Harvard Business Review
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HBR CLASSIC
Pygmalion in Management by J. Sterling Livingston
A manager 's expectations are the key to a subordinate 's performance and development.
In George Bernard Shaw 's Pygmalion, Eliza Doolittle explains:
"You see, really and truly, apart from the things anyone can pick up (the dressing and the proper way of speaking, and so on), the difference between a lady and a flower girl is not how she behaves but how she 's treated. I shall always be a flower girl to Professor Higgins because he always treats me as a flower girl and always will; but I know I can be a lady to you because you always treat me as a lady and always will."
Pygmalion was a sculptor in Greek mythology who carved a statue of a beautiful woman that subsequently was brought to life. The notion that one person can transform another is the basis for this "classic" article. At the time he wrote it for the fuly-August 1969 issue, J. Sterling Livingston was a professor of business administration at the Harvard Business School. He had founded the Sterling
References: 1. The Rosenthal and Headstart studies are cited in Robert Rosenthal and Lenore Jacobson, Pygmalion in the Classroom (New York: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, Inc., 1968), p. 11. 2. See John W. Atkinson, "Motivational Determinants of Risk-Taking Behavior/ ' Psychological Review, vol. 64, no. 6, 1957, p. 365. 6. David E. Berlew and Douglas T. Hall, "Some Determinants of Early Managerial Success," Alfred P. Sloan School of Management Organization Research Program #81-64 (Cambridge: MIT, 1964), p. 13. 8. Alfred A. Oberlander, "The Collective Conscience in Recruiting," address to Life Insurance Agency Management Association annual meeting, Chicago, Illinois, 1963, p. 5.