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Managing
your team
- What
differences do you see between leading and managing teams?
- Management
= getting results, achieving set targets while making the best use of
all resources at your disposal - just like investing money - you want
the best return.
- Leading
a team refers to inspiring them to change direction - establishing new
directions, not executing old ones.
- Could
you be disempowering your team? Try quiz.
Common
challenges managers face
- Making
the transition from great ''doer'' to coach or facilitator.
- Getting
the balance right between authority and empowerment.
- Doing
versus managing
- You
got promoted because of your professional knowledge.
- How
do you let go of that, to some extent, to rely more on others?
- If
you need to provide all the answers, how will your team grow?
- Can
you shift your confidence from technical know how to facilitative skills?
- Think
of team sports. You were once a great goal scorer, now you have to give
that up and be the coach. Even if you are a playing coach you will disempower
your team if you insist on scoring all the goals.
- Can
you avoid reverting back to what you know best under pressure?
- Manage
the expectations of your boss and other key stakeholders so they stop
expecting you to be the expert you once were.
- Define
your own success in future as team success - think ''we''.
- Learn
to obtain more satisfaction from seeing others succeed.
- Draw
technical solutions out of others instead of competing with them.
Balancing
authority and empowerment
- What
is the basis of your authority anyway?
- If
it's the power to punish or fire people, then it's based on fear.
- Conversely,
it could be based on the example you set, your commitment to live up
to their expectations and to be a good coach.
- This
means basing your authority on trust and respect, not fear.
- This
means that you don't have to score all the goals to be respected.
- Win
respect by showing it to others - making others feel good about themselves.
- Still,
you have to retain the authority to make decisions about them, critical
strategic decisions and the right to settle disputes.
- Empowerment
is not inconsistent with that.
- In
practical terms, it is simply a matter of being clear about boundaries
- for example, allowing them precise spending limits.
- Vague
boundaries can undermine confidence and trust on both sides.
- Don't
confuse authority with control. You can empower without losing control
by scheduling regular performance reviews to enable you to keep abreast
of what your team is up to.
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