A Time Management Tip: Stop Micro-Managing Employees
If I was a fly on the
wall what would I hear your employees say? Would it something like this?
“They won't allow me to make even the simplest decisions.” “The red tape
here makes it very difficult for me to do my job.” “Management has to sign
off on everything; they don't trust me."
A big time waster for
managers is micro-managing - paying extreme attention to small details and
not giving people the authority to do their job. If it is such a time waster
why do so many managers get hooked into micro-managing? Here are some
reasons.
Top down mirroring.
The CEO or President
micro-manages his or her direct staff. The staff then unconsciously adopts
the same management style with their direct reports. The practice spreads,
or ‘mirrors’ itself, and becomes part of the culture.
Fear.
In today's difficult economy,
managers live in perpetual fear that their department better produce or
else. This fear drives them to micro-manage, rather than trust their
employees to make the appropriate decisions.
A wrong belief.
Many managers think success is
based on amassing as much power as possible. They therefore do not allow
their employees to make decisions by themselves because that would be giving
up their own power. However, the more management allows employees to make
decisions, the more powerful the entire organization will be.
Here’s what can be done to
influence managers to focus their time, energy and resources on the
important tasks of managing – getting work down by and through others.
-
Start at the top.
Hire an executive coach to
help the CEO learn to trust and delegate to subordinates. Managers will
then likely follow suit with their own direct reports.
-
Ask employees.
Use focus groups and
individual interviews to learn from employees what decision-making
authority they feel they need to do their jobs well. Then communicate this
information to their supervisors.
-
Put yourself in their
shoes.
It is very easy for managers
to lose perspective about what decisions their employees really need to
make by themselves. Managers should ask themselves, what decisions would I
need to make if I were doing that job?
-
Train managers.
Delegating and trusting
employees are all skills that can be taught. During the training, those
few managers that ARE doing a good job of delegating should be asked to
share their best practices and successes with others.
Many managers often know in
their heart of hearts that they are micro managing. Yet they find it
difficult to change old habits. Great leaders are consummate learners and
are willing to take risks and try new approaches.
As a busy leader, are you
looking for a help desk to quickly solve your people problems so you can get
back to growing your company? Marcia Zidle provides People Smart Power
Learning Programs and What Really Works Business Management Success
tools in these leadership areas: relationship building, strategic staffing,
employee motivation and performance management.
Contact Marcia at
info@leadershiphooks.com or
800-971-7619
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