roles people play

“And what do you do?”


How many times have you been asked this question? How many times have you asked it? My guess is more than once or twice.


When answering this question, most people respond with their job title or their job function: I’m a banker, I’m the CEO, I’m a teacher. Or they launch into their ‘elevator pitch‘. We define ourselves often by the major role we play in life. And you know that you are much more than your job: I’m a CEO, husband, lover, father, child, brother, skier, scuba diver, teacher, sleeper, trainer, coach, friend, driver, passenger, dog-walker, saxophonist, cook, customer, eater, cleaner, golfer, author, writer, musician, listener, talker, leader, manager, accountant, salesman, communicator, website builder… and that’s just the more positive ones today. Am I good at all these? Not all, and not always. There are days when my golf, for example, is fluent and near perfect, today was not one of those days. Today, I was a “shank it in the water, find every bunker, slice it out of bounds” golfer.


roles people playNormal role development

Everyone plays a number of roles in their relationships with others. The essence of personality, according to Raimundo, is the sum of the roles I play.


As a leader, the way we relate to other people is through a role. The role we play must be complimentary, and must include a common link. My effectiveness as a leader is dependent on the effectiveness of the relationship which is the link between the roles. It is the “power” between me and another.


complimetary rolesWhen we have two complementary roles relating to each other, a link is formed and is the channel of interaction; enabling the role to mature and grow stronger.


The strength of the link depends on the roles we play and each time we relate through the link, the role we are playing is developed. Some of the roles we play are poorly developed, some are well-developed. The good news is that we can develop poorly developed roles and so improve the effectiveness of our relating.


Our most developed roles are usually so because we have experience with a more established and complementary role. A good Father-Son relationship develops a string son role and, in recognition of the strong role model, transfers to a strong father role later in life as well as strengthening the role of the father.

Roles we play can be Constructive, Fragmenting or Ambivalent.

Constructive role development is a normal expectation as we exercise our roles in a complementary relationship.


ideal relationshipIn the ideal relationship, both parties have well-developed roles and are relaxed with each other allowing and enabling the link to be formed and the power of the relationship (and hence the roles themselves) develop.


Think about the well developed roles you exercise and on any roles that you think are poorly developed. What enables (or restricts) your development of these roles?

The effect of anxiety on personal space and role development

contract spaceEveryone has a space around them that we perceive belongs to us, our personal space. I’m sure that you have met someone who, you felt, was a little too close. Perhaps someone who put their face close to yours and made you feel intimidated or scared? I recall a sales meeting with a particular CEO who talked to me with his face 2 inches from mine and kept it there the entire time. I honestly thought he was going to head butt me.


When we are relaxed and at peace, our personal space contracts, other people can be closer, both physically and emotionally.


expand spaceWhen we are fearful or anxious, our personal space expands.


So when that CEO came in physically close, I became tense and needed even more space than normally, making the situation tenser.


anxious


When our personal space expands through fear or anxiety, this can interrupt or distort the operation of a particular role. In my own example above, my normal, well-developed sales role was smothered and I wanted to run from the meeting.


A (sadly) frequent example we hear from clients is the expansion of personal space after coming back home exhausted each evening from work and being unable to relate to a son or daughter as a parent. As a parent, I have three possible responses.

  1. Attack or withdraw (a reptilian, knee-jerk, emotional response).

  2. Adopt a better developed role such as that of teacher or manager.

  3. Adopt a pseudo role.

Whichever the choice, the parent role does not develop if it is not used.

Role Deficiencies

pseudo rolePseudo Roles

A pseudo role is a copied, non-integrated role. It does not develop because it is not fuelled by the actions, emotions, feelings and thinking associated with “normal” role. Such roles are not part of the “self” or “ego”, they are roles we adopt to cope with certain situations.


Pseudo-roles do not become integrated with the self which only incorporates authentic roles. They are especially evident with people who have suffered high stress levels without the freedom to respond appropriately, and they frequently become protection mechanisms.


The good news about pseudo-roles is that, the self (the ego) drops them when they are no longer necessary. A little like not needing a crutch after the leg has healed from an injury.


pseudo role 3dRelationships built on one (or both parties) pseudo role are doomed. The link may initially appear to be there but they automatically and rapidly deteriorate or dissipate when people find new positions, or new friends, or a new partner.


More often than not, coaches unaware of this, challenge pseudo-roles directly, as if they were integrated authentic roles. This is unhelpful as the owner of the pseudo-role will have significant skill in maintaining the charade. Indeed, for some, just attending a coaching session, or counselling or as simple as a performance review or meeting with the boss can create an atmosphere of heightened tension – expanding personal space. It is not possible to reach a person through this space.


Think of a time when you have used a pseudo role. What was the situation? How long did the relationship last?

Mega roles

mega rolesOften at the expense of other roles, mega roles are overdeveloped. Such roles dominate due to a lack of stimulation of other roles. And once dominant, can prevent other roles from becoming stimulated.


A frequently heard example of a mega role I hear from clients is “managing” my children. The role of “manager” is well-developed, and we may use this when a more appropriate role, such as “parent” is not so well developed. We can become a “specialist” and only function effectively as a specialist.


A coach, for example, who knows only how to relate to people as a coach, may have poorly developed roles as a friend, or spouse – tending to coach a friend rather than just be a friend.


Think of a time when you have played a mega role or recall one that you have experienced.

Developing alternate behaviours


The first step in developing appropriate behaviours in a relationship is to recognize the roles of each party. Every role played is always in relation to a counter role. A “parent” role is often appropriately countered by a “child” role, “teacher”-“student”, “manager”-“staff”, “colleague”-“colleague”.

And, we need to consider how the role is being played: For example, a “Concerned Parent” could be countered by an “Obliging Child”… that is likely to work. However, a “Concerned Manager” countered by a “Resentful Staff” is likely to have some relationship issues.

It is often the “how” part of doing a particular role that people find the most difficulty in developing. The role itself may stay the same, but the way of playing that role can change.

So first, we examine the role we are playing and how we are doing it. Is the role I am playing constructive? Is it fragmenting? Is it ambivalent?

Then we can examine the counter role being played by the other person in the relationship.

Thirdly, we can examine what we need to change to move the relationship forward. Do I change the role that I am playing? Do I change how I am doing that role? Do I change both?

Consider the following roles and counter roles and what could change to improve the relationship:

Fearful Leader

Resentful Staff

Procrastinating Manager

Stressed out Team member

Patronizing colleague

Boastful friend

Loving Disciplinarian

Guilty Liar

Gentle Clarifier

Impatient Interrupter

Pushy Salesperson

Doubtful Prospect

Demanding Boss

Fearful Child



From this table you can see that some roles we play are constructive, both the role and the “how” are positive (e.g. Gentle Clarifier). Others are fragmenting, both the role and the “how” are negative (e.g. Guilty Liar). And some are ambivalent, either the role or the “how” are negative (e.g. Patronizing ve Colleague +ve).

It is often the ambivalent roles that destroy relationships.

Once we clarify perceptions (and remember that your perception is your reality just as their perception is their reality!), the roles and counter roles can be unravelled and resolved.

Each and every day, we play a number of roles. If we want our relationships to develop, then it is in our interests to develop the appropriate (and constructive) roles that enable those relationships to grow.







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Spring newsletter

Automn News update Spring Update

Preparing for the economic upswing

Volume 18, Issue 2 – February 2010

Welcome to our Spring Update newsletter. Thank you, our clients for an excellent start to our year. Following the launch of the new GAPPS3 we are pleased to announce that the GAINMORE Leadership Advantage Handbook’s 3rd Edition is being written online and will be published (in printed book form) in December 2010.

GAINMORE™ Leadership Advantage Handbook 3rd Edition

Complimenting GAPPS3 (GAINMORE™ Advantage Potential to Performance System Version 3), the Handbook including all the support material, templates, activities and resources you are likley to need in your leadership development journey is the 3rd Edition of the GAINMORE™ Leadership Advantage Handbook.

This time, the book is being entirely re-written online, as a collaborative wiki. We will publish the hard-copy version in December 2010 and until then you are welcome to vist the online version, please add your comments and share your experiences of using the tools and techniques and, if you have something critical to add, why not collaborate with us and write a page, a chapter or add your case studies.

Courageous Conversations at Jurong Executive Course

Courageous Conversations – Overcoming the fear of those ‘difficult’ conversations

DSM – the global leader in animal nutrition asked us to design a programme for the regional team to address two specific issues: finding and developing new business and having the courage to conduct those ‘difficult conversations’.

Team members back in the workshop In business, it seems that leaders are meant to be unqiuely unhuman – they are not supposed to worry about their emotions and should simply get on with those courageous conversations.

courageousconversations1Most of you receive training on how to control and hide their emotions and behave in a professional fashion. However, professionals have emotions too. These feelings and emotions are critical components of many conversations. As Douglas Stone, Bruce Patton, and Sheila Heen (1999) point out in their book, Difficult Conversations, unexpressed emotions leak into conversations, take a toll on our self-esteem and relationships, and make it difficult for us to listen to what the other person is saying.

The programme and supporting coaching has yielded excellent results in the workplace. New clients, previously firmly stuck using a competitor have come on board. Poor performance within teams has been addressed. Existing clients who resisted price increases are willingly paying more, and overall customer satisfaction has improved. Well, we would say that wouldn’t we, so let us put you in touch directly with participants and hear their experiences direct.

Take Back Your Time!

It seems like I hear more and more often from our coaching clients that they do not have enough hours in a day to accomplish what needs to done.

Here is what they say:
They are being pulled into meetings at the last minute and have to cancel agenda items to accommodate. They are stretched by the needs of family and friends. The wonderful new technologies make them so accessible to the needs of others they barely have time to breath. The phone rings during lunch, so they can’t remember with whom they had lunch, never mind what they ate. E-mail systems beep to tell them of a new message breaking their concentration required to complete that important report. Their open door policy allows free access to them by their colleagues and subordinates, but little space in which to accomplish the real work at hand. The result is a frazzled, short tempered, scattered, unhappy, minimally productive, minimally appreciated, person that works long hours and is rewarded with little sleep, no real nourishment of body and spirit and a “to do” list a mile long and reaching for two. Does any of this sound like you?

If it does, read on, because I have news for you. It does not have to.

Too often we stay on the “gerbil wheel” of life feeling incapable of making the choice of taking the first jolting step off and instead we are thrown off by an illness or major difficulty.

Have we all forgotten and missed the true meaning of the simple warning given at the beginning of every flight we take: “If the oxygen masks should fall, indicating a change in cabin pressure, put on your own mask first, BEFORE helping your children or others in need.” Or, in everyday terms: If your life should get so full that you are losing control of even the most simple of tasks, take care of your health and well-being first so you have the ability and energy required to support the ones you love and accomplish the tasks required.

So what can you do to soften that first step off the “gerbil wheel” of life? First: stop thinking it is out of your control. You can and do have control, but you have to choose to exercise it. Second: Begin to look at all the areas of your life that are out of control or on the verge of being out of control and choose just one to look at, for the present. Third: Take one small step to gain back some time for you.

Here are some suggestions:
1. Maybe it is closing your door for two hours each day and not answering the phone, so you can concentrate on that important project.
2.Perhaps forwarding your calls or putting a message on your answer service that you will be out of range for an hour and a half and you have a relaxed business lunch or lunch with a friend.
3. You could take the alarm system off your computer e-mail and set 2 to 3 periods a day when you will read and respond to your e-mail. A time of your choosing. If this is a big change, make sure people know this and tell them when they can expect a response.
4. Set a boundary with your family or work staff and colleagues that a certain time each day is off limits time. They are not to disturb you for any reason. Then define emergency very clearly! Kids of a certain age love to be made the guard and reminder. Tell them what time you need and that it is their job to remind you and then be sure no one interrupts it. It will be a game and can be fun!

All of these ideas will help you focus on what is real and necessary and will begin the process of your taking back your time. This is just a beginning, think for yourself where you can make a difference in your life. After all, you didn’t give away your time all in one day, it probably happened gradually. Expectations were built, but these too can be modified.

Be sure to explain your changes to all the people that they may effect, this is part of the remodeling of expectations. Also set up stopgaps for problems that may arise. Get someone to cover for you if that is possible. If not, make sure people know when you will be available again to help them.

As you begin to gain some time for clarity and focus, you will notice your energy improves and your productivity will increase. You will gain even more time. Be sure you allocate some of that time for self care of your physical, personal and spiritual being.

Bryan Dyson, the former CEO of Coca-Cola explained that he feels we juggle 5 different balls: a health ball, a family ball, a friends ball, a work ball and a spirituality ball. Four of the five are made out of crystal. If we drop them, they are going to shatter. Only one ball is made out of rubber and bounces back: the work ball.

Coaching Challenge: Find one area in your life to which you are willing to apply these principles and go for it!


New Associates

We’ve been fortunate to continue growing our business in spite of the economic situation. Partly, we (and our clients) believe, because our interventions have direct and real business impact. Partly because we have a great team of associates supporting our clients. four new full time associates join the CELSIM team:
Melissa Beveridge – who specializes in helping you keep a healthy life as well as great business leadership.
Rajesh Krishnan – based in Sydney, Australia, a respected leadership trainer in his own right, Rajesh adds our GAPPS3 to his already strong portfolio.
Pippa Jamieson– Based in Nelson, New Zealand, Pippa was with the NZ Economic Development Agency and havign recently completed her ground-breaking thesis on the Glass Cliff that women ion the workforce now face, brings another dynamic addition to our associate group.
Edmund Tan – a serial entrepreneur who is now helping others emulate his success.

GAPPS 3 for Recruitment

Gettign the right fit One incentive for us to radically update our GAPPS assessment tool was the increasing number of clients asking us to help them with their recruitment.

Working with clients and currently two renowned headhunters in China and Singapore, Potter Consulting and Gary & Pearl, GAPPS3 brings additional dimensions to your recruitment process.

As with all use of our GAPPS assessment, every candidate receives feedback coaching. This has multiple benefits for the recruiting firm:

  • An objective review of the candidates leadership strengths and development areas.
  • A detailed understanding of each candidates competency and organization cultural development needs.
  • Excellent brand building as an employer.
  • Detailed competency based questions presented to the interviewer for deeper probing, reducing time and vastly improving the success rate for recruitment.

As part of our Assessment Centre design for more effective recruitment strategies, GAPPS3 for recruitment is part of our commitment to support our clients across all areas of the employee life cycle. Call us today and learn more about how we can help you.

Copyright © 2009 CELSIM http://celsim.com/ +65 62450908
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