Internal Competition Can Kill Your Organization - Get Articles by Carole Nicolaides

Get Articles
 
  

submit your own reprintable article

Article Categories

Accepting Credit Cards Online
Accounting and Book-Keeping
Advertising
Affiliate and Associate Programs
Articles and Article Promotion
Autoresponders and How To Use Them
Bonuses and Freebies
Branding
Business Ideas
Business Practice
Communication Skills
Competition and Your Competitors
Copywriting
Creativity and Ideas
Customer Service and Support
Domains and Domain Names
Due Diligence
E-Commerce
Ebooks and Ebook Writing
Education
Email List Building
Email Marketing
Ethics and Morals
Expert Status
Ezines and Email Newsletters
Family
Forums
Fraud and Scams
Goal Setting
Graphics and Graphic Design
Guarantees
Health
Internet Auctions
Internet Marketing
Investment and Investing
Job and Career
Joint Ventures
Lead Generation
Legislation and Legal Issues
Management and Best Practice
Motivation
Negotiation
Networking
News Releases and Public Relations
Niche Marketing
Outsourcing
Pay Per Click Search Engines
PC Security and Viruses
Pricing and Supply and Demand
Product Creation
Public Speaking
Publicity
Relationship Building
Reprint Rights
Revenue Generation
Search Engines and SEO
Site Stickiness - Getting Repeat Visitors
Software Reviews
Spam - Unsolicited Commercial Email
Statistics and Tracking
Testimonials
Time Management
Traffic Generation - Getting Hits
Travel
Viral Marketing
Web Hosting
Web Site Design
Working At Home - Starting Out
Blank Page
 
Google
 

> Get Articles > Management and Best Practice > Internal Competition Can Kill Your Organization

Internal Competition Can Kill Your Organization


PDF icon Download as PDF

Carole Nicolaides
caroleprogressiveleadership.com

Progressive Leadership
http://www.progressiveleadership.com


by Carole Nicolaides © 2001

http://www.progressiveleadership.com



Competition is believed to be the driver of the Western Economy. Most Western countries believe that competition produces innovation, stimulates thinking, and it is simply characterized by many as the engine of capitalism. In a similar fashion, "internal competition drives business results" has become a popular saying. Mercedes Benz from Germany, Intel from the US and others across the western hemisphere encourage internal competition.



However, this type of practice is highly contradictory to organizational effectiveness and knowledge management practices. Internal competition can be so damaging that it leads to isolation of information (aka "job security"), loss of employees, breaks in the organizational flow chart, corporate disloyalty and other negative effects. The solution is to create a true "team" environment where the goal is to improve the corporate good through collaboration.



Unfortunately, the reality is different, people are still getting compensated and evaluated:

1) based on individual contribution (employee of the month )

2) based on forced distribution (a performance evaluation that gives only a few people the highest evaluation simply because everyone can't have an "A")

3) with forced distributions on merit (if one employee within a department receives a raise then another cannot)

4) with contests between employees for various monetary and non-monetary prizes



It simply contradicts everything that knowledge management and organizational effectiveness teach us about the united communication between individuals and departments.



Knowledge acquired and guarded only by one means absolutely nothing. It does not grow like money. It stays stagnant and eventually will be lost along with all value it might have brought to your company.



Edward Deming, the quality management guru, knew very well that relative performance evaluations and other merit ratings breed internal completion and bad management practices. He argued that these systems require leaders to label people as poor performers even though their work is well within the range of high quality.



Competition is great but only if it is used correctly or in a setting of a "collaborative competition" not one of peer against peer. When employees are trying to "look out for #1", how can we expect to receive knowledge sharing and organizational cooperation?



Below are some tips that can you use to overcome internal competition and help to breed an atmosphere of open communication and organizational collaboration.



1. Hire and reward employees based on their ability to work cooperatively to reach corporate goals

2. Fire people who destroy united communication

3. Focus people's attention on identifying external opportunities rather than competing with one another

4. Avoid compensation and performance measurement systems that create internal competition

5. Create new compensation measures based on teamwork or collaboration to reach goals

6. Promote employees to senior positions who have a history of building teams and promote collaboration and unity

7. Encourage people to become personal with each other- once they know their peers on a more personal level they will be more apt to adopt an attitude of cooperation

8. Model and mentor the behavior that you want your teams to have.



The bottom line is that internal competition can create rifts within teams. The overall goal of any organization is to meet certain goals and aspirations. With departments full of individuals who are looking to obtain power and stature for themselves, it will continue to be difficult to reach organizational goals. As a business leader, start re-thinking the way you compensate, hire and even fire people. Start instilling systems and processes that will support the true knowledge sharing and collaboration your business needs to succeed.



Carole is President of Progressive Leadership Inc offering personal and corporate success coaching, consulting and training in Knowledge Management and Organizational Development. Visit http://www.progressiveleadership.com for more info & subscribe to her FREE Ezine.





How useful did you find this article?

Not at all
A little
Averagely
Fairly
Very
 


This article can be downloaded freely from http://www.get-articles.com and used on your website or in your ezine so long as the author is credited and their resource box left intact. You should not change any links in the article, and where the article is used on a website it's links should be clickable. Please see our terms and conditions page for more information: http://www.get-articles.com/authors-publishers-terms.php
 

Get Articles


Top Articles

  • Stop Saving Money!
    By Leo J Quinn Jr
    Rating 138 / 195
  • The Top Ten Reasons For Being Honest
    By Monique Rider
    Rating 152 / 180
  • Top 10 Qualities of a Great Team Leader
    By Naseem Mariam
    Rating 143 / 180
  • 7 M's of Every Highly Effective Manager
    By Alonzie Scott
    Rating 124 / 175
  • Seven "Secrets/Tips" to Becoming a Millionaire
    By Craig Lock
    Rating 97 / 140
  • Five wonderful steps for good presentation skills:
    By Thomson Chemmanoor
    Rating 44 / 75
  • Do Pop-up Ads Work for Your Site?
    By Brian Su
    Rating 41 / 70
  • How to get your audience involved in your PowerPoint presentation:
    By Thomson Chemmanoor
    Rating 27 / 70
  • TOP TEN TIPS FOR PRESCRIPTION SWIMMING GOGGLES
    By Danielle Ross
    Rating 53 / 65
  • Ten Steps to a Power-Packed, Persuasive Proposal
    By Linda Elizabeth Alexander
    Rating 46 / 65
  • Insider Rollout Secrets Review
    By Alex Poole
    Rating 52 / 55
  • The 7 Signs of a Scam
    By Sharon Davis
    Rating 42 / 50
  • How to write a communication plan
    By Matt Eliason
    Rating 38 / 50
  • The MSN Ranking Code Loophole
    By Chris Rempel and Dave Kelly
    Rating 38 / 50
  • 12-Step Foolproof Sales Letter Template
    By David Frey
    Rating 41 / 45
  • Tips For Non-Sexist Writing
    By Tanja Rosteck
    Rating 35 / 45
  • Preventing Fraud On Your Website
    By Aaron Turpen
    Rating 32 / 40
  • Useless Resume Objectives
    By Rita Fisher, CPRW
    Rating 10 / 40
  • Hacker Prevention Techniques
    By Aaron Turpen
    Rating 30 / 35
  • 6 Steps to Great Customer Service
    By Aaron Turpen
    Rating 25 / 35

    May 26, 2012 © www.Get-Articles.com. All Rights Reserved.