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Chris Moerdyk

Survival of the fittest

2008-05-13 08:49

Chris Moerdyk

As the global economy slows down with some countries drifting uncomfortably towards a recession, it's logical that those companies that have become globally-competitive would probably be better placed to survive any sort of the downturn.

After all, it's been proved that competition is critical to the survival of a free market economy. Essential business strategy.

But, whenever I hear companies banging on about the importance of competition and especially parents insisting that their kids need to be competitive on both the sports field and in the classroom, I keep thinking about how easy and dangerous it is to confuse "competition" with "being competitive."

For example, in business terms, competition would be succeeding by making an opposing company fail. Competitive would be positioning your own company so well in terms of quality, service and price that the market cannot resist supporting you.

Light reading

Alfie Kohn is the American author of No contest - The Case Against Competition which won the US National Psychological Award for 1987. After going through more than 400 case studies, Kohn came to the very firm conclusion that competition is destructive and counter productive not only in excess.

"It is destructive not merely because we are doing it the wrong way - it is destructive by its very nature. I think the phase 'healthy competition' is a contradiction in terms and the ideal amount of competition (notice that he doesn't say 'conflict') in any environment - the workplace, classroom, family, playing field - is none..."

Kohn draws a distinction between what he calls "structural competition" and "intentional competition." "By structural I mean 'mutually exclusive goal attainment,' which is a fancy social expression for 'I succeed only if you fail.' There is a stronger version of this, which is 'I succeed only if I make you fail.'

"In the first case you may be talking about golf or tenpin bowling - I do something, you do something, I do something, you do something and at the end, of course, we have to have a winner. We compare scores but we don't interfere with each others' performance.

"The stronger version, we find in war or tennis in which, for me to do well I have to actively interfere with how you do it.

"This doesn't mean that all tennis players are nasty and malicious. It means the rules of the game require us to succeed at the expense of other peoples' failure.

"By intentional competition I mean simply the need for one person to be number one. Here we are talking not about the rules of the game but about the personality."

Universal

Kohn says his studies have shown that in both classroom and workplace; "not only is competition not required for excellence, its absence is required for excellence."

There are numerous studies, he says, which show that both in terms of structural and intentional competition in the workplace people do better when they are working together rather than trying to beat each other.

There are three reasons, says Kohn why competition is destructive. First it causes anxiety which is hugely distracting; second it is inefficient in that it excludes sharing of ideas and third is the simplest and most subtle - not only is the idea of success or excellence completely different from victory or beating other people, but in actual life they pull in opposite directions.

Kohn adds that competition is destructive in another respect - it destroys self-esteem. "In any competitive encounter losing is always possible and inevitable. Now that feels lousy (for a company or individual). But even when you win, you gloat, for a while you soar and you are impossible to live with. And then you come down, in fact you crash down and you need more of it in order to get that same feeling. It is precisely like building up a tolerance to a drug, or like drinking salt water when you're thirsty."

Musical chairs

Kohn demonstrates the dangers or rather, the futility of competition with a delightful story of the children's game Musical Chairs.

What happens is that we have ten kids and nine chairs and when the music stops all ten rush for the nine chairs and the one who doesn't make it is out of the game. Chairs are removed after each round until two kids are left rushing for one chair. At the end of it, at the end of this game which is usually played at birthday parties where everyone is supposed to be having fun, you end up with one smug, smiling little showoff and nine miserable losers.

Add to that the strange habit we have of punishing kids in class when they're caught copying from a neighbour and then punishing them again a few hours later on the soccer field when they try and score on their own instead of passing the ball. No wonder our kids get confused.

Wouldn't it be better in the musical chairs of children's games and in the workplace to start with all ten kids trying through teamwork and co-operation to all get on to one chair?

But, back to business. Being competitive is what counts and to be competitive one has to obliterate the destructive nature of competition among managers and staff and rather encourage co-operation and teamwork.

After all, it works in sport too - see what happens in rugby when someone starts playing the man instead of the ball...

Send your comments to Chris.

Disclaimer: News24 encourages freedom of speech and the expression of diverse views. The views of columnists published on News24 are therefore their own and do not necessarily represent the views of News24. News24 editors reserve the right to edit or delete any and all comments received.

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psycobabble 5/13/2008 9:08:01 AM
Competition is something we can't aviod or obliterate.People have been doing this for time in memorial.The difference from 1000 yrs ago and now are the rules and they're always changing.Emotional detachment helps as a defence of self esteem when on the losing end and humilty helps calm egotcentric urges on the winning end.Not easy but possible.

Van Die Dwesh 5/13/2008 9:32:15 AM
yeah, what he said

Kumalo 5/13/2008 9:37:48 AM
I wish everyone would see competition in that light, but the reality is that competition is embraced and being competitive is seen as success.

salem alberto malich 5/13/2008 9:53:56 AM
According to the theory of evolution, competition is what made you a human being. Stopping competition to spare feelings is silly.

Thokozani 5/13/2008 9:57:01 AM
I believe competition is goo just as long as it's healthy. I howver have a problem with parents pushing thier children to be competitive, well there's nothing wrong with a little push to the right direction, or guidance if you may. But today's parents turn to push a little harder resulting in thier children being ruthless against other kids. It also promotes the culture that says i'm better thatn you among kids as the writer rightfully puts it.

Boni 5/13/2008 10:06:06 AM
the part on companies... should companies be fixing prices and allocating markets instead of competing for our rand ala Tiger, Reclam. maybe im missing something.

charmaine 5/13/2008 10:11:29 AM
thanx for a great article...my concern is that without putting the edge on, how do we take ourselves, the company and even our kids to another level? re. 'copying from another kid in the class...thats called sneaky...competing on the soccer field in a healty competitive manner...isnt

SM 5/13/2008 10:27:07 AM
These studies are great but you try and te4ll any kid, or for that matter adult, that it is ok to lose as long as you lose as a team, irrespective if the only one in the team is you losing. On top of this the Kohn is American and did his reading (Cases) on american input. My opinion is that when it is american, it is biased, opiniated and normally of the mark due to the HUGE misplaced egos of americans.

David 5/13/2008 10:30:34 AM
Sorry, but Kohn is wrong. Yes, IN THEORY mutually beneficial collaboration should produce better results. If we were a bunch of purely rational machines. However, we are humans, and this is just NOT how human beings work. At all. Humans are naturally motivated by competition. Nothing gets a fat, lazy, overpriced company off its rump like a bit of market competition. Competition pushes for efficiencies. There are frightening echoes of a communist subtext in your article today.

PS 5/13/2008 10:35:54 AM
If we were to apply Kohn's musical chairs example to every aspect of life we would be dominated by a pack of whining little losers all screaming "Unfair!!!" whenever somebody shows a little bit of individual initiative. If you want a nanny state go live in the UK or USA and sue anybody who has the temerity to get the better of you.

Chris Lombard 5/13/2008 10:44:56 AM
Your examples are a bit fuzzy, how can you compare cheating with cooperation? No doubt competition brings out the best and worst in people. There are numerous examples of the increase in technological advances that happens during the most extreme form of comptetition - war. There are also more examples of the atrocities that happen during war. The question is not how to remove competition but how to make it fair (stop cheating) and how to help the losers get up and fight another day.

Malusi 5/13/2008 10:50:40 AM
I think one has to know when to compete and when not to compete, the kids will grow with up much personalities with less competition because we learn more when we work together then when we compete with each other.

CTheB 5/13/2008 11:01:32 AM
All I see is opinion and poor reasoning. I played musical chairs (and other games) as a child and don't remember 1 smug kid and n miserable kids. The classroom vs field bit isn't even an argument since the contexts are completely different - one is an individual situation and the other is a team, apart from anything else. Even where one tries to win through another's failure, one's attitude toward competition is more likely a source of destruction than competition itself.

Rudi Nuyts 5/13/2008 11:04:17 AM
That is exactly what Deming taught the Japanese and exactly the reason why so many Japanese firms are way way ahead in the business world. Just look at all the world market leaders who really do produce world best products - Toyota, Canon, Honda. If you investigate the management philosophies of these Japanese firms you will see that they understood very deeply, and practice what Deming taught them. Opposed though look at the VW, GM, Ford, companies stuck in poor practices and economically in woe

SM 5/13/2008 11:13:08 AM
Have to agree with you, well said. It is the tipical american nature to expect everybody to roll over, wag their tails and ask what can we give to the great takers of the poor's goods. When chalenged (Competition) they always cry wolf. (forgetting they are the wolves, taking what does not belong to them). In general I would rely on my own research before even reading or considering some from the americans.

Tiaan 5/13/2008 11:14:39 AM
Sorry but this Kohn guy seem a bit like nitwit. Sharing ideas with coworkers or classmates, works well until only one of us gets the promotion or become team captian. Just remember, we cant all be winners, but we can all be loosers, being competitive is the only way to prevent this. Great column though.

TB 5/13/2008 11:21:47 AM
Yes, Americans have a knack to make money out of garbage. Seems like if you cannot find a decent job in the good old USA, just write a book based on stupid assumptions and quote a bit of research, promote it like hell and Voila!! Money making racketeers all of them.And the rest of us stupidly swallow it like hotcakes.

Kaal Marks 5/13/2008 11:34:00 AM
It feels like we have been through this before. The purpose of communism is also cooperation and competitiveness without competition, and its implementation went to some length to remove all possible sources of competition. Without rewards there is no excellence, and without competition there is no way to decide to whom to give the limited amount of available rewards.

Kaal Marks 5/13/2008 11:36:55 AM
Without rewards there is no excellence, and without competition there is no way to decide to whom to give the limited amount of available rewards. It feels like we have been through this before. The purpose of communism is also cooperation and competitiveness without competition, and its implementation went to some length to remove all possible sources of competition.

Lejane 5/13/2008 11:38:21 AM
I think a lot of people have missed your point.

M 5/13/2008 12:12:03 PM
but this world isn't ideal, we are humans but not very far away from having an animalistic nature. Under stress this nature surfaces, we compete, we destroy. If Kohn was placed in such a situation (survival of the fittest) he wouldn't react so idealistically. He would provide and survive with all means

Shaheer 5/13/2008 12:12:50 PM
It's impossible to have any sort of hiererchical business without instigating competition in its employees. And business with no managers, no owners, no few at the top to take responsibility may sound utopian, but how long could that possibly last and still be effective? Competition keeps people striving, keeps the wheels of civilization rolling forward... and keeps us evolving.

moloi maitse 5/13/2008 12:16:25 PM
i concur with your analysis, believe me kohn is right the fact that children are so violent is due to competition. we should n't be for competition but be competitive. to share ideas and give others a space to expand. for bafana bafana to win as a team one must be a striker one defender,if we all need to win competitiveness is needed.

Colin J. FRYER 5/13/2008 12:20:08 PM
We are the result of the Western world economic box model, we being the business fraternity within SA. Maybe our box has limitations. Just possibly as resources dwindle,true global players understand the ethos of teamwork. Our Western world business model has & continues to denude our planet at a frightening pace. With this in mind, we need far less competition and more cohesive worlwide teamwork. Ciao Colin

Joe 5/13/2008 12:22:28 PM
.. is that the kids that lose KNOW that next time they play the game (and they will) they also have a shot at being the winner. We all can get our turn, and that's a beautiful lesson. So it is with capitalism, free market competition and raw opportunities. To decry somebody else's success is to believe that you too can never be successful. Look to the Buddhist philosophy rather: Realise that somebody else's advancement is PART OF your own advancement. It's not a zero-sum game.

SM 5/13/2008 12:24:19 PM
What point did we miss? That we should be bunch of nice losers or that, like TB, says we must write a book and sell it to a lot of suckers.

Karen 5/13/2008 12:24:41 PM
The trouble is we have forgotten the first rule of nature.. survival of the fittest. If you cannot compete, you shouldnt be in the competition. This is why humans have the problem of poverty and over population. we keep trying to keep the weaker alive. In nature you get eat killed and eaten. Shame the kiddies cant compete, we should all be playing sport for the fun of it and not keep score. What a load of rubbish. You are saying it is ok to be mediocre? No, survival of the fittest..

Odette 5/13/2008 12:25:13 PM
I think that many readers missed the point. From what I've read, this is one of those concepts that is at first quite hard to grasp but once done you can see it clearly. I think this concept (in a certain form) was already discovered by Eastern philosophies, e.g. Buddhism.

PS 5/13/2008 12:25:14 PM
Please tell us the point

ElectroMan 5/13/2008 12:30:06 PM
Yeah! Some of us don't really understand the phrase: "All for one and one for all". Don't get stuck in the middle somewhere and then forget about working together. Dictators (over-competitive managers) develop in those cases.

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