Subtleties of working with people … Take a short quiz.

There was a time when I believed the sheer force of will of a manager would be enough to motivate and drive people … through experience I have learned using sheer forces of will is not a sign of a good manager, much less an effective leader; but rather are traits of a would-be tyrant, whose affect will actually drive their people away rather than lead them to success.

Effective leaders are those who appreciate the subtleties of those customers, staff, family, and others they interact with. Success becomes the sum of constant, daily conversations, appreciation, and collaborative alignment of goals.

Are you as successful as you wish to be? Are you an entrepreneur, a manager, a supervisor, or a prospective leader? Are you frustrated; are your people, your customers or your clients not responding how you want them to? Ask yourself, “Would you work for you?” and do so in the context of the following quiz.

See how you do.

Scheduling

Do you try to balance the needs of your organization and the needs of your people when preparing your schedules?

Does your organization have a sick day policy for your people that allows them to be paid should they not be able to come to work? How do you handle inclement weather days? Do you pay your people or are they not paid? Taking this one step further, how understanding is your organization in dealing with additional time off for parents with sick children, parents with daycare issues, people with elderly parents, and times when other medical appointments occur during scheduled hours?

Do you allow your people any input on when they get their days off or do you simply schedule them without any consideration of what might be the best day(s) for them?

Salary and bonuses

Do you have a clearly defined bonus structure? Is it achievable and something the person can influence? Have you promised a bonus program and never actually implemented one; this is a common occurrence in many organizations I have seen.

Do you expect your salaried people to work longer than your hourly paid people? Managers, supervisors, and leaders will typically work longer hours than regular staff given the nature of their responsibilities; however, do you ever recognize and show your appreciation, even if it is just a “thank you”?

Organizational Performance

Standards and Discipline

Do you have a written, communicated, comprehensive, and evolving policy for your people? How are deviations handled? Do you handle issues in person or via email? Do you indirectly foster gossip and innuendo by skirting and avoiding issues rather than dealing directly with the problems when they occur? Are you afraid of offending certain team members and avoid dealing with their behavior? Do you have favorites for whom some or all of the organizational rules do not apply?

Approach to your people

Are you autocratic? Even if autocratic, are you approachable? Do you deal with your people as if they are merely interchangeable “cogs in your machine” or do you appreciate your highly trained people who you feel make valuable contributions to your organization’s success? Worse, are you sometimes approachable and other times not, do you shut down offers and opinions with a flat “no”? Are you extremely rigid and do you have to be involved in every decision that occurs in your organization?

Are you collaborative in your leadership approach or do you do what you previously planned anyway?

Do you attempt to speak to all of your people every day?

Do you find yourself frequently looking for things your people have done wrong and cannot remember the last time you went looking for things they did right?

Do your people trust you enough to tell you what they are thinking about your ideas, systems, and processes? Do you care?

Is it important to you to build your people’s skills and abilities by listening to them and incrementally helping them to be better? Is this a core objective of your organization?

How does your organization encourage risk, innovation, and making good decisions? How does your organization reward failure, subsequent “lessons learned,” and regrouping after setbacks?

Priorities

Although you demand results, do you deliver on what you said you would do for your people?

When planning a project or establishing a goal, do you ever define what success should look like, and then review afterward to see if the goal was accomplished?

Communication

Do you rely on emails, texts, and memos even though they are not effective communication tools? Are your meetings primarily focused on your direction, and your ideas, and are seldom interactive? Are you aware of how tone affects motivation and performance?

Training

How did you do?

Most organizations and many managers do not initially score very well when asked these questions.

The “lesson learned” however, is to put yourself in the shoes of your people.

I have found the owners, managers, leaders, and supervisors of many struggling organizations to be intelligent people; they have been successful previously; but are struggling now because they cannot or will not see it is them who are standing in the way of their organization’s success. By considering the questions I have posed today, which are based on common situations and complaints from people in real organizations, they may be able to stem their frustrations.

These managers are losing their best people and their remaining staff are unhappy and sometimes more frustrated even than their supervisors. As a result, these organizations are having to constantly hire and train, all the while everyone is becoming more and more frustrated at their inability to drive success.

I hope as an entrepreneur, manager, supervisor, or someone who aspires to take on any of those roles, ask yourself “Would you work for you,” if the answer is no, then help yourself immediately by starting to change the answers to the questions in this post. Fortunately, virtually every one of the negative answers is within your and your organization’s ability to rectify, some simply by recognizing and appreciating your people’s perspectives and the negative effects of your decisions, policies, and procedures on them and their lives. Other solutions may take more effort and time; however, all of them are worth doing.

Good luck

Paul