1 Corinthians 1:10 (New International Version)
I appeal to you, brothers and sisters, in the name of our
Lord Jesus Christ, that all of you agree with one another in what you say and
that there be no divisions among you, but that you be perfectly united in mind
and thought.
"I'm about to have a contest between our workers to
spur productivity. Any ideas?" - Harvey G.
Let the following story be a warning.
"We're about to have some exciting
competition," said the manager of a steel plant in Ohio. "We have
three eight-hour shifts and I'm going to issue this challenge. The shift that
produces the most steel with the highest quality over the next thirty days will
receive a substantial bonus for every worker."
For the first few days, there was a lot of bantering
between the workers as they changed shifts. "You just wait. We're going to
win this thing," one night supervisor said to the incoming morning
employees. It began as a friendly rivalry.
As time passed, however, what the manager thought was a
great motivational device proved to be a disaster. Just a few days after the
competition began, discord surfaced between the teams. For example, as one
shift was about to leave the plant they would turn off the power so that the
next group would have to re-fire the furnaces - losing precious time and
producing less steel.
Workers in another shift, dumped foreign materials into
the furnace that would lower the quality of the steel for the next team.
At the end of the month, management was stunned. There
had been a decrease in output.
Internal competition rarely works. It pits worker against
worker, resulting in lower morale, diminished production and friction in the
organization. The lesson learned in that Ohio plant is one we all must discover
sooner or later. We win through cooperation, not competition.
Dear Lord we pray that we would not compete against each
other but that we would work together. In Jesus; name, Amen.
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