The Pygmalion Effect
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Eric Garner | Feb 10, 2009
A team does as well as you and the team think they can.
This idea is known as “the self-fulfilling prophecy”. When you believe the team will perform well, in some strange, magical way they do. And similarly, when you believe they won’t perform well, they don’t.
There is enough experimental data to suggest that the self-fulfilling prophecy is true. One unusual experiment in 1911 concerned a very clever horse called Hans. This horse had the reputation for being able to add, multiply, subtract, and divide by tapping out the answer with its hooves. The extraordinary thing was that it could do this without its trainer being present. It only needed someone to put the questions.
On investigation, it was found that when the questioner knew the answer, he or she transmitted various very subtle body language clues to Hans such as the raising of an eyebrow or the dilation of the nostrils. Hans simply picked up on these clues and continued tapping until he arrived at the required answer. The questioner expected a response and Hans obliged.
In similar vein, an experiment was carried out at a British school into the performance of a new intake of pupils. At the start of the year, the pupils were each given a rating, ranging from “excellent prospect” to “unlikely to do well”. These were totally arbitrary ratings and did not reflect how well the pupils had previously performed. Nevertheless, these ratings were given to the teachers. At the end of the year, the experimenters compared the pupils’ performance with the ratings. Despite their real abilities, there was an astonishingly high correlation between performance and ratings. It seems that people perform as well as we expect them to.
The self-fulfilling prophecy is also known as the Pygmalion Effect. This comes from a story by Ovid about Pygmalion, a sculptor and prince of Cyprus, who created an ivory statue of his ideal woman. The result which he called Galatea was so beautiful that he immediately fell in love with it. He begged the goddess Aphrodite to breathe life into the statue and make her his own. Aphrodite granted Pygmalion his wish, the statue came to life and the couple married and lived happily ever after.
The story was also the basis of George Bernard Shaw’s play “Pygmalion”, later turned into the musical “My Fair Lady”. In Shaw’s play, Professor Henry Higgins claims he can take a Cockney flower girl, Eliza Doolittle, and turn her into a duchess. But, as Eliza herself points out to Higgins’ friend Pickering, it isn’t what she learns or does that determines whether she will become a duchess, but how she’s treated.
“You see, really and truly, apart from the things anyone can pick up (the dressing and the proper way of speaking and so on), the difference between a lady and a flower girl is not how she behaves but how she’s treated. I shall always be a flower girl to Professor Higgins, because he always treats me as a flower girl, and always will, but I know I can be a lady to you because you always treat me as a lady, and always will.”
The implication of the Pygmalion effect for leaders and managers is massive. It means that the performance of your team depends less on them than it does on you. The performance you get from people is no more or less than what you expect: which means you must always expect the best. As Goethe said, “Treat a man as he is and he will remain as he is. Treat a man as he can and should be and he will become as he can and should be.”
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Eric Garner is Managing Director of ManageTrainLearn, the site that will change the way you learn forever. Download free samples of the biggest range of management and personal development materials anywhere and experience learning like you always dreamed it could be. Just click on http://www.managetrainlearn.com/ and explore.
Filed Under: Miscellaneous
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Nice one.
Beautiful thought, sure the managers have to believe in their team and its success!
I could relate to it because I was at the receiving end when my manager did not believe in me and my team to deliver. When we were infact delivering and capable of things much more than that!
By the way, extending this thought on Pygmalion effect,
In Indian mythology – People say that whenever you wish for anything ensure that you wish something good and never be negative because Gods while wandering around, say “Thathastu!” or “Amen” as known in other faith. So, that has been one of the corner stones of our thought process to always wish for something good…
In fact there are myths which claims that “It rains when people collectively wish/pray for it”
Recession – today the number of people expecting a doomsday are more than those wishing for recovery… the day tables turn the economy will automatically turn around…because its a cyclic effect, people wish for good,start spending, more production and lo… there you go the economy would get back on track.
Same is with your relatives, if you think they are bad they will come across bad.. if you think they are good your actions and theirs will resonate…
So Pygmalion effect can be extended to many other areas in life and what we need is positive wishful thinking!
Hi Eric,
Wonderful article!
Cheers,
Mario
Good one!
I think the concept of ‘Auto-suggestion’ plays a vital role in pygmalion effect.
Auto-suggesting yourself that your team will outperform will cause yourself to talk and act in such a way that team wins!
Cheers…neil