Sunday, December  22


Our Workshops
Online Workshops
Overview of our Coaching Services
Overview of our Consulting Services
What our Satisfied Clients are Saying!
Resources for your Development
The Institute's Weblog
People and Projects Podcast
Check out online video and audio samples!
Archives of our Horizon Time newsletter
About the Institute
Contact us about project management and leadership development

 

Call us toll-free to reserve a date for your event
 RSS Feed

 

View Andy Kaufman's profile on LinkedIn

 

Join my list of friends on Facebook!



Previous Posts


Archives
07/2003
08/2003
09/2003
10/2003
12/2003
01/2004
02/2004
03/2004
04/2004
05/2004
06/2004
07/2004
08/2004
12/2004
01/2005
04/2005
05/2005
08/2005
12/2005
01/2006
02/2006
03/2006
04/2006
05/2006
07/2006
08/2006
09/2006
10/2006
01/2007
02/2007
03/2007
04/2007
07/2007
10/2007
11/2007
01/2008
02/2008
03/2008
04/2008
05/2008
06/2008
07/2008
08/2008
09/2008
10/2008
11/2008
01/2009
02/2009
03/2009
04/2009
05/2009
06/2009
08/2009
 

Search our site

Andy Kaufman, Expert Author on EzineArticles.com  


  Home > Leadership in the Real World Blog

[Powered by Blogger] Leadership in the Real World Blog
Notes, links, and inspiration about topics related to personal and leadership development.
 


Wednesday, March 11, 2009

"I'm not cheating! I'm showing my genius!"

I couldn't help but see the irony of two headlines on my browser homepage this morning. The first is a reference to Bernard Madhoff, that he will plead guilty to swindling people out of billions of dollars through his Ponzi scheme.

How refreshing. Finally, a criminal who isn't claiming he's a victim....

The second headline reads "Why Student Cheating Has an Upside."

What?

The article talks about the disconnect between students who insist that being honest and honorable is important yet overwhelmingly admit that they lie to their parents and teachers as well as cheat on tests.

As author Martha Brockenbrough suggests, those who care about our future leaders should find this discouraging. "Kids are shredding their ethics, but not that many feel bad about it." In fact, many "reported that they thought cheaters were more likely to succeed in life."

Brockenbrough relates how cheaters are getting more clever. Indeed technology is providing opportunities to cheat in ways that were not available when I walked the halls.

Yet she goes further: there's an upside to all this cheating. It demonstrates creative genius! Though she points out she's not advocating cheating, she goes on to equate clever approaches to cheating with innovative advances for mankind.

Interesting. When do we cross the line from a healthy break from status quo to becoming a cheat. After all, aren't we encouraged by Marcus Buckingham to "break all the rules?"

Bernie Madhoff is a genius. He kept his scam going for years. He had an innovative approach but it ended up inflicting serious pain across a wide swath of people around the world. Creative genius? Sure. Cheat? Absolutely.

Innovation looks at status quo in a new way and makes the workplace, the world, or a product better, often for the long term. Cheating provides a shortcut to personal gain (or a way to avoid short-term personal pain) with long term negative consequences.

And those consequences are not just experienced by the cheater.

I take exception to the students who think cheaters are more successful. Though it could appear that way in the short term, just look at the headlines to find another cheater soon to be behind bars.

Tempted to cut a corner today? Feeling compelled to exaggerate contributions to accomplishments on your resume? Wondering if you should just slather some lipstick on a status report to management about a project that is really a pig?

Let's not kid ourselves. That's not creative genius. Let's call it what it is: cheating.

Labels: , , , ,

posted by Andy at 7:34 AM  


1 comment(s)  Post a Comment

Comments

What amazes me is the energy and creative talent people put into cheating and scamming others. If they put that effort into making the world better, what a positive difference that would make.

by Anonymous Jay, 3/11/2009 1:35 PM  


  Call us toll-free at (866) 88 I-LEAD    | Privacy Policy  
Copyright © 2001-2009, Institute for Leadership Excellence & Development Inc., All Rights Reserved.