The Power of Positive Interactions
January 25th, 2010 Posted in Newsletter
John Gottman’s pioneering research found that marriages are much more likely to succeed when the couple experiences a 5 to 1 ratio of positive to negative interactions whereas when the ratio approaches 1 to 1, marriages are more likely to end in divorce. Additional research also shows that workgroups with positive to negative interaction ratios greater than 3 to 1 are significantly more productive than teams that do not reach this ratio.
So what does this mean for you and me? For most of us it means we need to increase the number of positive interactions we have at home and at work and reduce our negative interactions.
We need to engage each other with more smiles, kind words, encouragement, gratitude, meaningful conversations, honest dialogues and sincere positive interactions. And to foster these actions we need to create personal and team rituals that help us interact more positively. If we make them part of our organizational process and individual habits they are more likely to happen.
For instance, at home you might decide to take a walk with your spouse each night after dinner and talk about the positive things that happened at work. The more you practice this the more it will become ingrained in your life. At work you might make it a point to smile at your co-workers and customers more often. As a manager you would spend more time praising your employees for the things they do right rather than always focusing on what everyone is doing wrong. A manager I know makes it a point to personally praise 5 people every week. As an organization you might gather all of your employees on a call once a day to share a positive message. Or perhaps you might gather your sales team together each week and have your team members share success stories. The ideas are infinite. The key is to intentionally cultivate more positive interactions to fuel success.
However, please know that this doesn’t mean we should never have negative interactions. There is research by Barbara Fredrickson from the University of Michigan that shows if a work group in a company experiences a positive to negative interaction ratio of 13 to 1 the work group will be less effective. This implies that no one is willing to confront the real problems and challenges that are holding them back. Sometimes we need to confront a situation to move past it and, as we know, ignoring problems that stare us in the face doesn’t work. Negative interactions are necessary so long as they occur much less frequently than positive interactions.
Positive interactions are essential to a healthy marriage, positive work environment and individual and team success. In this spirit when you are finished reading this, I encourage you to go thank someone at work or at home and let them know how they impacted your life in a positive way. Then make it a habit.
-Jon
Tags: encouragement, graitude, jon gordon, meaningful, positive interactions









9 Responses to “The Power of Positive Interactions”
By Connie Brubaker on Jan 25, 2010
When I was first married to my husband, I noticed that we acted impatient and irritated with each other. I decided to only speak and act with kindness and love. Within 2 weeks, I saw a difference in my husband’s responses to me. We have now been happily married for 10 years. I won’t go so far as to say I am flawless, but my positive interactions far out weigh my negative behaviors. I love the guidelines of this newsletter.
Connie Brubaker
Austin, TX
By Randy Bosch on Jan 25, 2010
Jon, This post deserves a “positive interaction” point! What ratio has been tested and proven for blogs?
By Kelly Myers on Jan 25, 2010
I think this is great and goes on to say that if you make it a point to “love” in the active sense the emotions often follow. Thus, if you say, think and act positively, good and happiness will follow. I do agree that we need to be honest and forthright many times and that if you have the deposits in your account (so to speak) you can make those withdrawals when the time comes. Thanks, Jon!!!
By chris on Jan 25, 2010
I am loosing my job after 16 years. I am staying positive and looking at this an opportunity. I was a great hard wokring employee and have nothing to feel bad about I am keeping my head held high!
By Donna Donzella on Jan 26, 2010
Positive energy is wonderful. It turns all the dark gray clouds to beautiful rays of sunlight.It makes you happier and healthier. After all positive thinking comes from God. You were born into this world because God loves you. If God is Love and love is wonderful. You will be positive knowing the reason for your existance. God Bless You Jon! I’ll ride you bus anytime!
By Maisimah Zakaria on Jan 26, 2010
Hi Jon,
Iam a type thats not clever at saying kind words but I used to smile to my friends. I found that 90% in the organisation that I work gave a good response to my requirement.
By James Wallace on Jan 26, 2010
I am fortunate enough to work with a company called Primerica. My coach, Jeff Fieldstad, is constantly challenging everyone in our office to work on our thinking, and our attitudes. “We are a self improvement company with a compensation package attached!” Thank God for the constant encouragement to be focused on the positive. It makes a tangilble difference in not only your life, but in the lives of the people you touch every day.