Manager 101
Here's the secret to becoming a great manager.. Management isn’t a profession for the impatient.
Forget everything you learned in business school, hide your certificates and MBA, and put down all recent business best sellers. The key to long term success as a manager is; learn how to watch a pot of water on a stove come to a boil without ever wishing it to hurry. Better yet? Learn to watch that same pot of water, without ever checking to en sure you switched on the burner.
Manager 101 - Rules of Thumb
1) Treat others as you’d like them to treat you.
- Just because it’s old, doesn’t mean it’s out of date.
2)Trust is management’s most important asset.
- Always do what you said you’ll do.
3) If you don’t know… ask, don’t assume, or worse… pretend.
- Ignorance isn’t a crime, and it’s always curable.
4) When you do know… ask anyway. Their answers may surprise you.
- When you give others the chance to answer questions, they become involved in the solutions.
5) Give praise when it’s deserved, it’s not a limited resource.
- Just because positive feedback works with puppies, isn’t reason enough not to use it with people
6) Create an environment where there are truly, no dumb questions.
- In order for staff to contribute to your success, they must feel comfortable contributing.
Background & the Challenges
Unlike inanimate objects such as pots of impossible to boil water, and even plants, people have minds of their own. Dig a hole in the ground; throw in some Tulip bulbs before the first snowfall, and in the spring we’re almost guaranteed to see the beautiful results of our labors.
People, bless their brittle little hearts, are less predictable. They’re endowed with this thing called free will, something designed and intended to thwart all of our plans and aspirations. People do what they want, when they want, and for the most part, how they want - regardless of those plans and aspirations.
There are those who believe the very title of “Manager” will gift them with the ability to overcome the “Free Will” of their staff. If it were not so sad to see young delusional managers flail about in their new role, it would be amusing. On second thought, it’s mostly amusing. True, it’s only amusing in the sense of Three Stooges slapstick comedy, but it is amusing never-the-less.
It’s almost immediately obvious, even to a young novice manager, that there is something very different between “managing” and “doing”. We’re not exactly sure what’s different, but the moment we step into the title of “Manager”, the world changes even if we can’t explain the change.
New Manager Mistakes
The most common “new manager” mistake is to act as if little has changed. We do what we did before and devote a small amount of our time to just telling others to do some other things.
When that that strategy fails to deliver all that a manager is supposed to deliver, (unfortunately it sometimes works for a while) then we’re faced with two immediate choices.
We can:
- Work harder to compensate for what our staff isn’t doing, or
- Start wrestling with this problem of why the title of “Manager” didn’t have the effect we expected.
What did we expect? We expected people to do what we told them to.
The “work harder” strategy is eventually self-correctable as it is inevitably terminated by stress, burn-out and unexpected tours of medical facilities with expensive hands- on demonstrations of sophisticated shiny medical equipment.
Our second option, the one where we begin to “wrestle” with the heart of the management problem is, “Why don’t, and why do, people do what we tell them to?” is our first shaky step on the path towards becoming a Manager.
Patience and Experience
This path towards management is where “patience” begins to come into play. When we work with “things”, we can make a change in our approach to a problem, and then almost immediately determine if our actions have improved or degraded the situation. When we work with people, our problem solving efforts are more complicated. A management strategy that works for John, won’t necessarily work as well with Susan and might not work at all with Jim, and we won't even talk about James. He scares us.
The challenge for the new manager is that none of this knowledge is readily available in books. There are too many variables involved, too many unique situations, too many conflicting priorities. With all due respect to the management gurus of the world, a lot of what makes a good manager is experience, piled on common sense, and then sprinkled with intuition, fairness and gut instinct. All of which differs from one individual to another.
In case this all sounds too pessimistic or daunting for a newly appointed manager? Here is half a dozen tried and true, though seemingly simplistic, guidelines;
1) Treat others as you’d like them to treat you.
- Just because it’s old, doesn’t mean it’s out of date.
2) Trust is management’s most important asset.
- Always do what you said you’ll do.
3) If you don’t know… ask, don’t assume, or worse… pretend.
- Ignorance isn’t a crime, and it’s always curable.
4) When you do know… ask anyway. Their answers may surprise you.
- When you give others the chance to answer questions, they become involved in the solutions.
5) Give praise when it’s deserved, it’s not a limited resource.
- Just because positive feedback works with puppies, isn’t reason enough not to use it with people
6) Create an environment where there are truly, no dumb questions.
- In order for staff to contribute to your success, they must feel comfortable contributing.
Conclusion
Oh… here’s the bad news… all of the above are the things you have to integrate into your own behavior, before you have any hope of changing their behavior!
One final note on this article. The above six suggestions are the essence of 'obvious', but for some reason which I don't understand, we can trace the source of most management problems back to a violation of at least one, if not more, sometimes all of them.
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Author
The author of this article is Peter de Jager .
Peter de Jager is a speaker, writer and consultant on the issues relating to the Rational Assimilation of the Future. He has published hundreds of articles on topics ranging from problem solving, creativity and change to the impact of technology on areas such as privacy, security and business. His articles have appeared in The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, The Futurist and Scientific American.
A list of his publications can be found online. Peter also conducts webinars for a more in depth understanding of his information.
You can contact him at pdejager@technobility.com and visit his archive of presentations at www.vimeo.com/technobility
(c) 2006 Peter de Jager