“A good half of the art of living is resilience.” ~ Alain de Botton.
As companies embark on another tough year ahead in 2013, and a climate of ongoing uncertainty, they are increasingly placing ‘resilience’ as one of the most important qualities they are looking for in their people. But, how do you recognise resilience in people, and how do you help people develop it further?
GlaxoSmithKline have defined ‘resilience’ as: “the ability to succeed personally and professionally in the midst of a high pressured, fast moving and continuously changing environment”.
Traditional views are reflected in the language often used to describe resilient behaviour:
- “Bouncing back after being knocked down”
- “Taking the blows and coming back for more”
- “Living to fight another day”
These expressions are adversarial and have their roots in war-like and conflict-driven situations. It is arguable that a mind-set of resilience, steeped in this language, is likely to generate more friction than collaboration.
- What would it feel like to be resilient ‘in the moment’? Not walk away to ‘re-group’ and then come back re-charged and ready for the fight. Not retreat in order to re-think your strategy and make sure you win the argument the next time.
- But instead, there and then, you were to demonstrate emotional resilience, to really hear what was being said?
- What if you could ‘flip’ the situation, get behind what was being said, and assess the dynamics objectively and not react?
- What if you could show genuine curiosity in what’s happening, to hang around long enough to ask questions, to listen deeply, and to hear people out?
- What might happen once they have been heard? What different level of engagement might then be possible?