Aubrey Daniels
Aubrey C. Daniels was an American behavioral scientist and the founder and chairman of the board for Aubrey Daniels International or ADI, a performance management consulting company.
Background and career
Born on May 17, 1935, in Lake City, South Carolina, he attended Lake City High School and graduated from Furman University in 1957 with a B.A. in Psychology & Speech. While at Furman, he sang with The Furman Singers, where he met and subsequently married Rebecca Tapp, a soloist from Greer, South Carolina. The two married in 1953. Having also enlisted in the military around this time, one month after his wedding to Rebecca, Aubrey was deployed to the demilitarized zone as a lieutenant in the US Army immediately following the end of open conflict in the Korean War.He attended the University of Florida where he earned his M.A. and Ph.D. in Psychology and Philosophy, and became a devotee of the renowned behavioral psychologist, B.F. Skinner. He quickly became convinced that the work of B. F. Skinner and other behavioral scientists best enabled his patients to change their own behaviors. It is then that he made the connection that the science could be successfully applied outside of a clinical setting. With this conviction, Daniels began to consider the impact of applying behavioral science to the workplace.
Daniels was an author and speaker. He was the first editor of the Journal of Organizational Behavior Management in 1977.
Performance Management
Performance Management was coined by Daniels in the late 1970s to describe a technology for managing both behavior and results, the two critical elements of what is known as performance.The PM approach is used most often in the workplace but applies wherever people interact—schools, churches, community meetings, sports teams, health setting, governmental agencies, and political settings.