Middle management: is it even possible to enjoy it?
There are too many horror stories of middle managers to count (but we'd still like to hear yours). Their leaders, their directs, even they agree that the work is getting harder as organizations get more dysfunctional .?
So is it even possible to build organizations where middle managers are beloved and love their jobs?
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More isn't always better.
Companies have known middle management is struggling for a long time. ?A paper published all the way back in 1979 in the Management International Review found that middle managers had more stress and lower satisfaction than more senior leaders. So why haven't we fixed this problem yet??
While there are many reasons, once common issue is companies often replace systems thinking with symptoms thinking.
For example, seeing that managers feel overworked and stressed, companies hired more of them, presumably to spread the work. In 1983, there were 8.5 employees per manager in the US, but today, there are 4.5.
But this, of course, didn't work. Why? Induced demand.
In the 2000s, Houston's Katy Freeway had a major traffic problem. The six-lane highway was clearly not enough for Houston's growing suburbs. So Houston started a 3 billion dollar project to add lanes, in some places, as many as seven additional lanes. Yet traffic only got worse. ?Economists call this problem induced demand, where more supply creates more demand. With added lanes, households who previously used other alternatives now used the highway until traffic was back to where it was.
As with adding lanes, adding middle managers created more work (i.e., demand). ?To survive the thunderdome of annual ratings, each middle manager needs to have their own priorities. But those priorities often require coordination from other middle managers, causing meeting and coordination costs to grow non-linearly.
The strategy to reduce work actually increased work. But perhaps worse still, this wasn't even the most powerful lever to help middle managers enjoy their work.
In our research on performance motivation , we routinely measure people's total motivation (i.e., tomo), and how it differs based on aspects of their work. Here are two different attributes of a person's job:
Which do you think had the higher impact on performance motivation?
If you're a reader of our newsletter or Primed to Perform, I hope the findings aren't a surprise. Having the ability to solve important problems was a far greater performance motivator than having a good work-life balance (although both together is clearly the best).?
What all this research says is that if we are to help middle managers thrive, we must shift from symptoms thinking to systems thinking.
The four steps to creating high-performing middle management
Step 1 - Clarify what they own
Many middle managers are unclear on what they own. But perhaps worse still, many others feel like their job is to enforce a command-and-control regime. Neither is great for optimizing performance.
Organizations must come to realize that there are two types of performance, not one —tactical and adaptive performance.
The aim is to build an organization that is high on both tactical and adaptive performance, and this is where the middle managers come in.
Many mistakenly say that middle managers should cascade goals down the organization. ?This isn't quite right.
Rather than cascading goals from the ivory tower, middle managers are responsible for a process of integration, where top-down goals are integrated with bottoms-up problem solving. Think about middle managers like an estuary where the pristine freshwater from rivers is integrated with the messy reality of ocean water.?
One major technology company we've partnered with in their own operating model transformation has asked us to create that clarity. This organization is large enough to have on average 5 layers below the c-suite, so each layer needs to understand their role in this process of integration.
When constructed well, as in the example above, every layer has a unique, interesting, and critical role to play in this process of integration.
To get started on this step:
Step 2 - Eliminate the bureaucracy
There's so much written about the pain of bureaucracies that you'd think a bureaucracy was responsible for writing them. And no executive wants a bureaucracy in their organization. So what's going on here??
We'll flesh out the concept of bureaucracies in another article, but for now, one of the most problematic root causes of bureaucratic organizations is the meeting culture.
These meeting-centric bureaucracies make the job of middle managers much harder.?
To get started in this step:
Step 3 - Continue their apprenticeship
The Peter Principle is the observation that when a leader learns how to do their job, they get promoted to a new job where they are no longer effective. Therefore, all leaders in companies are bad at their jobs. To avoid the Peter Principle, it is important that organizations develop the skills of their middle managers.?
I once worked in an incredible apprenticeship culture. Yet even in that company, the apprenticeship focused on technical skills, like building financial models. When it came to the skills needed to be a high-performing middle manager, the model became Darwinian—survival of the fittest. If you just happened to intuit the skills needed (or get lucky by hitching your wagon to cash cows), you survived.
For most organizations, a Darwinian model results in toxic cultures and is simply impractical. Instead, it is important to clarify the skills needed to perform in middle management roles. ?
For example, using the skills catalog in the Factor platform , you can see each of these roles has a unique and interesting set of skills to master. Take a look at your level and the two levels on either side—wouldn't you want to learn these skills?
To get started in this step:
Step 4 - Make people leadership easier
People leadership is exceedingly difficult when your aim is to maximize performance. This problem is covered deeply in the worldwide bestseller Primed to Perform . One of the major challenges is the Dunning-Kruger Effect which demonstrates that people tend to overestimate their abilities. For example, in one of our research projects, we asked people how their leaders perceive their performance. Here's the distribution of answers we got:
Yes, 50% of respondents thought they were in the top 10% of employees. Given that's how I would have answered this question also, I have a lot of reflecting to do.?
Because of this, a leader's ability to drive performance is incredibly difficult. Organizations should put in the processes to make this much easier. ?When we build high-performing organizations, there are three critical processes we recommend org-wide:
Marsha, Marsha, MARSHA!
The middle management problem isn't new. The term itself can be traced back to a 1941 book called Middle Management written by Mary-Cushing Niles who in her remarkable career worked for the White House and the government of India. ?
In her book, she writes:
...these administrators carry a heavy load of work and responsibility. They are subject to pressure from above by their chiefs in the top management with whose ideas, policies, and attitudes they must work; from below by the supervisors who press for counsel, decisions, and changes; and sideways by colleagues whose departments or functions are interrelated in greater or lesser degree with their own."
In the intervening 83 years, this description is still shockingly accurate, yet society doesn't seem to have mastered the concept. One recent study found:
Another study found middle managers are 46% less satisfied with their jobs than senior executives are.?
Nevertheless, companies still struggle.?
Rather than blaming middle managers, or treating symptoms, it is time to take a systems thinking approach and solve the problem of middle management once and for all.
Have a question or story about middle management? Don't hesitate to reach out to [email protected] .
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Experienced Senior Ethics & Compliance Leader, focused on reducing risk and improving culture.
8 个月Lindsay McGregor, it’s always great to see smart people digging into the plight of middle management which is so often where burnout and frustration meet to devour creativity and motivation. I’d also note that adding to the middle management burden in recent years is the pressure on corporations to be all things to all people/stakeholders (a topic that is explored so well in Alison Taylor’s new book Higher Ground”). The pressure of that messaging and the responsibility expansion that goes with it often falls disproportionately on middle management.