- Create a virtual community board where employees, partners and even customers can share what they are grateful for daily. Sounds idealistic?
Sounds like a nightmare. Imagine being The Employee Who Didn't Say Something Positive Yesterday!.
(Disclaimer: I was primed by reading http://kotaku.com/5484581/japan-its-not-funny-anymore right before this.)
That was my first thought too. Does it mean that I am a negative person? Does it mean that I would be fired?
By the way I do agree with some of the assumptions. Giving positive feedback is good, and people who don't provide it regularly should learn it. It's just... when someone is forced to behave positively way above their "natural" level (which can also change day to day), it can be a painful experience. But where the positivity is mandatory or a strong social norm, even admitting that this kind of pain exists is in a strong conflict with the s...
From the Harvard Business Review, an article entitled: "Can We Reverse The Stanford Prison Experiment?"
By: Greg McKeown
Posted: June 12, 2012
Clicky Link of Awesome! Wheee! Push me!
Summary:
Royal Canadian Mounted Police attempt a program where they hand out "Positive Tickets"
This idea can be applied to Real Life