Friday, March 7, 2025

Celebrate Employee Appreciation Day with Gregg Vanourek


Since today is Employee Appreciation Day, I'd like to welcome Gregg Vanourek back to my blog. I recently read a post that Gregg wrote nearly two years ago entitled, "The Four Types of People in Any Organization (Beware the Fourth)," and it's especially fitting that we re-visit that post today.

First, a little background about Employee Appreciation Day and then a brief bio about Gregg. Observed annually on the first Friday in March, Employee Appreciation Day was started in 1995 by Dr. Bob Nelson, initially to celebrate the publication of his book, "1001 Ways to Reward Employees." Together with his publishing company, he made sure that the holiday appeared prominently on workplace calendars. This was a successful strategy because the book sold over two million copies and was translated into over 25 languages. So, as your organization considers how to best appreciate, recognize, and value your employees, read on for some amazing insights.

Gregg Vanourek is a writer, teacher, and TEDx speaker on personal development and leadership. He is also co-author of three books, including LIFE Entrepreneurs: Ordinary People Creating Extraordinary Lives (a manifesto for integrating life and work with purpose, passion, and contribution) and Triple Crown Leadership: Building Excellent, Ethical, and Enduring Organizations (a winner of the International Book Award). He teaches at the Stockholm Business School; served as a senior executive at a tech startup, now a market leader with $1 billion in sales; and has given talks/workshops in eight countries.

Now, what are the four types of people in any organization? Well, according to Gregg and his important post, they are as follows:

(1) LEADERS: According to Gregg, "We may disagree about what good leadership entails, but there's little doubt that we need leaders."

(2) FOLLOWERS: According to Gregg, "All organizations also need followers. How effective would leaders be without good followers? Followers are often neglected in discussions about organizational effectiveness, but that's a big mistake. Followers make a big difference in many ways: getting the work done, upholding the organization's values, supporting leaders in times of difficulty, contributing to the culture, and more."

(3) OBJECTORS: According to Gregg, "Objectors express disagreement or opposition. They challenge leaders when they go astray. Sometimes it comes in the form of tough questions. Other times in the form of outright objections. Though often overlooked, objectors play a critical role in accountability, culture, ethics, and more."

(4) MUTTERERS: According to Gregg, "Mutterers are the ones who sit quietly in the meeting, nodding their heads and going along, and then mutter complaints, insults, and frustrations under their breath after the meeting. The other dynamic often missed here is that people want to be around people who take initiative, not complainers."

In his post, Gregg used a soccer scenario as an example of these types of people. He wrote, "But was it the job of the coach to be the best in all areas all the time? Ideally, we'd have a coach who's brilliant at everything: scouting, recruiting, positioning, practice and drill design, match strategy, mid-game competitive adjustments, halftime chats, post-game reviews, player psychology, group dynamics, goalkeeper training, crisis management, humor, fun, and more. (Even TED LASSO doesn't rise to that mantle.)"

However, Gregg shared in a previous appearance on my blog, "The TED LASSO series is brilliant on many fronts, including the way it showed the human aspects of leadership and the complex dynamics of being part of a team and community. For leaders (and others), it has powerful lessons about heart, humanity, dignity, love, hope, belief in people, and the transformation of pain and hardship."

So, today, on Employee Appreciation Day, how can your organization help steer employees toward being leaders, followers, and productive objectors and help steer them away from being unproductive mutterers?

I asked Gregg to provide an update to include here today:

"Muttering can be toxic in an organization. It puts our attention on what's wrong instead of what's right or what we can do. It wastes time. It makes us passive and makes bad situations worse. Perhaps, worse of all, it's contagious. Leaders are wise to nip muttering in the bud."

My gratitude to Gregg for inspiring today's post, sharing an update to his post, and for being a valued member of my blog community!


SHARE THIS: People want to be around people who take initiative, not complainers. ~@gvanourek #EmployeeAppreciationDay #DebbieLaskeysBlog


SHARE THIS: Complaining does not work as a strategy...Any time we spend whining is unlikely to help us achieve our goals. ~Randy Pausch via @gvanourek #EmployeeAppreciationDay #DebbieLaskeysBlog


Image Credit: Adobe.


Read Gregg's post that inspired today's post:

https://triplecrownleadership.com/four-types-of-people/


Connect with Gregg at these links:

Website: https://www.greggvanourek.com

Blog: https://greggvanourek.com/blog/

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/gregg-vanourek-5347b11

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TripleCrownLeadership/

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/gvanourek

Twitter/X: https://www.twitter.com/gvanourek


Check out Gregg’s previous appearances here on my blog:

SPRING LEADERSHIP SERIES – Featuring Gregg Vanourek  (April 2024)

https://www.debbielaskeysblog.com/2024/04/spring-leadership-series-featuring_01233877214.html

Does Your Organization Have Culture Champions and Cultural Stewards? (January 2022)

https://www.debbielaskeysblog.com/2022/01/does-your-organization-have-culture.html


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