Three Benefits to Delegation
Delegation can be tough. It’s gut-wrenching to give up decisions or projects you care strongly about, and then it’s doubly gut-wrenching when it goes wrong. See what happens when one city manager delegates the task of?selecting a new city slogan.
In reality, of course, delegation is a necessity if you want to expand your reach and grow your direct reports. So why is it so difficult? Amy Gallo at the?Harvard Business Review?asked this question in a?blog post?over 10 years ago.
I’d like to look at it a different way. What if we could get inside the mind of a non-delegator, what would we see? What if we went to a non-delegator conference (which would be interesting because everyone in charge would have tried to pull off the entire conference by themselves)? What would we hear if the self-talk in the mind of a non-delegator was playing in a loop all over the conference?
I think we’d hear some collection of the following 12 thoughts:
Does this sound like you? Ever had those thoughts?
Some people start at #1 on this list and some people start at #9. Some people hit all the stops and others do a bit of a “greatest hits” tour. Regardless, did you notice the most common thought of a non-delegator? “I need help.”
Most of the delegation-related thoughts of a non-delegator don’t start with “How can we grow profits?” or “How can I best develop the people under me?” They are far more inward-focused—“I need help.” But as they sit and stare at that need, the anxiety around turning over a project outpaces that need for help. And they convince themselves not to delegate.
Sense the need for help. Look around at options. Only trust yourself over others. Add more workload. Repeat.
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Getting Started
I have a friend who says, “If someone can do a job 70% as well as you can, let them do it.” Why? Because delegation helps in three key ways:
James Clear, author of Atomic Habits,?talks about recognizing that it’s hard to delegate and suggests steps to making it a habit.
Be prepared. They likely won’t do it as well as you will. But it will likely turn out fine. Which is why it helps to look inside the mind of a delegator as well. There, we see thoughts like:
General George Patton said, “Never tell people how to do things. Tell them what to do and they will surprise you with their ingenuity.”
You non-delegators out there are thinking, “Yeah, that sounds good, but you don’t know the people I work with. It’ll never work.”
I’ve got two solutions for you: 1. Change your staff; 2. Start delegating to them.
Sometimes you have to be blunt with non-delegators.
I Move Stories Forward @WriteMyBooks.com?? @QwillCreative.com??
1 年Thank you for this, Steve! Alex Demczak Trevor Waite