’ve led our system’s patient experience work for over a decade, and Utah’s innovative approach attracts national attention. In my role, I’m often asked by people both inside and outside our system “what is Utah’s secret to success?” This book, Grit: The Power of Passion and Perseverance, has part of the answer. Our people—our physicians, our nurses, our custodians, our medical assistants, our leaders—embody grit every day. If you’re wondering how we got this far, and how we’ll continue to get better in the future, I’ll tell you. Effort counts more than talent, deliberate practice, and a great team.
#1 Effort counts twice as much as talent
Duckworth illustrates how an individual moves from talent to achievement:
Talent x effort = skill → Skill x effort = achievement
Duckworth writes: “Our potential is one thing. What we do with it is another” (page 14). Duckworth explains this premise is both exciting and threatening.
Duckworth challenges that believing in grit is about believing that personal and professional success is largely in our own hands.
How Utah Grows Grit:
We Have Great People
We hire people who love what they do and who have deep belief that their work is meaningful. We recognize their contribution to the organization every quarter. We share patient feedback to illustrate how meaningful their work is.
We Practice
We focus on deliberate practice in the way we set goals. We set a goal based on prior performance with a slight increase so that it feels like a stretch. Feedback comes in the form of weekly scorecards.
We Improve Value
Our three goals allow teams to keep focused on the most important things, reflecting and refining performance each year.
#2 Growing Grit
Duckworth identifies that gritty individuals have four psychological strengths in common:
People with grit can say:
"I love what I do."
Passion begins with enjoying what you do, which isn’t to say that all work is fun. These individuals have aspects of their work that they don’t enjoy. But, they are committed to the endeavor as a whole.
“Here is how I’m getting better.”
Gritty individuals show their perseverance through the daily discipline of trying to do things better than yesterday. After discovering and developing your interest, the next step is practicing. Practice means focused challenges that lead to mastery. This theory builds on Malcolm Gladwell’s famous theory that 10,000 hours is the magic number for expertise. Duckworth agrees that excellence takes years of work.
What she clarifies is that the work must be in the form of deliberate practice. The basic elements include:
- A clearly defined stretch goal
- Full concentration and effort
- Immediate and informative feedback
- Repetition with reflection and refinement
“This is important – both to me and others.”
Continued deepening of passion depends on the belief that your work matters. Interest without purpose is almost impossible to sustain. Developing purpose requires connecting your personal interest in your work with the well-being of others. For many, the motivation of purpose develops early. For others, it happens after they see the reaction of others to their efforts.
“I will find a way to get back up and keep moving.”
Duckworth’s research reveals that along every step of the way, it is crucial that improvers stay the course and keep going even in the face of setback and doubts.
#3 Want to be great? Join a great team.
Duckworth emphasized that if you want to improve your grit, you can certainly focus as an individual, but if you really want to be great at anything, join a great team. Hundreds of psychological experiments have demonstrated how quickly individuals change their acting or thinking to fall in line with a group – often without conscious awareness. Over time and under the right circumstances, culture can positively shape personal identify.
Chrissy Daniels
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