It’s Okay to Be the Boss! Workshop
Be the Boss or Face the Consequences of Undermanagement
What do you get when you put together employees with diverse personalities, work backgrounds, different temperaments, habits, and varying levels of weirdness?
Chaos.
But nowadays, that’s what most managers call a “team,” and the difficulty of handling such team doesn’t stop with aforementioned differences. In fact, that’s just the start. Add a dash of disregard for authority, laziness, lack of initiative and you have yourself a “typical” team.
Of course, not all teams are like this, but we can’t ignore the fact that managing employees now is more difficult than ever. As Bruce Tulgan says in his best-selling book, It’s Okay to be the Boss, “employees are not only more likely to disagree openly and pushback, but they also won’t work hard for vague promises or long term rewards.”
It’s almost as if they’re the boss and you’re the underling!
They say managing a team requires leadership, understanding, and consistency, but in reality, it all boils down to your management approach.
Hands-off or Hands-on Management?
When faced with the challenge of handling a group of difficult people that can make their every waking hour miserable, most managers take the hands-off management approach.
Leaders who use this approach put most of the responsibility in the hands of his subordinates. These managers leave their employees on their own after giving a “monthly quota” or project. This approach relies heavily on quantifiable goals to measure the productivity of staff.
The Problem with the Hands-off Approach
Unfortunately, this won’t work unless your team is composed of self-starters, who are adequately trained and confident in executing their work. Although even if you have a team of superstars with you, their energy won’t be enough to propel them to do their best every single day without any recognition or help. They’ll get bored and demoralized, and soon they’ll start working like drones, not minding if they’re doing the right thing or not.
In the end, this approach will just create more problems for you.
If the hands-off approach doesn’t work, what will?
You guessed it! A hands-on, highly engaged management style should do the trick! Here’s what it means to be a highly engaged manager:
- Set expectations with employees – Managers who use this approach don’t wait for annual reviews to set goals with their team. No, wait, they don’t even wait for quarterly reviews! Likewise, you don’t need a formal review setting to discuss expectations, devise a plan, and tell your staff what to do.
- Supervise people without breathing down their necks. Obsessively watching your team, when you know well enough that they’re not a bunch of teenagers, will reduce their morale, and breed a culture of dependency.
- Measure employee performance and correct mistakes early on. So many employees hate annual performance reviews. Why? Because they don’t want to know that they failed. Employee scorecards, when explained properly can help staff understand what they’re doing right, and how they can improve to get a better score. It can also highlight behaviors that need to be corrected.
- Reward people that deserve it. If you can create incentives that reinforce the positive behavior you want, do it!
The “It’s Okay to be the Boss” Workshop isn’t just a theoretical workshop; it’s packed with tools and tips you can actually use for your team. After going through this, you’ll have a clear action plan for transforming your unorganized team into an army of high-energy workers.
Choose to be The Boss.
Call us at 800-819-3520 or 800-540-3609.
Or visit marshall@mbrownassociates.com and Michelle@riklanresources.com for more information.
The Leader’s Institute®
Fearless Presentations® and Public Speaking Secrets®, along with other team-building courses, are composed of individual modules that can be customized into a range of time periods from a one-hour keynote address to a one-day or two-day seminar, to a series of individual sessions for time-spaced learning so we have a solution for every group. Click here to read how one team event, Build-A-Bike®, built the team and helped two charities.