What Makes Them Tick? Employee Motives and Firm Innovation,” NBER Working Paper No. 14443, October 2008.

  7 Amy Wrzesniewski and Jane E. Dutton, “Crafting a Job: Revisioning Employees as Active Crafters of Their Work,” Academy of Management Review 26 (2001): 181.

  8 Carol S. Dweck, Self-Theories: Their Role in Motivation, Personality, and Development (Philadelphia: Psychology Press, 1999), 17.

  9 Ibid.

  10 Angela L. Duckworth, Christopher Peterson, Michael D. Matthews, and Dennis R. Kelly, “Grit: Perseverance and Passion for Long-Term Goals,” Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 92 ( January 2007): 1087.

  11 K. Anders Ericsson, Ralf T. Krampe, and Clemens Tesch Romer, “The Role of Deliberate Practice in the Acquisition of Expert Performance,” Psychological Review 100 (December 1992): 363.

  12 For two excellent popular accounts of some of this research, see Geoff Colvin, Talented Is Overrated: What Really Separates World-Class Performers from Everybody Else (New York: Portfolio, 2008), and Malcolm Gladwell, Outliers: The Story of Success (New York: Little, Brown, 2008). Both books are recommended in the Type I Toolkit.

  13 Daniel F. Chambliss, “The Mundanity of Excellence: An Ethnographic Report on Stratification and Olympic Swimmers,” Sociological Theory 7 (1989).

  14 Duckworth et al., “Grit.”

  15 Dweck, Self-Theories, 41.

  16 Clyde Haberman, “David Halberstam, 73, Reporter and Author, Dies,” New York Times, April 24, 2007.

  17 The passage is quoted in David Galenson, Painting Outside the Lines: Patterns of Creativity in Modern Art (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2001), 53. See also Daniel H. Pink, “What Kind of Genius Are You?” Wired 14.07 ( July 2006).

  18 This study is explained in detail in Chapters 10 and 11 of Csikszentmihalyi’s Beyond Boredom and Anxiety, which is the source of all quotations here.

  19 Csikszentmihalyi, Beyond Boredom and Anxiety, 190.

  CHAPTER 6. PURPOSE

  1 United Nations Statistics Division, Gender Info 2007, Table 3a (2007). Available at http://www.devinfo.info/genderinfo/.

  2 “Oldest Boomers Turn 60,” U.S. Census Bureau Facts for Features, No. CB06-FFSE.01-2, January 3, 2006.

  3 Gary Hamel, “Moon Shots for Management,” Harvard Business Review, February 2009): p. 91.

  4 Sylvia Hewlett, “The ‘Me’ Generation Gives Way to the ‘We’ Generation,” Financial Times, June 19, 2009.

  5 Marjorie Kelly, “Not Just for Profit,” strategy+business 54 (Spring 2009): 5.

  6 Kelly Holland, “Is It Time to Re-Train B-Schools?” New York Times, March 14, 2009; Katharine Mangan, “Survey Finds Widespread Cheating in M.B.A. Programs,” Chronicle of Higher Education, September 19, 2006.

  7 See the MBA Oath website, http://mbaoath.org/about/history.

  8 Hamel, “Moon Shots for Management,” p. 93.

  9 Full disclosure: I worked for Reich for a few years in the early 1990s. You can read a short account of this idea at Robert B. Reich, “The ‘Pronoun Test’ for Success,” Washington Post, July 28, 1993.

  10 “Evaluating Your Business Ethics: A Harvard Professor Explains Why Good People Do Unethical Things,” Gallup Management Journal ( June 12, 2008). Available at http://gmj.gallup.com/content/107527/evaluating-your-business-ethics.aspx.

  11 Elizabeth W. Dunn, Lara B. Ankin, and Michael I. Norton, “Spending Money on Others Promotes Happiness,” Science 21 (March 2008).

  12 Drake Bennett, “Happiness: A Buyer’s Guide,” Boston Globe, August 23, 2009.

  13 Tait Shanafelt et al., “Career Fit and Burnout Among Academic Faculty,” Archives of Internal Medicine 169, no. 10 (May 2009): 990-95.

  14 Christopher P. Niemiec, Richard M. Ryan, and Edward L. Deci, “The Path Taken: Consequences of Attaining Intrinsic and Extrinsic Aspirations,” Journal of Research in Personality 43 (2009): 291-306.

  15 Ibid.

  INDEX

  Page numbers set in italics indicate illustrations.

  Accountability

  Achievement; beliefs and; goals and; individual ; intrinsic motivation and; mastery and; purpose and

  Adams, Scott

  Addiction, extrinsic rewards and

  The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, Twain

  Adversity, responses to

  Affirmative action, ethics and

  Akerlof, George

  Aknin, Lara

  Algorithmic tasks; extrinsic rewards and

  Allowances, for children

  Alpine Access

  Altruism, rewards and

  Amabile, Teresa; and algorithmic tasks; and creativity

  The Amateurs: The Story of Four Young Men and Their Quest for an Olympic Gold Medal, Halberstam

  Anderson, Brad

  Anderson, Max

  Anderson, Ray

  Anxiety, profit goals and

  Apache

  Ariely, Dan; Predictably Irrational

  Art, autonomy and

  Artists: and mastery; motivations

  Aspirations of college graduates

  Asymptote, mastery as

  Atlassian

  Auden, W. H.

  Australia, software company

  Autonomous motivation

  Autonomy; business management and; child’s allowances and; in child’s homework ; contingent rewards and; control and; and creativity ; and motivation; need for ; in organizations; and performance; and purpose; ROWE and ; Type I behavior and

  Autotelic experiences; work and. See also “Flow”

  Baard, Paul

  Baby-boom generation; and purpose

  Baseline rewards

  Bazerman, Max

  B Corporations

  Becker, Gary

  Behavior: g
ood, rewards and; motivations for; negative consequences; types A and B; types I and X,

  —unethical, extrinsic motivation and. See also Type I behavior; Type X behavior

  Behavioral economics

  Behavioral science: self-determination theory; work categories

  Beliefs, and achievements

  Bénabou, Roland

  Best Buy

  Beyond Boredom and Anxiety: Experiencing Flow in Work and Play, Csikszentmihalyi

  Bharat, Krishna

  Big Picture Learning

  Billable hours

  Biological drives

  Blood donors, motivation

  Boston Globe

  Brain, response to rewards

  Breen, Bill, The Future of Management

  Bucheit, Paul

  Buffett, Warren

  Built to Last, Collins and Porras

  Business management: and autonomy ; goals of; McGregor’s approaches to ; premises of; problems of; as technology

  Business model, open source

  Business organizations; management of; and motivation; policies of ; and purpose; Type I toolkit for. See also Business management

  Cadet Basic Training

  Call centers

  Candle problem

  Cannon-Brookes, Mike

  Carrot-and-stick. See Punishment; Rewards

  Carse, James P., Finite and Infinite Games: A Vision of Life as Play and Possibility

  Casinos

  Cézanne, Paul

  Challenges, as opportunities

  Chambliss, Daniel

  Charitable acts, monetary incentives and

  Charitable giving, as corporate policy

  Chen, Jenova

  Children: chores for; and “flow” state; motivation of

  Coe, Sebastian

  Collins, Jim; and Drucker, Peter F. ; Good to Great

  Colvin, Geoff, Talent Is Overrated: What Really Separates World-Class Performers from Everybody Else

  Commissioned art

  Compensation, motivational

  Competence, need for

  Competing for the Future, Hamel

  Competition, within groups

  Complexity of work

  Compliance; Motivation 2.0 and

  Computers; and intellectual labor

  Conduct, code of, and purpose

  Contingent rewards; and creativity. See also “If-then” rewards

  Control: autonomy and; bosses and management and

  Controlled motivation

  Conversation starters

  Cooperatives

  Cornell University, autonomy study

  Cowell, Simon

  Creativity; extrinsic motivators and ; freedom in; motivations and; rewards and

  Creativity: Flow and the Psychology of Discovery and Invention, Csikszentmihalyi

  Csikszentmihalyi, Mihaly ; Beyond Boredom and Anxiety; Creativity; Finding Flow: The Psychology of Engagement with Everyday Life; Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience ; Good Work: When Excellence and Ethics Meet; measurement of “flow,” and purpose

  Customer service representatives

  The Daily Drucker, Drucker

  Damon, William, Good Work: When Excellence and Ethics Meet

  Deci, Edward L. ; and autonomy ; and extrinsic aspirations; and intrinsic motivation ; Intrinsic Motivation ; Soma puzzle study ; Why We Do What We Do: Understanding Self-Motivation

  Decision latitude

  Decision-making, rewards and

  Deliberate practice; mastery and

  Discussion guide

  Disutility, work as

  DIY (do it yourself) report cards

  Dopamine, rewards and

  Drives, motivational

  Drucker, Peter F.

  Dumbing Us Down, Gatto

  Duncker, Karl

  Dunn, Elizabeth

  Dutton, Jane

  Dweck, Carol; and effort; Mindset: The New Psychology of Success; and praise for children; and self-theories

  Echo boomers. See Young adults

  Economic bubbles

  Economics: and behavior; modern, views of

  Educators, Type I toolkit

  Effort: mastery and; self-theories and

  Employees: and mastery; and organizational goals; views of

  Empowerment; notion of

  Encyclopedias, online

  Engagement; autonomy and; and “flow,”; and mastery ; Motivation 3.0 and

  Enjoyment-based intrinsic motivation

  Eno, Brian

  Entity theory of intelligence; effort and

  Entrepreneurs: and autonomy; and open-source software; and purpose

  Environmental drive. See also Punishment; Rewards

  Erickson, Tamara

  Ericsson, Anders

  Erving, Julius

  Ethical standards

  Excellence, mundanity of

  Exercise, physical, Type I,

  Experience Sampling Method

  External drives

  External fairness of compensation

  External motivations, and algorithmic tasks

  External rewards, Type X behavior and

  Extrinsic aspirations

  Extrinsic motivations; and creativity; ethical standards as; and human irrationality; management and; negative effects; open source and; positive results; Type X behavior and

  Extrinsic rewards; artists and ; and short-term thinking ; unexpected

  Fairness in compensation

  Falk, Stefan

  Farquhar, Scott

  Fast Company magazine

  Federer, Roger

  FedEx days; for children

  Feedback: critical, mastery and; praise as; for students

  Ferris, Joshua, Then We Came to the End

  The Fifth Discipline: The Art and Practice of the Learning Organization, Senge

  Financial incentives, and performance

  Finding Flow: The Psychology of Engagement with Everyday Life, Csikszentmihalyi

  Finite and Infinite Games, Case

  Firefox

  Fitness plan, Type I

  “Five Dangerous Things You Should Let Your Children Do,” Tulley

  Fixed mindset

  Flaste, Richard, Why We Do What We Do: Understanding Self-Motivation

  Flex time

  Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience, Csikszentmihalyi

  “Flow” (mental state); and anxiety; children and ; mastery and ; measurement of; open-source projects and

  flOw (video game)

  Flowchart, rewards use

  Flow-friendly environments

  fMRI (functional magnetic resonance imaging), reward study

  “For-benefit” organizations

  Fourth Sector Network

  Freedom: creative; human

  Freud, Sigmund

  Frey, Bruno

  Friedman, Meyer

  Friedman, Milton

  Fry, Art

  Functional fixedness

  Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), reward study

  The Future of Management, Hamel and Breen

  Galenson, David

  Gardner, Howard; Good Work: When Excellence and Ethics Meet

  Gatto, John Taylor, Dumbing Us Down

  Generalized anxiety disorder

  Generation Y

  Georgetown University Hospital

  Gladwell, Malcolm, Outliers: The Story of Success

  Glossary

  Glucksberg, Sam

  Gneezy, Uri

  Goals; of college graduates ; in “flow,” ; individual performance review; organizational, setting of; publicly held companies and ; purpose and; ROWEs and; self-fulfilling ; self-theories and ; Type X behavior and

  Godin, Seth

  Goldilocks tasks ; for groups

  Good behavior, rewards and

  Good to Great, Collins

  Good Work: When Excellence and Ethics Meet, Gardner, Csikszentmihalyi, and Damon

  Goodwin, Doris Kearns, Team of Rivals: The Political
Genius of Abraham Lincoln

  Google

  Grades, students and

  Green, Francis

  Green Cargo

  Greene, David

  Grit, mastery and

  Grouplets

  Groups, Goldilocks tasks for

  Growth mindset

  Gunther, Jeff

  Halberstam, David, The Amateurs: The Story of Four Young Men and Their Quest for an Olympic Gold Medal

  Hamel, Gary; The Future of Management ; and management ; and wealth maximization

  Happiness: fulfilling work and; money and

  Harlow, Harry F.; primate behavior study

  Harvard Business School students

  Health, Type I behavior and

  Heart disease, incidence of

  Heuristic tasks; rewards and

  Hewlett, Sylvia

  Home Education Magazine

  Homeschooling

  Homeshoring

  Homework, for children

  Homo Oeconomicus Maturus (Mature Economic Man)

  Household chores, and allowances

  How the Mighty Fall, Collins

  Hsieh, Tony

  Human behavior

  Human condition, intrinsic motivation and

  Human nature; and autonomy

  Human needs, universal

  The Human Side of Enterprise, McGregor

  Humanistic psychology

  “Hurry sickness,”

  Identity, good work and

  “If-then” rewards; and addiction; allowances as; and altruism; and creativity; Hsieh and; and mastery; praise as; and routine tasks; and thinking

  Incentives, and performance

  Incremental theory of intelligence ; effort and

  Independence, autonomy and

  India, extrinsic incentives test

  Individuals: and autonomy; Type I toolkit for

  Industrial Revolution

  “Infinite games,”

  Informational motivators

  Innovation

  Intellectual challenge, productivity and

  Intelligence, beliefs about

  Interest, capacity for