Turbulence Tolerance Test
The
following statements were made by a 37-year-old manager in a large, successful
corporation. How would you like to have a job with these characteristics? Using
the following scale, write your response to the left of each statement.
4 = I
would enjoy this very much; it's completely acceptable.
3 = This
would be enjoyable and acceptable most of the time.
2 = I'd
have no reaction to this feature one way or another, or it would be about
equally enjoyable and unpleasant.
1 = This
feature would be somewhat unpleasant for me.
0 = This
feature would be very unpleasant for me.
_____I regularly spend 30 to 40 percent of my time in
meetings.
_____Eighteen months ago my job did not exist, and I have
been essentially inventing it as I go along.
_____The responsibilities I either assume or am assigned
consistently exceed the authority I have for discharging them.
_____At any given moment in my job, I have on the average
about a dozen phone calls to be returned.
_____There seems to be very little relation in my job between
the quality of my performance and my actual pay and fringe benefits.
_____About 2 weeks a year of formal management training is
needed in my job just to stay current.
_____Because we have very effective equal employment
opportunity (EEO) in my company and because it is thoroughly multinational, my
job consistently brings me into close working contact at a professional level
with people of many races, ethnic groups and nationalities, and of both sexes.
_____There is no objective way to measure my effectiveness.
_____I report to three different bosses for different
aspects of my and each has an equal say in my performance appraisal.
_____On average about a third of my time is spent dealing
with unexpected emergencies that force all scheduled work to be postponed.
_____When I have to have a meeting of the people who report
to me, it takes my secretary most of a day to find a time when we are all
available, and even then, I have yet to have a meeting where everyone is
present for the entire meeting.
_____The college degree I earned in preparation for this
type of work is now obsolete, and I
probably should go back for another degree.
_____My job requires that I absorb 100–200 pages of
technical materials per week.
_____I am out of town overnight at least one night per week.
_____My department is so interdependent with several other
departments in the company that all distinctions about which departments are
responsible for which tasks are quite arbitrary.
_____In about a year I will probably get a promotion to a
job in another division that has most of these same characteristics.
_____During the period of my employment here, either the
entire company or the division I worked in has been reorganized every year or
so.
_____While there are several possible promotions I can see
ahead of me, I have no real career path in an objective sense.
_____While I have many ideas about how to make things work
better, I have no direct influence on either the business policies or the
personnel policies that govern my division.
_____My company has recently put in an “assessment center”
where I and all other managers will be required to go through an extensive
battery of psychological tests to assess our potential.
_____My company is a defendant in an antitrust suit, and if
the case comes to trial, I will probably have to testify about some decisions
that were made a few years ago.
_____Advanced computer and other electronic office
technology is continually being introduced into my division, necessitating
constant learning on my part.
_____The computer terminal and screen I have in my office
can be monitored in my bosses' offices without my knowledge.
Scoring
Total
your responses and divide the sum by 24; enter the score here [TTT =
_____ ].
This
instrument gives an impression of your tolerance for managing in turbulent
times—something likely to characterize the world of work well into the
[future]. In general, the higher your TTT score, the more comfortable you seem
to be with turbulence and change—a positive sign. For comparison purposes, the
average scores for some 500 MBA students and young managers was 1.5–1.6. The
test's author suggests the TTT scores may be interpreted much like a grade
point average in which 4.0 is a perfect A. On this basis, a 1.5 is below a C!
How did you do?
Source:
Peter B. Vail, Managing as a Performance Art: New Ideas for a World of Chaotic
Change (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1989), pp. 8–9.
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