The Hamilton Spectator

Ask for help or you may be the one really needing it

- Jay Robb

I still have no answer to the one question my boss asks at the end of all our one-on-one meetings:

What can I do to make it easier for you to do your job?

I draw a blank because this has never been a frequently asked question throughout my career. And I’ve brought that on myself, having spent too many years being the go-it-alone, stubbornly self-reliant lone wolf.

Not asking for directions can make us lousy travelling companions. Not asking for direction, guidance or help at work can be a career limiting, or even a job-ending, move.

“Not asking for help is one of the most self-limiting, self-constraini­ng, even self-destructiv­e decisions we can make,” says

Wayne Baker, University of Michigan business professor and author of “All You Have to Do is Ask.”

“Without the help and assistance of others, we don’t receive the resources that we need to get our work done, to solve problems, and to fulfil our missions in the world.”

We have our reasons for not asking for help. We underestim­ate just how ready, willing and able people are to lend a hand. We believe that asking for help makes us look weak, incapable, incompeten­t, lazy or dependent. We fool ourselves into thinking we can somehow do it all on our own. We feel we haven’t earned the privilege to ask for help, we don’t know how to make a request or we work for organizati­ons where asking for help just isn’t done and getting help is near impossible.

While we tell ourselves it’s better to give than to receive, Baker believes it’s best if we regularly do both. “The two acts are two sides of the same coin. There is no giving without receiving and there is no receiving without giving. And it’s the request that starts the wheel turning.”

To ask for and then get what we need, Baker recommends making requests that are specific, personally meaningful, action-oriented, realistic and time-based. “When others know why you are making the request, they are more motivated to respond,” Baker says. “They empathize with you.”

Leaders need to lead by example, stringing together a psychologi­cal safety net and creating a “thanks for asking” culture that recognizes and rewards people who request a helping hand.

One way to achieve this is by setting up reciprocit­y rings. Up to 24 people get together and take turns making both a personal and work-related request. Asking for help is the price of admission to a reciprocit­y ring. People in the ring can ask for informatio­n, advice, recommenda­tions, referrals and extra resources. Anyone who can help in any way steps forward.

You can also introduce fiveminute favours. Take over a room and tape flip chart paper to the walls. Have employees write requests on the top half of a flip chart and add their names to the bottom of sheets where they can offer assistance.

Yet another suggestion is to write one problem a week on a whiteboard and invite employees to weigh in with ideas and solutions.

“Most people are in fact willing to help — if they are asked,” Baker says. “But most people don’t ask and as a result, all those answers, solutions and resources are being left untouched, unused and wasted — for no good reason.”

Lone wolves, take note. It’s time we ditch the stubborn independen­ce and start asking for help.

Jay Robb serves as communicat­ions manager with McMaster University’s Faculty of Science, lives in Hamilton and has reviewed business books for The Hamilton Spectator since 1999.

 ??  ?? “All You Have to Do is Ask,” by Wayne Baker.
“All You Have to Do is Ask,” by Wayne Baker.
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