THE
PYGMALION EFFECT AND WHY IT IS CRUCIAL TO EMPLOYEE PRODUCTIVITY
“OK, that was not good. I want you try it again…with passion.
This time, I want to feel what you believe, rather than hear what
you believe. I want you to forget what you have learned the content to be and
give to me raw, what you believe in about the content of your presentation”, I
said. “I know you can do this”.
The turnaround was amazing. From a stilted presentation that was
hard to listen to and harder to believe – let alone get excited about – to a
presentation that was passionate, gripping, and held my attention for every
moment, even though I knew the content intimately. Our consultant had just
become a presenter. Prior to this, she had been willing, but unable. Afraid of the
audience and self-critical of each word as it came from her mouth, she was
afraid of presenting.
I knew she had the capability and the capacity to present. In
the office, when she strayed on to a topic that she was passionate about, she
could easily hold the room.
Without provocation and guidance on what she had to do to
present well, she would never have crossed the Rubicon of fear of presenting in
large groups of intelligent people, who held opinions about the content she was
delivering.
A “Good Effort” from me, on the other hand, delivered without
conviction and no intent to use her as a presenter and develop her into a
facilitator as she gained experience, would have left her underwhelmed and
lacking even more in confidence.
Worse still, would be if I used extreme language and suggested
that she ‘always looked nervous’ or ‘never engaged her audience’, or if I used
a label like ‘stupid’ or ‘useless’. The end result would have been not only a
lack of confidence on herself, but also a justifiable lack of confidence in me
as her manager.
When we have expectations of people and communicate them, more
often than not those expectations will be met. If they are not met, we can
generally be assured that the people’s behaviour and attitude is much more
positive than when we do not have expectations or do not communicate them.
Not only that, the more we – as leaders – engage our people in
learning activities, the higher our expectations become and, in turn, our
people engage in more learning behaviour.
Pygmalion Effect
The effect of setting high expectations on people, coined the
Pygmalion effect, was first postulated in a study of teachers’ impact on
students (Rossenthal & Jacobson, 1968). In the study, students at an
elementary school took intelligence pre-tests. Rosenthal and Jacobsen then
informed the teachers of the names of twenty percent of the students in the
school who were showing “unusual potential for intellectual growth” and would
bloom academically within the year. Unknown to the teachers, these students were
selected randomly, with no relation to the initial test. When Rosenthal and
Jacobson tested the students eight months later, they discovered that the group
of randomly selected students scored significantly higher.
In the workplace, a study on the Israeli defence forces (Eden,
1992) revealed two effects of setting expectations:
1.
Leadership mediates the Pygmalion effect. Raising manager
expectations improves leadership, which in turn promotes subordinate
performance.
2.
Managers allocate leadership resources to subordinates in
proportion to their expectations.
The implications of the first effect are that setting
expectations, and setting them high, improves our leadership capabilities and
our people’s performance.
The implications of the second effect were reported as,
“Evidently, high expectations bring out the best leadership in a manager. This
suggests the hypothesis that if managers would treat all their subordinates to
the same quality leadership that they lavish upon those of whom they expect the
most, all would perform better”.
Creating a Pygmalion Effect in the Workplace
So what does this mean for us, as leaders in the workplace? How
do we motivate ourselves to become better leaders by setting higher
expectations?
Remove negative expectations of performance
As leaders we need to remove any cultural, personal, gender, age
or other stereotypes we and our peers might hold.
When I was General Manager of Shell Fiji, I lost count of the
number of times I was told what Fijians could not do. Ad-nauseum I heard about
it being almost impossible for Fijians to arrive on time, to deliver against
their goals and be capable of complex thinking. Hogwash! Refusing to accept the
cultural crutch of ‘Fiji Time’ in the workplace and setting different cultural
expectations in the workplace was the beginning for a tremendous growth phase
in the business and the people.
It is imperative that we start with the premise that people can
do almost anything with the right leadership and support.
Wipe the slate clean
If there has been a history of underperformance in individuals,
it is important to consign discussion about those performances to the dustbin
of history. Give everyone the chance to make a change to find their purpose and
understand their responsibilities and what is expected of them in terms of
performance.
Set high expectations
Don’t aim low or set small incremental gains in performance.
When people are given incremental performance improvement targets, there is a
high risk that their thinking will fit the norms of ‘work harder’, when what is
definitely needed is ‘work smarter’. When people are given seemingly difficult
goals, it forces them to think differently, especially if we help them with
that different thinking.
Set the right
expectations
Setting expectations of people can have a negative effect if we
set the wrong ones, so some careful analysis and thinking is required before we
set off on our journey of getting people to achieve things they thought were
not possible. The law of unintended consequences applies to everyone setting
performance indicators and goals.
For example, when I ran a production centre, the prevailing goal
for staff involved in blending, filling and warehousing products was to achieve
a minimum productivity rate. Initially, I set higher productivity targets. They
responded and achieved higher productivity but at the expense of medium and
small runs of products, which were slower to blend and fill. They constantly
ran out of stock. Customers and the marketing team were always unhappy, extra
stocks were held ‘just in case’ and the warehouse was too small to house the
increase in inventory we carried. When I changed the goal on reflection to
having low levels of out of stocks, productivity actually improved, all
stakeholders were happier and the warehouse space required reduced by more than
25%.
Train and coach our
people to be self-efficacious
After setting our ambitious goals, it is important that we
support our staff in being able to reach these goals. This may include skills
or knowledge training and workplace coaching or mentoring. Our people must feel
it is very important to try and that we will support them through a few
missteps and, where necessary, assist directly in building their skills.
Give feedback
Even our most able and most willing people, who need little
skill or knowledge building, need feedback on how they are doing. Even if they
seem embarrassed by positive feedback, it is crucial that people who have
accepted the challenge of higher expectations feel that warm inner glow of having
delivered something difficult.
For those who are struggling, we must at first give positive
feedback on their level of effort and give constructive feedback on how they
can improve their performance.
Works Cited
Eden, D. (1992). Leadership and expectations: pygmalion effects
and other self-fulfilling prophecies in organisations. Leadership
Quarterly, 3(4) , 271-305. .
Rossenthal, R., & Jacobson, L. (1968). Pygmalion in
the classroom. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston.
www.changefactory.com.au. (n.d.). Managing
performance: The Pygmalion Effect of Leadership. [online] Available at:
https://www.changefactory.com.au/our-thinking/articles/managing-performance-pygmalion-effect-leadership/
[Accessed 26 Apr. 2022].
Nice write up.But I have doubt of this effect could come from Literature...👍
ReplyDeleteYou have chosen a different title. PYGMALION is a new topic for me. So I read this with great interest. Thanks for choosing a title like this. nice writing. good luck.
ReplyDeletethanks for your valued comment kumudu
DeleteYou have discussed about an interesting topic. Pygmalion is new one for me and i got a huge idea about Pygmalion by reading this article. Good Luck Manoj!
ReplyDeletethanks for your comment sachini
DeleteYou a topic is a understand good job
ReplyDeletethanks kithsiri
DeleteThe Pygmalion effect occurs when others' expectations influence an individual's performance. Likewise, it can affect employee performance in organizations. All the best!!
ReplyDeletereally thanks for your valued comment gayan
DeleteHi, As mentioned in your post, Pygmalion is about having high expectations and being motivated to become a better leader. You have well explained the importance of Pygmalion. It will also be a good support for the growth of an organization. All the best!
ReplyDeletereally thanks tharindu
DeleteThis is interesting article about Pygmalion Effect.you have nicely descried importance of pygmalion. good luck
ReplyDeletereally thanks sashitha
DeleteThis topic is new to me and I was able to understand a lot of new information from this article. Pygmalion means that the employer has higher expectations of the employee than the employee's ability. This employer or trainer will put more effort into achieving the goals and the employee performance will be higher. All the best
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing the document related to
ReplyDeletePygmalion effect
Thank you for making the material on the Pygmalion effect available to us. It is a really valuable document.
ReplyDeleteThank you for providing the Pygmalion effect paper. It is an easy-to-understand document.
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing the document
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing the document for the knowledge
ReplyDeletethanks
Delete