Home > Golf Clubs > Square Technology

Square Technology

November 4th, 2009

Square Technology

Check out this page for a wide variety of Square Technology



PETITE 1 LADIES SQUARE TECHNOLOGY ASPIRE C500 12 460cc TITANIUM DRIVER  HDCVR
PETITE 1 LADIES SQUARE TECHNOLOGY ASPIRE C500 12 460cc TITANIUM DRIVER HDCVR
$39.99
Time Remaining: 2d 16h 20m
Buy It Now for only: $39.99

2011 NEW SQUARE TECHNOLOGY ASPIRE C500 105 460cc 7075 TITANIUM DRIVER w HDCV
2011 NEW SQUARE TECHNOLOGY ASPIRE C500 105 460cc 7075 TITANIUM DRIVER w HDCV
$39.99
Time Remaining: 1d 9h 31m
Buy It Now for only: $39.99

PETITE LADIES 1 SQUARE TECHNOLOGY 12 460cc 7075 TITANIUM DRIVER WITH HEADCOVER
PETITE LADIES 1 SQUARE TECHNOLOGY 12 460cc 7075 TITANIUM DRIVER WITH HEADCOVER
$39.99
Time Remaining: 1d 12h 37m
Buy It Now for only: $39.99

NEW 2011 SQUARE TECHNOLOGY 7075 TITANIUM S5 105 DRIVER FACTORY HEADCOVER
NEW 2011 SQUARE TECHNOLOGY 7075 TITANIUM S5 105 DRIVER FACTORY HEADCOVER
$39.99
Time Remaining: 23h 52m
Buy It Now for only: $39.99

NEW LADIES SQUARE TECHNOLOGY C500 12 460cc 7075 TITANIUM DRIVER WITH HEADCOVER
NEW LADIES SQUARE TECHNOLOGY C500 12 460cc 7075 TITANIUM DRIVER WITH HEADCOVER
$39.99
Time Remaining: 1d 12h 34m
Buy It Now for only: $39.99

TALL MEN +1 SQUARE TECHNOLOGY ASPIRE C500 105 460cc 7075 TIT
TALL MEN +1 SQUARE TECHNOLOGY ASPIRE C500 105 460cc 7075 TIT
$39.99
Time Remaining: 1d 9h 37m
Buy It Now for only: $39.99

Square Technology

What to do when you have... square pegs in round holes!

As both Gallup and the Corporate Leadership Council have identified through their research of tens of thousands of workgroups, the opportunity to do what you do best is the #1 reason for employee engagement - yet it is surprising how often workgroups form where the team members invariably find themselves not playing to their strengths.

This is damaging not only to team performance, but also to the individuals themselves, as feelings of job dissatisfaction, stress and frustration set in, becoming increasingly serious over longer periods of time.

While many managers are aware of these 'soft' problems, they are perhaps not so aware of the available solutions and approaches they can take to overcome them. But first we must understand how they come about.

Beliefs - and habits - frame our world

'Square pegs' typically happen for a number of reasons:

1. School Daze

The first compelling reason is that our experience in school and, by extension, the education system so often teaches us not to play to our strengths but to pass exams. In some cases an emphasis on 'passing exams' might be unavoidable. But consider the subjects - or parts of subjects - that as a child you had absolutely no chance in excelling. Consider the subjects or parts of subjects that you hated!

The chances are, these subjects were those playing to your weaknesses.

When  asked whether they would spend more time talking with their child about the subject he or she excelled in, or the subject he or she was struggling with, over 70% of American parents replied with the latter.

This focus on 'weaknesses' is the origin of the problem of 'square pegs in round holes' because it seems to justify the idea that working in areas in which we are naturally unsuited is perfectly normal.

School curricula are not interested in seeing children play to their strengths. They are interested only in seeing them achieve qualifications in the narrow sphere of academia.

When these children grow up and start working in teams and organisations, it is little wonder that they do not know what role they may best be suited to, leading to potentially huge people and performance problems.

2. Because companies put What before Who

In his groundbreaking book Good to Great, Jim Collins discovered through all the data collected that top-performing companies placed Who before What. Mediocre companies, by contrast, placed the What first.

In teams, a focus on the What before the Who invariably leads to square pegs in round holes, as we forget to seek out Who may have the natural attributes most suited to the accomplishment of certain tasks.

3. Because 'There's no I in TEAM'

Interviewed some years back in the Harvard Business Review, the famous basketball player Michael Jordan was confronted with a question asking him about his concept of teamwork, specifically whether he though he was too selfish on the basketball court.

'There's no I in TEAM,' the interviewer put to him.

Jordan's reply? 'But there is in WIN'.

This neatly summarises the differences between mediocre teams and high-performing teams. In mediocre teams, players worry too much about 'sacrifice'. In high-performing teams, the players can afford to be selfish when they know they are playing to their strengths.

The concept or feeling of 'sacrifice' or 'unselfishness' is often a cause of square pegs in round holes, as team members seek out the 'hard work' that they are not naturally suited to performing. They see this as selflessly performing 'team duty'. Little may the person know it, but there is often someone else in the team who would be far more suited to doing the task, who could do so quite naturally, and who would probably even enjoy the task! Yet time and again we see teams that seem to arrange themselves around their 'weaknesses' based on a mistaken concept of 'duty'.

As Michael Jordan went on to say, top-performing teams have a certain amount of selfishness in them - a selfishness to be determined to play to their strengths!

How to avoid square pegs in round holes

Playing people to their strengths is a critical area which Talent Technologies helps companies with. This is the building block of a high-performing team.

We offer two programmes: Talent Factor and Working to your Strengths.

We also help companies overcome some of the ongoing challenges within teams with our High-Synergy! Teams one day training programme.

About the Author



Thanks for visiting our Square Technology site.


Comments are closed.