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.

What is Coaching2Grow all about?

 
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