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Self-Actualize

 

Our Value:

Self-Actualize

Be all you can be. Identify, develop and apply your gifts and passions so you can best contribute in ways that are most meaningful to you. Be a lifelong learner.

What is Self-Actualize?

Psychologist Abraham Maslow defined self-actualizing as realizing your potential – becoming everything you are capable of becoming. It is a deeply personal and unique journey of discovering your aptitudes, developing skills and using them in productive ways.

Self-Actualize is highlighted in the Virtue and Talents and Motivation Dimensions.

Why is This Important?

Self-actualizing employees are motivated to contribute, create, face reality, take on new challenges, cooperate and help others succeed. These qualities help us work together to create virtuous cycles of mutual benefit and become preferred partners with customers, employees, suppliers, and other core constituencies.

As an individual who is striving to self-actualize, you will live a more productive, fulfilling, and meaningful life and contribute to society in many ways. At Koch, we believe self-actualizing is so essential to individual and company success that helping each employee along this path is an important responsibility of supervisors at every level. 

 

Principle in Brief

Self-actualizing employees are essential to Koch’s success, where our Vision is to succeed by creating value for others and creating virtuous cycles of mutual benefit. Self-actualizing employees are motivated to contribute, create, face reality, take on new challenges, cooperate and help others succeed.

Abraham Maslow defined this as realizing one’s potential – what he described as “everything one is capable of becoming.” It is a deeply personal and unique journey of discovering your aptitudes, developing skills and using them in productive ways. Self-actualizing is not about reaching the peak of a mountain, but a series of peaks that you continue to climb as you develop, contribute and discover new possibilities. It is creating your own virtuous cycles on a personal level.

Self-actualizing goes beyond your basic physical and communal needs. It requires deliberately and persistently striving to improve, developing your aptitudes in ways that are beneficial to others. As Maslow put it: “Every person is, in part, his own project and makes himself. . . . We must constantly learn about our own strengths and limits and extend them by overcoming difficulties….If you deliberately plan to be less than you are capable of becoming you’ll be deeply unhappy. You will be evading your own capacities, your own potential.”

This journey is all about experimenting to discover the work in which you can make the greatest contribution and have a passion for, and be a lifelong learner so you can continually transform yourself.

Helping each employee along this path is the most important responsibility of supervisors at every level. They must respect employees as individuals, continually evaluate and adjust their roles and responsibilities so they can best contribute, provide meaningful work that fits their talents and passions, combined with ongoing coaching and feedback to promote learning, development and growth.

In sum, our goal is for you to be all that you can be. That is not only the secret to success, it’s the secret to a life of meaning.

 

Understand it Better

Examples

 

Personal Reflection Worksheet

Need a little help discovering your aptitudes and interests and determining how that can translate into meaningful work? Download your own copy of a simple, yet powerful, self-reflection worksheet. Consider discussing your answers with your supervisor.

Note for Koch employees: This replaces the “Discover” section of Journey of a Lifetime. All other aspects of it are accessible from this website or Koch’s intranet.

Give it a Try

The power of these principles happens through application. There’s no substitute for learning as you apply.