Avoiding Micromanagement = Success

Avoiding Micromanagement = Success

Helping Team Members Excel – On Their Own


You've assigned an important task to a talented employee, and given him a deadline. Now, do you let him do his work and simply touch base with him at pre-defined points along the way – or do you keep dropping by his desk and sending e-mails to check his progress?

 

If it's the latter, you might be a micromanager. Or, if you're the harried worker trying to make a deadline with a boss hovering at your shoulder, you might have a micromanager on your hands – someone who just can't let go of tiny details.

 

Micromanagers take perfectly positive attributes – an attention to detail and a hands-on attitude – to the extreme. Either because they're control-obsessed, or because they feel driven to push everyone around them to success, micromanagers risk disempowering their colleagues. They ruin their colleagues' confidence, hurt their performance, and frustrate them to the point where they quit.

Luckily, though, there are ways to identify these overzealous tendencies in yourself – and get rid of them before they do more damage. And if you work for a micromanager, there are strategies you can use to convince him or her to accept your independence.

First, though, how do you spot the signs of micromanagement? Where is the line between being an involved manager, and an over-involved manager who's driving his team mad? This article and the video, below, will answer these questions and provide you with strategies that you can use to avoid micromanagement.

 

Signs of Micromanagement

 

What follows are some signs that you might be a micromanager – or have one on your hands. In general, micromanagers:

 

Resist delegating.

Immerse themselves in overseeing the projects of others.

Start by correcting tiny details instead of looking at the big picture.

Take back delegated work before it is finished if they find a mistake in it.

Discourage others from making decisions without consulting them.

What's Wrong With Micromanaging?

If you are getting results by micromanaging and keeping your nose in everyone's business, why not carry on?

 

Bottom of Form

 

Micromanagers often affirm the value of their approach with a simple experiment: They give an employee an assignment, and then disappear until the deadline. Is this employee likely to excel when given free rein?

 

Possibly – if the worker has exceptional confidence in his abilities. Under micromanagement, however, most workers become timid and tentative – possibly even paralyzed. "No matter what I do," such a worker might think to himself, "It won't be good enough." Then one of two things will happen: Either the worker will ask the manager for guidance before the deadline, or he will forge ahead, but come up with an inadequate result.

 

In either case, the micromanager will interpret the result of his experiment as proof that, without his constant intervention, his people will flounder or fail.

 

But do these results verify the value of micromanagement – or condemn it? A truly effective manager sets up those around him to succeed. Micromanagers, on the other hand, prevent employees from making – and taking responsibility for – their own decisions. But it's precisely the process of making decisions, and living with the consequences, that causes people to grow and improve.

 

Good managers empower their employees to do well by giving opportunities to excel; Bad managers disempower their employees by hoarding those opportunities. And a disempowered employee is an ineffective one – one who requires a lot of time and energy from his supervisor.

 

It's that time and energy, multiplied across a whole team of timid, cowed workers that amounts to a serious and self-defeating drain on a manager's time. It's extremely difficult, if not impossible, to keep up with analysis, planning, communication with other teams, and the other "big-picture" tasks of managing, when you are sweating the details of the next sales presentation.

 

Escaping Micromanagement

 

So now you've identified micro-managerial tendencies and seen why they're bad. What can you do if you know you're exhibiting such behaviours – or are being subjected to them by a supervisor?

 

From the micromanager's perspective, the best way to build healthier relationships with employees may be the most direct: Talk to them.

 

It might take several conversations to convince them that you're serious about change. Getting frank feedback from employees is the hard part. Once you've done that, as executive coach Marshall Goldsmith recommends in his book What Got You Here Will Not Get You There, it's time to apologise and change. This means giving your employees the leeway – and encouragement – to succeed. Focus first on the ones with the most potential, and learn to delegate effectively to them. Read our article on delegation for more about this.

 

 

Tips:

 

Part of being a good manager, one often lost on those of the micro variety, is listening . Managers fail to listen when they forget their employees have important insights – and people who don't feel listened to become disengaged.

 

As for the micromanaged, well, things are a bit more complicated. Likely as not, you're being held back in your professional development – and probably not making the progress in your career that you could be if you enjoyed workplace independence.

 

But there's a certain amount that you can do to improve the situation:

 

? Help your boss to delegate to you more effectively by prompting him to give you all the information you will need up front, and to set interim review points along the way.

? Volunteer to take on work or projects that you're confident you'll be good at. This will start to increase his confidence in you – and his delegation skills.

? Make sure that you communicate progress to your boss regularly, to discourage him from seeking information just because he hasn't had any for a while.

? Concentrate on helping your boss to change one micromanagement habit at a time. Remember that he's only human too, and is allowed to make mistakes!

 

Key Points

 

Micromanagement restricts the ability of micromanaged people to develop and grow, and it also limits what the micromanager's team can achieve, because everything has to go through him or her.

 

When a boss is reluctant to delegate, focuses on details ahead of the big picture and discourages his staff from taking the initiative, there's every chance that he's sliding towards micromanagement.

 

The first step in avoiding the micromanagement trap (or getting out of it once you're there) is to recognise the danger signs by talking to your staff or boss. If you're micromanaged, help your boss see there is a better way of working and if you are a micromanager, work hard on those delegation skills and learn to trust your staff to develop and deliver.

 

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To building strong relationships, this is your future for success...

Makes all the difference......Enjoy Your Journey...

 

Have fun, learn heaps, and remember life is all about commitment, have the right attitude to make `your` own success in life with others!

 

May all your success be fun and may all your fun be successful!

 

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Sharing information from many sources for your success

About the Author Colin Thompson

Colin is a former successful Managing Director of Transactional/Document Manufacturing Plants, Document Management/Workflow Solutions companies and other organisations, former Group Chairman of the Academy for Chief Executives, Non-Executive Director, Mentor - RFU Leadership Academy, Mentor - Coventry University, Mentor - The Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development, Business Advisor NHS Deanery, author/writer Business Advice Section for IPEX, Graphic Display World, News USA, Graphic Start, plus many others globally, helping companies raise their `bottom-line` and `increase cash flow`. Plus, helping individuals to be successful in business and life in general. Author of several publications, research reports, guides, presentations, business and educational models on CD-ROM/Software/PDF and over 4000 articles/reports and 35 books published on business and educational subjects worldwide. Plus, International Speaker/Visiting University Professor.  

Colin Thompson

 

Strategist | Mentor | Speaker | Author

DDL: + 44 (0) 121 247 4589

Mobile: 07831 588310

Main T: + 44 (0) 121 244 1802

email: [email protected]

Skype:colin.thompson384

 

www.colinthompson.org.uk

www.board-evaluation.co.uk

www.harrison-scott.com

www.ceo-worldwide.com

 

ETHOS

 

INTEGRITY is non-negotiable

 

EXCEED expectations

 

CHALLENGE conventional wisdom

 

RESPECT for all

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


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