Are you incompetent? "Peter" thinks so.
Katheryn Gronauer ACC
Facilitator and Executive Coach, Tedx Speaker, Author ?Creating Authentic Leaders with The Sento Mindset???Leadership, Cross-cultural Education, Wellness エグゼクティブコーチ兼ファシリテーター
I’ve been fascinated with this book lately called “The Peter Principle ”.?
Ever heard of the concept? It’s been around for decades, but it’s new to me.?
The Peter Principle in a nutshell
Basically, the idea is that when you get promoted, you are always moving from a role where you are competent to a role where you are incompetent.?
Your personal ceiling is when you have been promoted enough times until you've reached a level in which you can no longer become competent in your role.?
On a larger scale, organizations ultimately wind up with people in leadership positions who are incompetent. In short, people “rise to their incompetence”.?
To give you an example, let’s say there’s a fabulous heart surgeon. He has so much expertise that the hospital decides to make him the Head of Surgery.?
But here’s the problem: he has no clue how to manage others, regardless of how much expertise he has in the field.?
He may be an expert at heart surgery, but he’s incompetent at management.?
The surgeon can learn new skills to be competent as a manager and succeed in his new role. But if it proves too difficult for him, then he won't be able to move past it due to incompetence (essentially, his output isn't stellar enough to be recognized for further promotion).
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But what if you're "Super Competent"?
Another element that I find fascinating is that people who are “super-competent” may equally get let go from a company as someone who is incompetent.?
The reason is that someone who goes outside the box and is an overachiever will ultimately threaten a system set up by the organization. “Super competent” people become viewed as loose cannons, with others in the organization unable to match their level of output.
For example, if a school teacher is so effective that students become way ahead of their grade level, then it poses a challenge for teachers in higher grade levels and it also makes it difficult for other teachers on the same level to match the level of quality. The teacher has essentially "threatened the system".
Here are my thoughts
There are a few things that come to mind when I was thinking about the Peter Principle:
How can you identify what role is going to be the highest in which you excel, without feeling tempted to go for a promotion to a level of incompetence?
What kind of careers best suit "Super Competent" people?
And finally, whether or not a foreign professional is competent in their role, cross-cultural incompetence can threaten that person's ability to fulfill both their own goals as well as what is expected of them. It then may become difficult for that leader's higher up to see results in the Japan market and that leader may have challenges figuring out her next steps.
Competence can be learned and practiced.
If you’re aiming for a promotion…how can you build your competency starting now so that you’re ready for when that shift happens and don't run into challenges part way through your transition?
Leave a comment with your thoughts :)
President at Aspire Communications Inc.
2 年This book always haunts me. Whenever I take on a new challenge I wonder if I've "Petered" myself... The other lesson I've learnt is the Dunning-Kruger effect. I try to remember that when I get a feeling of euphoria that follows thinking like "oh this is easy..." ;-) Fortunately these days I'm just ignorant enough to feel confident, and just knowledgeable enough to know I'm ignorant.
|Always Curious|Brand and Growth Strategist| Brand IKIGAI| Founder Heart-Data Inc | Cancer Thriver
2 年Thank you for a fascinating read and now you have me googling "peter principle" ... As I am a constantly curious person I often throw myself into situations where I know enough to be considered and then step into the learning curve (as that gives me joy ... a thing that I have learned about myself ...the strong need to "figure it out" ...)