ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Adam Grant - Organizational psychologist
After years of studying the dynamics of success and productivity in the workplace, Adam Grant discovered a powerful and often overlooked motivator: helping others.

Why you should listen

In his groundbreaking book Give and Take, top-rated Wharton professor Adam Grant upended decades of conventional motivational thinking with the thesis that giving unselfishly to colleagues or clients can lead to one’s own long-term success. Grant’s research has led hundreds of advice seekers (and HR departments) to his doorstep, and it’s changing the way leaders view their workforces.

Grant's book Originals: How Non-Conformists Move the World examines how unconventional thinkers overturn the status quo and champion game-changing ideas.

Grant is the host of the TED original podcast WorkLife, taking us inside unconventional workplaces to explore the ideas we can all use to make work more meaningful and creative.

More profile about the speaker
Adam Grant | Speaker | TED.com
TED@IBM

Adam Grant: Are you a giver or a taker?

Filmed:
7,250,021 views

In every workplace, there are three basic kinds of people: givers, takers and matchers. Organizational psychologist Adam Grant breaks down these personalities and offers simple strategies to promote a culture of generosity and keep self-serving employees from taking more than their share.
- Organizational psychologist
After years of studying the dynamics of success and productivity in the workplace, Adam Grant discovered a powerful and often overlooked motivator: helping others. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:12
I want you to look
around the room for a minute
0
837
2267
00:15
and try to find the most
paranoid person here --
1
3128
2719
00:17
(Laughter)
2
5871
1064
00:18
And then I want you to point
at that person for me.
3
6959
2452
00:21
(Laughter)
4
9435
1035
00:22
OK, don't actually do it.
5
10494
1359
00:23
(Laughter)
6
11877
1119
00:25
But, as an organizational psychologist,
7
13020
1869
00:26
I spend a lot of time in workplaces,
8
14913
1882
00:28
and I find paranoia everywhere.
9
16819
2160
00:31
Paranoia is caused by people
that I call "takers."
10
19532
2409
00:33
Takers are self-serving
in their interactions.
11
21965
2183
00:36
It's all about what can you do for me.
12
24172
2261
00:38
The opposite is a giver.
13
26832
1401
00:40
It's somebody who approaches
most interactions by asking,
14
28257
2760
00:43
"What can I do for you?"
15
31041
1600
00:45
I wanted to give you a chance
to think about your own style.
16
33165
2871
00:48
We all have moments of giving and taking.
17
36060
1953
00:50
Your style is how you treat
most of the people most of the time,
18
38037
3016
00:53
your default.
19
41077
1158
00:54
I have a short test you can take
20
42259
1542
00:55
to figure out if you're more
of a giver or a taker,
21
43825
2499
00:58
and you can take it right now.
22
46348
1478
00:59
[The Narcissist Test]
23
47850
1439
01:01
[Step 1: Take a moment
to think about yourself.]
24
49313
2312
01:03
(Laughter)
25
51649
1103
01:04
[Step 2: If you made it to Step 2,
you are not a narcissist.]
26
52776
2858
01:07
(Laughter)
27
55658
1559
01:10
This is the only thing I will say today
that has no data behind it,
28
58082
3833
01:13
but I am convinced the longer it takes
for you to laugh at this cartoon,
29
61939
3432
01:17
the more worried we should be
that you're a taker.
30
65395
2427
01:19
(Laughter)
31
67846
1065
01:20
Of course, not all takers are narcissists.
32
68935
2032
01:22
Some are just givers who got burned
one too many times.
33
70991
2888
01:25
Then there's another kind of taker
that we won't be addressing today,
34
73903
3324
01:29
and that's called a psychopath.
35
77251
1853
01:31
(Laughter)
36
79128
1151
01:32
I was curious, though, about how
common these extremes are,
37
80303
2872
01:35
and so I surveyed over 30,000
people across industries
38
83199
2809
01:38
around the world's cultures.
39
86032
1612
01:39
And I found that most people
are right in the middle
40
87668
2478
01:42
between giving and taking.
41
90170
1466
01:43
They choose this third style
called "matching."
42
91660
2345
01:46
If you're a matcher, you try to keep
an even balance of give and take:
43
94029
3345
01:49
quid pro quo -- I'll do something
for you if you do something for me.
44
97398
3318
01:52
And that seems like a safe way
to live your life.
45
100740
2381
01:55
But is it the most effective
and productive way to live your life?
46
103145
3184
01:58
The answer to that question
is a very definitive ...
47
106353
2464
02:00
maybe.
48
108841
1158
02:02
(Laughter)
49
110023
1226
02:03
I studied dozens of organizations,
50
111273
2179
02:05
thousands of people.
51
113476
1175
02:06
I had engineers measuring
their productivity.
52
114675
3552
02:10
(Laughter)
53
118251
2355
02:12
I looked at medical students' grades --
54
120630
2969
02:15
even salespeople's revenue.
55
123623
1975
02:17
(Laughter)
56
125622
1446
02:19
And, unexpectedly,
57
127092
1652
02:20
the worst performers in each
of these jobs were the givers.
58
128768
3669
02:24
The engineers who got the least work done
59
132749
2044
02:26
were the ones who did more favors
than they got back.
60
134817
2506
02:29
They were so busy doing
other people's jobs,
61
137347
2136
02:31
they literally ran out of time and energy
to get their own work completed.
62
139507
3550
02:35
In medical school, the lowest grades
belong to the students
63
143081
2805
02:37
who agree most strongly
with statements like,
64
145910
2107
02:40
"I love helping others,"
65
148041
2208
02:43
which suggests the doctor
you ought to trust
66
151068
2224
02:45
is the one who came to med school
with no desire to help anybody.
67
153316
3079
02:48
(Laughter)
68
156419
1027
02:49
And then in sales, too,
the lowest revenue accrued
69
157470
2358
02:51
in the most generous salespeople.
70
159852
1695
02:53
I actually reached out
to one of those salespeople
71
161571
2430
02:56
who had a very high giver score.
72
164025
1607
02:57
And I asked him, "Why do
you suck at your job --"
73
165656
2558
03:00
I didn't ask it that way, but --
74
168238
1541
03:01
(Laughter)
75
169803
1044
03:02
"What's the cost of generosity in sales?"
76
170871
2352
03:05
And he said, "Well, I just care
so deeply about my customers
77
173247
3266
03:08
that I would never sell them
one of our crappy products."
78
176537
2762
03:11
(Laughter)
79
179323
1401
03:12
So just out of curiosity,
80
180748
1228
03:14
how many of you self-identify more
as givers than takers or matchers?
81
182000
3284
03:17
Raise your hands.
82
185308
1150
03:18
OK, it would have been more
before we talked about these data.
83
186962
2949
03:22
But actually, it turns out
there's a twist here,
84
190525
3627
03:26
because givers are often
sacrificing themselves,
85
194176
3296
03:29
but they make their organizations better.
86
197496
2179
03:32
We have a huge body of evidence --
87
200345
2767
03:35
many, many studies looking
at the frequency of giving behavior
88
203136
3733
03:38
that exists in a team
or an organization --
89
206893
2137
03:41
and the more often people are helping
and sharing their knowledge
90
209054
3086
03:44
and providing mentoring,
91
212164
1153
03:45
the better organizations do
on every metric we can measure:
92
213341
2777
03:48
higher profits, customer satisfaction,
employee retention --
93
216142
2831
03:50
even lower operating expenses.
94
218997
1845
03:53
So givers spend a lot of time
trying to help other people
95
221407
2868
03:56
and improve the team,
96
224299
1207
03:57
and then, unfortunately,
they suffer along the way.
97
225530
2476
04:00
I want to talk about what it takes
98
228030
1668
04:01
to build cultures where givers
actually get to succeed.
99
229722
3321
04:05
So I wondered, then, if givers
are the worst performers,
100
233564
3020
04:08
who are the best performers?
101
236608
1828
04:11
Let me start with the good news:
it's not the takers.
102
239438
2650
04:14
Takers tend to rise quickly
but also fall quickly in most jobs.
103
242112
3655
04:17
And they fall at the hands of matchers.
104
245791
2097
04:19
If you're a matcher, you believe
in "An eye for an eye" -- a just world.
105
247912
3420
04:23
And so when you meet a taker,
106
251356
1420
04:24
you feel like it's your mission in life
107
252800
1869
04:26
to just punish the hell
out of that person.
108
254693
2042
04:28
(Laughter)
109
256759
1014
04:29
And that way justice gets served.
110
257797
1625
04:32
Well, most people are matchers.
111
260108
1970
04:34
And that means if you're a taker,
112
262102
1584
04:35
it tends to catch up with you eventually;
113
263710
1980
04:37
what goes around will come around.
114
265714
1638
04:39
And so the logical conclusion is:
115
267376
1606
04:41
it must be the matchers
who are the best performers.
116
269006
2865
04:43
But they're not.
117
271895
1518
04:45
In every job, in every organization
I've ever studied,
118
273437
2850
04:48
the best results belong
to the givers again.
119
276311
2162
04:51
Take a look at some data I gathered
from hundreds of salespeople,
120
279651
3158
04:54
tracking their revenue.
121
282833
1153
04:56
What you can see is that the givers
go to both extremes.
122
284010
2655
04:58
They make up the majority of people
who bring in the lowest revenue,
123
286689
3218
05:01
but also the highest revenue.
124
289931
1466
05:03
The same patterns were true
for engineers' productivity
125
291421
2604
05:06
and medical students' grades.
126
294049
1391
05:07
Givers are overrepresented
at the bottom and at the top
127
295464
2607
05:10
of every success metric that I can track.
128
298095
2082
05:12
Which raises the question:
129
300201
1302
05:13
How do we create a world
where more of these givers get to excel?
130
301527
3409
05:16
I want to talk about how to do that,
not just in businesses,
131
304960
2823
05:19
but also in nonprofits, schools --
132
307807
1831
05:21
even governments.
133
309662
1293
05:22
Are you ready?
134
310979
1206
05:24
(Cheers)
135
312209
1186
05:25
I was going to do it anyway,
but I appreciate the enthusiasm.
136
313419
2992
05:28
(Laughter)
137
316435
1023
05:29
The first thing that's really critical
138
317482
1844
05:31
is to recognize that givers
are your most valuable people,
139
319350
2747
05:34
but if they're not careful, they burn out.
140
322121
2434
05:36
So you have to protect
the givers in your midst.
141
324579
2490
05:39
And I learned a great lesson about this
from Fortune's best networker.
142
327093
4140
05:44
It's the guy, not the cat.
143
332993
1350
05:46
(Laughter)
144
334367
1160
05:47
His name is Adam Rifkin.
145
335551
1756
05:49
He's a very successful serial entrepreneur
146
337331
2212
05:51
who spends a huge amount
of his time helping other people.
147
339567
2794
05:54
And his secret weapon
is the five-minute favor.
148
342385
2336
05:57
Adam said, "You don't have to be
Mother Teresa or Gandhi
149
345261
2659
05:59
to be a giver.
150
347944
1183
06:01
You just have to find small ways
to add large value
151
349151
2503
06:03
to other people's lives."
152
351678
1357
06:05
That could be as simple
as making an introduction
153
353059
2343
06:07
between two people who could
benefit from knowing each other.
154
355426
2931
06:10
It could be sharing your knowledge
or giving a little bit of feedback.
155
358381
3337
06:13
Or It might be even something
as basic as saying,
156
361742
2312
06:16
"You know,
157
364078
1229
06:17
I'm going to try and figure out
158
365331
1500
06:18
if I can recognize somebody
whose work has gone unnoticed."
159
366855
3029
06:22
And those five-minute favors
are really critical
160
370462
2294
06:24
to helping givers set boundaries
and protect themselves.
161
372780
2722
06:27
The second thing that matters
162
375962
1445
06:29
if you want to build a culture
where givers succeed,
163
377431
2468
06:31
is you actually need a culture
where help-seeking is the norm;
164
379923
2925
06:34
where people ask a lot.
165
382872
1180
06:36
This may hit a little too close
to home for some of you.
166
384536
2669
06:39
[So in all your relationships,
you always have to be the giver?]
167
387229
3039
06:42
(Laughter)
168
390292
1024
06:43
What you see with successful givers
169
391340
1731
06:45
is they recognize that it's OK
to be a receiver, too.
170
393095
3120
06:48
If you run an organization,
we can actually make this easier.
171
396754
2863
06:51
We can make it easier
for people to ask for help.
172
399641
2297
06:53
A couple colleagues and I
studied hospitals.
173
401962
2072
06:56
We found that on certain floors,
nurses did a lot of help-seeking,
174
404058
3202
06:59
and on other floors,
they did very little of it.
175
407284
2251
07:01
The factor that stood out on the floors
where help-seeking was common,
176
409559
3346
07:04
where it was the norm,
177
412929
1151
07:06
was there was just one nurse
whose sole job it was
178
414104
2375
07:08
to help other nurses on the unit.
179
416503
2031
07:10
When that role was available,
180
418558
1381
07:11
nurses said, "It's not embarrassing,
it's not vulnerable to ask for help --
181
419963
3657
07:15
it's actually encouraged."
182
423644
1380
07:18
Help-seeking isn't important
just for protecting the success
183
426263
2826
07:21
and the well-being of givers.
184
429113
1399
07:22
It's also critical to getting
more people to act like givers,
185
430536
2932
07:25
because the data say
186
433492
1189
07:26
that somewhere between 75 and 90 percent
of all giving in organizations
187
434705
3400
07:30
starts with a request.
188
438129
1278
07:31
But a lot of people don't ask.
189
439996
1448
07:33
They don't want to look incompetent,
190
441468
1748
07:35
they don't know where to turn,
they don't want to burden others.
191
443240
3027
07:38
Yet if nobody ever asks for help,
192
446291
1709
07:40
you have a lot of frustrated givers
in your organization
193
448024
2675
07:42
who would love to step up and contribute,
194
450723
1983
07:44
if they only knew
who could benefit and how.
195
452730
2166
07:47
But I think the most important thing,
196
455413
1798
07:49
if you want to build a culture
of successful givers,
197
457235
2476
07:51
is to be thoughtful about who
you let onto your team.
198
459735
2802
07:54
I figured, you want a culture
of productive generosity,
199
462561
3016
07:57
you should hire a bunch of givers.
200
465601
1972
07:59
But I was surprised to discover, actually,
that that was not right --
201
467597
3670
08:03
that the negative impact
of a taker on a culture
202
471715
2475
08:06
is usually double to triple
the positive impact of a giver.
203
474214
2869
08:09
Think about it this way:
204
477530
1150
08:10
one bad apple can spoil a barrel,
205
478704
1664
08:12
but one good egg
just does not make a dozen.
206
480392
2826
08:15
I don't know what that means --
207
483942
1552
08:17
(Laughter)
208
485518
1119
08:18
But I hope you do.
209
486661
1373
08:20
No -- let even one taker into a team,
210
488058
3322
08:23
and you will see that the givers
will stop helping.
211
491404
2854
08:26
They'll say, "I'm surrounded
by a bunch of snakes and sharks.
212
494648
2930
08:29
Why should I contribute?"
213
497602
1366
08:30
Whereas if you let one giver into a team,
214
498992
1976
08:32
you don't get an explosion of generosity.
215
500992
2122
08:35
More often, people are like,
216
503138
1421
08:36
"Great! That person can do all our work."
217
504583
2138
08:39
So, effective hiring and screening
and team building
218
507077
2746
08:41
is not about bringing in the givers;
219
509847
2136
08:44
it's about weeding out the takers.
220
512007
2214
08:47
If you can do that well,
221
515036
1151
08:48
you'll be left with givers and matchers.
222
516211
1942
08:50
The givers will be generous
223
518177
1365
08:51
because they don't have to worry
about the consequences.
224
519566
2634
08:54
And the beauty of the matchers
is that they follow the norm.
225
522224
3113
08:57
So how do you catch a taker
before it's too late?
226
525361
2768
09:00
We're actually pretty bad
at figuring out who's a taker,
227
528745
2887
09:03
especially on first impressions.
228
531656
1826
09:05
There's a personality trait
that throws us off.
229
533506
2308
09:07
It's called agreeableness,
230
535838
1305
09:09
one the major dimensions
of personality across cultures.
231
537167
2621
09:11
Agreeable people are warm and friendly,
they're nice, they're polite.
232
539812
3485
09:15
You find a lot of them in Canada --
233
543321
1791
09:17
(Laughter)
234
545136
1603
09:18
Where there was actually
a national contest
235
546763
3497
09:22
to come up with a new Canadian slogan
and fill in the blank,
236
550284
3030
09:25
"As Canadian as ..."
237
553338
1575
09:26
I thought the winning entry
was going to be,
238
554937
2084
09:29
"As Canadian as maple syrup,"
or, "... ice hockey."
239
557045
2471
09:31
But no, Canadians voted
for their new national slogan to be --
240
559540
2985
09:34
I kid you not --
241
562549
1161
09:35
"As Canadian as possible
under the circumstances."
242
563734
2431
09:38
(Laughter)
243
566189
3213
09:42
Now for those of you
who are highly agreeable,
244
570020
2371
09:44
or maybe slightly Canadian,
245
572415
1393
09:45
you get this right away.
246
573832
1373
09:47
How could I ever say I'm any one thing
247
575229
1817
09:49
when I'm constantly adapting
to try to please other people?
248
577070
2826
09:52
Disagreeable people do less of it.
249
580400
1823
09:54
They're more critical,
skeptical, challenging,
250
582247
2937
09:57
and far more likely than their peers
to go to law school.
251
585208
3054
10:00
(Laughter)
252
588286
1143
10:01
That's not a joke,
that's actually an empirical fact.
253
589453
2655
10:04
(Laughter)
254
592132
1059
10:05
So I always assumed
that agreeable people were givers
255
593215
2549
10:07
and disagreeable people were takers.
256
595788
1947
10:09
But then I gathered the data,
257
597759
1430
10:11
and I was stunned to find
no correlation between those traits,
258
599213
3113
10:14
because it turns out
that agreeableness-disagreeableness
259
602350
2659
10:17
is your outer veneer:
260
605033
1163
10:18
How pleasant is it to interact with you?
261
606220
1941
10:20
Whereas giving and taking
are more of your inner motives:
262
608185
2692
10:22
What are your values?
What are your intentions toward others?
263
610901
2892
10:25
If you really want to judge
people accurately,
264
613817
2192
10:28
you have to get to the moment every
consultant in the room is waiting for,
265
616033
3517
10:31
and draw a two-by-two.
266
619574
1165
10:32
(Laughter)
267
620763
2098
10:37
The agreeable givers are easy to spot:
268
625648
2007
10:39
they say yes to everything.
269
627679
2634
10:43
The disagreeable takers
are also recognized quickly,
270
631740
2873
10:46
although you might call them
by a slightly different name.
271
634637
3907
10:50
(Laughter)
272
638568
1864
10:53
We forget about the other
two combinations.
273
641828
2072
10:55
There are disagreeable givers
in our organizations.
274
643924
3335
10:59
There are people who are gruff
and tough on the surface
275
647283
2641
11:01
but underneath have
others' best interests at heart.
276
649948
2538
11:05
Or as an engineer put it,
277
653089
1363
11:06
"Oh, disagreeable givers --
278
654476
1606
11:08
like somebody with a bad user interface
but a great operating system."
279
656106
3876
11:12
(Laughter)
280
660006
1286
11:13
If that helps you.
281
661316
1371
11:14
(Laughter)
282
662711
1150
11:16
Disagreeable givers are the most
undervalued people in our organizations,
283
664424
3503
11:19
because they're the ones
who give the critical feedback
284
667951
2592
11:22
that no one wants to hear
but everyone needs to hear.
285
670567
2606
11:25
We need to do a much better job
valuing these people
286
673197
2488
11:27
as opposed to writing them off early,
287
675709
1788
11:29
and saying, "Eh, kind of prickly,
288
677521
1744
11:31
must be a selfish taker."
289
679289
1497
11:33
The other combination we forget about
is the deadly one --
290
681849
2759
11:36
the agreeable taker,
also known as the faker.
291
684632
2682
11:40
This is the person
who's nice to your face,
292
688444
2065
11:42
and then will stab you right in the back.
293
690533
1980
11:44
(Laughter)
294
692537
1332
11:46
And my favorite way to catch
these people in the interview process
295
694537
3234
11:49
is to ask the question,
296
697795
1272
11:51
"Can you give me the names of four people
297
699091
1962
11:53
whose careers you have
fundamentally improved?"
298
701077
2369
11:56
The takers will give you four names,
299
704424
1893
11:58
and they will all be more
influential than them,
300
706341
2697
12:01
because takers are great at kissing up
and then kicking down.
301
709062
3202
12:04
Givers are more likely to name people
who are below them in a hierarchy,
302
712957
3400
12:08
who don't have as much power,
303
716381
1546
12:09
who can do them no good.
304
717951
1372
12:11
And let's face it, you all know
you can learn a lot about character
305
719723
3174
12:14
by watching how someone
treats their restaurant server
306
722921
2555
12:17
or their Uber driver.
307
725500
1163
12:19
So if we do all this well,
308
727319
1266
12:20
if we can weed takers
out of organizations,
309
728609
2084
12:22
if we can make it safe to ask for help,
310
730717
1912
12:24
if we can protect givers from burnout
311
732653
2014
12:26
and make it OK for them to be ambitious
in pursuing their own goals
312
734691
3227
12:29
as well as trying to help other people,
313
737942
2156
12:32
we can actually change the way
that people define success.
314
740122
2907
12:35
Instead of saying it's all about
winning a competition,
315
743053
3352
12:38
people will realize success
is really more about contribution.
316
746429
3540
12:42
I believe that the most
meaningful way to succeed
317
750761
2361
12:45
is to help other people succeed.
318
753146
1870
12:47
And if we can spread that belief,
319
755040
1671
12:48
we can actually turn paranoia upside down.
320
756735
2651
12:51
There's a name for that.
321
759410
1163
12:52
It's called "pronoia."
322
760597
1436
12:55
Pronoia is the delusional belief
323
763025
1697
12:56
that other people
are plotting your well-being.
324
764746
2600
12:59
(Laughter)
325
767370
1523
13:02
That they're going around behind your back
326
770908
2553
13:05
and saying exceptionally
glowing things about you.
327
773485
2916
13:09
The great thing about a culture of givers
is that's not a delusion --
328
777647
3809
13:13
it's reality.
329
781480
1234
13:15
I want to live in a world
where givers succeed,
330
783697
2576
13:18
and I hope you will help me
create that world.
331
786297
2322
13:20
Thank you.
332
788643
1221
13:21
(Applause)
333
789888
5286

▲Back to top

ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Adam Grant - Organizational psychologist
After years of studying the dynamics of success and productivity in the workplace, Adam Grant discovered a powerful and often overlooked motivator: helping others.

Why you should listen

In his groundbreaking book Give and Take, top-rated Wharton professor Adam Grant upended decades of conventional motivational thinking with the thesis that giving unselfishly to colleagues or clients can lead to one’s own long-term success. Grant’s research has led hundreds of advice seekers (and HR departments) to his doorstep, and it’s changing the way leaders view their workforces.

Grant's book Originals: How Non-Conformists Move the World examines how unconventional thinkers overturn the status quo and champion game-changing ideas.

Grant is the host of the TED original podcast WorkLife, taking us inside unconventional workplaces to explore the ideas we can all use to make work more meaningful and creative.

More profile about the speaker
Adam Grant | Speaker | TED.com

Data provided by TED.

This site was created in May 2015 and the last update was on January 12, 2020. It will no longer be updated.

We are currently creating a new site called "eng.lish.video" and would be grateful if you could access it.

If you have any questions or suggestions, please feel free to write comments in your language on the contact form.

Privacy Policy

Developer's Blog

Buy Me A Coffee