"What's Wrong with my Manager?" - Humanizing your boss
Jeff Sigel
Author of "The Middle Matters: A Toolkit for Middle Managers" - Helping mid-level leaders become great in their roles: Keynotes | Coaching | Groups | Courses | Development Programs
Why doesn’t my boss trust me? Listen to me? Respect my expertise? Care what I think? Support my career? Give me more responsibility? Let me do my job?
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The simplest answer is: your boss is human.
I am not excusing. Nor am I dismissing the extreme frustration that bosses can create by micromanaging, ignoring, quiet firing, being too mean, etc.
I get all that. I’ve experienced it. It’s not fun.
I’ve probably been on the other side of the equation too.
It boils all down to anxiety & insecurity.
Everyone has a boss, including your manager. So your manager is likely dealing with an insecure boss of their own who leaves them in a constant state of fear and panic.
“What if I fail? What if my streak of success comes to an end? What if I can’t deliver?”
Which turns into Perfectionism, Risk Aversion, and Hyper Goal/Task Orientation, leading to two behaviors that perpetuate corporate toxicity:
It’s convenient to dismiss these as the result of isolated “bad apple” bosses. But it’s not true - they are expected responses of people living in a constant state of “fight or flight” level stress.
The solution: overhaul the company culture, but that “easier-said-than-done” solution will have to wait.
Rather, today’s focus is on what you can do about a hyper-stressed, anxiety-ridden boss.
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Consider how your task oriented boss views you. You are essentially a means to an end, a tool to help them achieve. So you’re either the right tool or not.
If you’re the right tool, great - you have temporarily soothed the anxiety.
But if they needed a screwdriver, and you’re a hammer, then you become, at least for a moment, the source of their frustration.
That’s probably infuriating, obnoxious, unfair, disrespectful, etc.
So what are going to do about it?
Again, not defending your boss, just sharing how to deal with your boss’s iron-fisted control streak. Specifically, you need to find ways of decreasing your boss’s stress.
Here a few thoughts:
So what is wrong with your boss? They are as overwhelmed, stressed, anxious, and insecure as you are (maybe even more.) Focus on how you can alleviate that stress, and the independence will come over time.
Above all, remember when you are leading your own team, don’t perpetuate anxiety. Stop the cycle of viewing the team as means to an end. They are people. Developing their skills and independence will make them more effective and keep them more satisfied.
For more detail on the five bullets above and how to manage up to your boss:
Or send me a note at [email protected] for information about individual coaching or workshops/programs/presentations for your organization.
This article is cross-posted on jeffsigel.com.
Speaker, Trainer, Author, Co-Founder of You Grow Girl!
2 个月Your articles and insights are so good Jeff!!