Tuesday, May 19, 2020

Getting credit for your ideas is overrated

Getting credit for your ideas is overrated Your success at work is dependent on your accomplishments, not your ideas. So can everyone please stop being so petty about whose ideas are whose? A very small number of you are strategists and inventors. For you, your ideas make or break your career. So dont bother reading the rest of this column. For the rest of you, face the music: You are not paid to come up with ideas. You are paid to execute them. So lets say youre a marketing manager and you have a great idea to spam the whole world to get them to buy soap. Spamming is not an innovation, and selling soap has been done before, too. The person who is a genius will be the person who can make a spam campaign work. That would require direct mail expertise, figuring out which product is most likely to sell, setting up fulfillment capabilities. Lets say the spam campaign is a success. Whos the genius? The person with the idea to spam or the person who actually increased soap sales? Let me tell you something, in this economy, few companies can afford an ideas guy. Companies are hiring people who generate revenue: executors. Look, Im not saying the world doesnt need ideas. Ideas are great. And in the perfect world, everyone gets credit for the ideas they have. But the world isnt perfect, and people steal ideas at work. And while we fight off large imperfections like fake (Enron) companies, race discrimination and massive layoffs, getting credit for an idea is pretty small peanuts. Yet still, I hear people complain about a stolen idea as if it was their first-born child. And sometimes I think maybe it was. Maybe the people who worry about a stolen idea the most are the people who have the fewest ideas. Ask yourself if your problem is not really thievery but scarcity. If you dont have a lot of ideas to begin with then you shouldnt bother trying to be known for your ideas. Its not who you are. Most people who complain about stolen ideas peg their boss as the culprit. If youre in this category ask yourself this question: Is your job in jeopardy because your boss thinks you have no good ideas? In that case you probably need to start documenting your ideas on paper. But I have news for you: your boss probably doesnt like you if she recognizes you so little as to steal your brilliance and accuse you of lacking ideas. In that case, you can grovel for credit, but you should probably try to find a job working for someone else. And heres a tip for when youre looking for that next job: Dont bother listing your great ideas on your resume. No one cares. Employers want to see resumes with quantified accomplishments. Replace thought of opening a new sales channel to opened a sales channel and increased revenue x%. Maybe your boss steals just a few ideas, but is generally a good boss. In that case, ignore her ethical transgression. You have a limited number of times you can tell your boss she is bothering you. Use those times for instances when you will make more money. If your bonus is tied to having an original idea, then by all means, point out the idea that your boss stole so that you can collect your money. But if the only thing that a stolen idea harms is your ego, then get over it. Besides, the best way to get a promotion is to make your boss love you. And you can make your boss love you by making her feel smart. If your boss feels smart it doesnt mean that she thinks you are not smart. Dont be so insecure. It should be enough that you know that you have good ideas.

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