10 best qualities in the manager.
10 Qualities of a Manager
There isn't a magic formula for good
management, of course, but if you're a manager, perhaps these tips will help
you be more effective:
1. Choose a field thoughtfully. Make it one you enjoy. It's hard to be productive without
enthusiasm. This is true whether you're a manager or employee;
2. Hire carefully and be willing to
fire. You need a strong team, because a
mediocre team gives mediocre results, no matter how well managed it is. One
mistake is holding on to somebody who doesn't measure up. It's easy to keep
this person on the job because he's not terrible at what he does. But a good
manager will replace him or move him to where he can succeed unambiguously.
3. Create a productive environment. This is a particular challenge because it requires
different approaches depending on the context. Sometimes you maximise
productivity by giving everybody his or her own office. Sometimes you achieve
it by moving everybody into open space. Sometimes you use financial incentives
to stimulate productivity. A combination of approaches is usually required. One
element that almost always increases productivity is providing an information
system that empowers employees.
When I was building Microsoft, I set
out to create an environment where software developers could thrive. I wanted a
company where engineers liked to work. I wanted to create a culture that
encouraged them to work together, share ideas and remain motivated. If I hadn't
been a software engineer myself, there's no way I could have achieved my goal.
4. Define success. Make it clear to your employees what constitutes success
and how they should measure their achievements. Goals must be realistic.
Project schedules, for example, must be set by the people who do the work.
People will accept a "bottoms-up" deadline they helped set, but
they'll be cynical about a schedule imposed from the top that doesn't map to
reality. Unachievable goals undermine an organisation. At my company, in
addition to regular team meetings and one-on-one sessions between managers and
employees, we use mass gatherings periodically and E-mail routinely to
communicate what we expect from employees. If a reviewer or customer chooses
another company's product , we analyse the situation. We say to our people,
"The next time around we've got to win. What's needed?" The answers
to these questions help us define success.
5. To be a good manager, you have to like people and be good at communicating. This
is hard to fake. If you don't enjoy interacting with people, it'll be hard to
manage them well. You must have a wide range of personal contacts within your
organisation. You need relationships - not necessarily personal friendships -
with a fair number of people, including your own employees. You must encourage
these people to tell you what's going on and give you feedback about what
people are thinking about the company and your role in it.
6. Develop your people to do their
jobs better than you can. Transfer
your skills to them. This is an exciting goal, but it can be threatening to a
manager who worries that he's training his replacement. If you're concerned,
ask your boss: "If I develop somebody who can do my job super well, does
the company have some other challenge for me or not?" Many smart managers
like to see their employees increase their responsibilities because it frees
the managers to tackle new or undone tasks. There's no shortage of jobs for
good managers. The world has an infinite amount of work to be done.
7. Build morale. Make it clear there's plenty of goodwill to go around and
that it's not just you or some hotshot manager who's going to look good if
things go well. Give people a sense of the importance of what they're working
on - its importance to the company, its importance to customers.
8. Take on projects yourself. You need to do more than communicate. The last thing people
want is a boss who just doles out stuff. From time to time, prove you can be
hands-on by taking on one of the less attractive tasks and using it as an
example of how your employees should meet challenges.
9. Don't make the same decision
twice. Spend the time and thought to make
a solid decision the first time so that you don't revisit the issue
unnecessarily. If you're too willing to reopen issues, it interferes not only
with your execution but also with your motivation to make a decision in the
first place. People hate indecisive leadership; However, that doesn't mean you
have to decide everything the moment it comes to your attention. Nor that you
can't ever reconsider a decision.
10. Let people know whom to please. Maybe it's you, maybe it's your boss, and maybe it's
somebody who works for you. You're in trouble and risking paralysis in your
organisation when employees start saying to themselves: "Am I supposed to
be making this person happy or this other person happy? They seem to have
different priorities."
I don't pretend that these are the only 10 approaches a manager should keep in mind. There are lots of others. Just a month ago I encouraged leaders to demand bad news before good news from their employees. But these 10 ideas may help you manage well, and I hope they do.
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