Archive for the ‘Managing the Manager’ Category

Helping your managers embrace their right to manage

Friday, January 15th, 2010

So frequently the managers I work with seem to feel the need to gain permission to undertake probably the most important part of their role – managing their staff’s performance. They clearly know there are expectations of them as managers but they don’t feel they have somehow earned the right to manage. Here’s an example: 

 

“I don’t feel managing performance is appropriate for my staff, some of them are more experienced than I am – who am I to say what good performance in their job looks like?”

 

 

Employees’ rights at work are a well debated and largely well understood concept. Most managers have some understanding of the organisation’s legal duties with regard to the care of employees. And rightly so. Many managers, however, spend little time thinking about their rights as managers of people’s performance. Here are some of the rights I believe managers must have:

 

The manager’s rights

 

·         To explain and agree standards of performance for the job

·         To expect their staff to consistently meet the agreed standards

·         To monitor performance against the standards

·         To give focused specific feedback on performance – the positive and less positive aspects

·         To identify areas of under performance and to address those areas of under performance with their staff member

·         To expect the staff member to take agreed actions to improve areas of under performance.

 

I’m guessing you can think of more.

 

Can I bring your attention to the word ‘agree’ in the above statements? I’m not suggesting here that managers have the right to coerce or bully good performance out of their staff. That would be daft. I am suggesting that managers have the right to explain clearly and directly their expectations of their staff and to have positive assumptions about their staff’s willingness to perform to a high standard.

 

 

 

And The Practical Application?

 

You could:

 

  • Open a conversation with the managers in your business around the issue of the right to manage – what they perceive to be their rights and identifying any barriers to asserting those rights   

 

  • Agree what rights the managers your business have and what asserting those rights would look like in practice

 

  • Develop a ‘managers rights’ charter

 

  • Use the concept of the managers rights in coaching sessions with managers who appear reluctant to manage

 

 

I’ve introduced the concept of ‘management rights’ to many managers and many of those managers have told me that understanding this concept has had a profound impact on their confidence. If we don’t believe we have the right to do anything, are we ever going to do it consistently and well?

 

 

 © Joan Henshaw 2009

 

 

Joan Henshaw is the author and presenter of the video management training series ‘The 10 Minute Management Toolkit’ – the flexible, cost effective and time effective way to help managers learn how to motivate their staff to high performance. Want to learn more about how to motivate staff to high performance? Watch videos and claim your free e-book at http://www.10mmt.com 

    

 

5 Ways to Motivate your Managers to Manage Performance

Thursday, October 22nd, 2009

I’ve worked with hundreds of managers, including team leaders and supervisors, and many of those managers were, by their own admission, reluctant to manage. Of course on a day by day basis they do manage people – they answer questions, allocate work, go to management meetings, and hold some team briefings. But what they often don’t do is apply a focused and structured approach to motivating their staff to high performance by managing their performance.

In theory, managers know they should be managing performance, that they should be agreeing objectives, monitoring and reviewing performance and using the review or appraisal system. They know they should be having dynamic discussions with their staff about their performance. But clearly there’s an obvious difference between knowing you should do something and actually doing it. And when managers don’t manage, the business suffers and so do their staff. So what’s the answer?

Here are five ways to motivate your managers to manage performance:

1. Help managers to understand why performance management is important to the business
Do your managers need help in understanding the value of managing performance? Do they need to understand why effective performance management is a critical commercial issue and how effective performance management impacts business success? If you can help your managers to understand the importance to the business they then gain the confidence that there will be some real business benefit derived from their efforts. And then they see the point.

2. Help managers understand why performance management is important to their staff
Do your managers know that research shows that what people seem to want, and want quite badly, is to be well managed? That they want clarity on what is expected of them and feedback which is motivational? Much of what ‘well managed’ means is effective performance management. The manager’s role in the satisfaction and the engagement of their staff can’t be overstated but often needs to be explained.

3. Help managers to embrace their right to manage performance
Frequently the managers I work with seem to feel the need to gain permission to undertake probably the most important part of their role – managing performance. They clearly know there are expectations of them as managers but they don’t feel they have somehow earned the right to manage. Do your managers need to understand the rights they have to manage? Do they know what those rights look like in practice?

4. Give managers the tools and techniques they need to manage performance
Do your managers have access to a range of tools and techniques which can make the seemingly complex much, much simpler? How can we expect managers to know, for example, that there is a simple way to give feedback about even the most ‘difficult’ performance issue so that the issue can be understood and accepted by the staff member? Managers just do not have the time to work these processes out for themselves so they either waste a lot of time (and staff good will) on ‘trial and error’ or they just give up.

5. Ensure that managing performance is a top priority for your managers
Do managers have ‘managing performance’ listed in their job description, their job objectives or anywhere else? I have heard hundreds of managers tell me that there is nothing written down or agreed that describes their responsibilities as a performance manager. So why would a manager dedicate time and effort to an activity for which they are not held accountable, for which there is no reward, which appears to be just about the lowest priority of the business? How can organisations expect their managers to undertake the complex work of managing their staff’s performance if:
a) the manager does not know what being an effective performance manager looks like in practice in their organisation
b) the manager is not held accountable for the effective performance management of their staff – it is not seen as an integral part of their job but something to be done when all of the ‘real work’ has been completed
c) they are not acknowledged or rewarded for effective performance management?

In summary

It’s all about developing the ‘will’ and the ‘skill’. Helping managers to understand the importance of effective performance management in motivating their staff to high performance, helping them develop the skills and then holding them accountable for applying those skills in practice

© Joan Henshaw 2009

Joan Henshaw is the author and presenter of the video management training series ‘The 10 Minute Management Toolkit’ – the flexible, cost effective and time effective way to help managers learn how to motivate their staff to high performance