10
Common Leadership and Management Mistakes
Avoiding Universal Pitfalls
Avoid common leadership and
management mistakes.
Experience
is the name every one gives to their mistakes.
– Oscar Wilde
– Oscar Wilde
It's
often said that mistakes provide great learning opportunities. However, it's
much better not to make mistakes in the first place!
In
this article, we're looking at 10 of the most common leadership and management
errors, and highlighting what you can do to avoid them. If you can learn about
these here, rather than through experience, you'll save yourself a lot of
trouble!
1. Lack of Feedback
Sarah
is a talented sales representative, but she has a habit of answering the phone
in an unprofessional manner. Her boss is aware of this, but he's waiting for
her performance review to tell her where she's going wrong. Unfortunately,
until she's been alerted to the problem, she'll continue putting off potential
customers.
According
to 1,400 executives polled by The Ken Blanchard Companies, failing to provide
feedback is the most common mistake that leaders make. When you don't provide
prompt feedback to your people, you're depriving them of the opportunity to
improve their performance.
2. Not Making Time for Your
Team
When
you're a manager or leader, it's easy to get so wrapped up in your own workload
that you don't make yourself available to your team.
Yes,
you have projects that you need to deliver. But your people must come first –
without you being available when they need you, your people won't know what to
do, and they won't have the support and guidance that they need to meet their
objectives.
Avoid this mistake by blocking out time
in your schedule specifically for your people, and by
learning how to listen actively to your team. Develop your emotional intelligence so that you can be more aware
of your team and their needs, and have a regular time when "your door is
always open", so that your people know when they can get your help. You
can also use Management By Walking Around, which is an effective way to
stay in touch with your team.
Once
you're in a leadership or management role, your team should always come first -
this is, at heart, what good leadership is all about!
3. Being Too
"Hands-Off"
One
of your team has just completed an important project. The problem is that he
misunderstood the project's specification, and you didn't stay in touch with
him as he was working on it. Now, he's completed the project in the wrong way,
and you're faced with explaining this to an angry client.
Many leaders want to avoid micromanagement. But going to the opposite extreme (with a
hand-offs management style) isn't a good idea either – you need to get the
balance right.
Our article, Laissez Faire versus Micromanagement will help you
find the right balance for your own situation.
4. Being Too Friendly
Most
of us want to be seen as friendly and approachable to people in our team. After
all, people are happier working for a manager that they get on with. However,
you'll sometimes have to make tough decisions regarding people in your team,
and some people will be tempted to take advantage of your relationship if
you're too friendly with them.
This
doesn't mean that you can't socialize with your people. But, you do need to get
the balance right between being a friend and being the boss.
5. Failing to Define Goals
When
your people don't have clear goals, they muddle through their day. They can't
be productive if they have no idea what they're working for, or what their work
means. They also can't prioritize their workload effectively, meaning that
projects and tasks get completed in the wrong order.
Avoid this mistake by learning how to
set SMART goals for your team. Use a Team Charter to specify where your team is going, and
detail the resources it can draw upon. Also, use principles from Management by Objectives to align your team's goals
to the mission of the organization.
6. Misunderstanding
Motivation
Do
you know what truly motivates your team? Here's a hint: chances are, it's not
just money!
Many
leaders make the mistake of assuming that their team is only working for
monetary reward. However, it's unlikely that this will be the only thing that
motivates them.
For example, people seeking a greater work/life balance might be motivated by telecommuting
days or flexible working. Others will be motivated by factors such as
achievement, extra responsibility, praise, or a sense of camaraderie.
7. Hurrying Recruitment
When
your team has a large workload, it's important to have enough people "on
board" to cope with it. But filling a vacant role too quickly can be a
disastrous mistake.
Hurrying
recruitment can lead to recruiting the wrong people for your team: people who
are uncooperative, ineffective or unproductive. They might also require
additional training, and slow down others on your team. With the wrong person,
you'll have wasted valuable time and resources if things don't work out and
they leave. What's worse, other team members will be stressed and frustrated by
having to "carry" the under-performer.
8. Not "Walking the
Walk"
If
you make personal telephone calls during work time, or speak negatively about
your CEO, can you expect people on your team not to do this too? Probably not!
As
a leader, you need to be a role model for your team. This means that if they
need to stay late, you should also stay late to help them. Or, if your
organization has a rule that no one eats at their desk, then set the example
and head to the break room every day for lunch. The same goes for your attitude
– if you're negative some of the time, you can't expect your people not to be
negative.
So
remember, your team is watching you all the time. If you want to shape their
behavior, start with your own. They'll follow suit.
9. Not Delegating
Some
managers don't delegate, because they feel that no-one apart from themselves
can do key jobs properly. This can cause huge problems as work bottlenecks
around them, and as they become stressed and burned out.
Delegation
does take a lot of effort up-front, and it can be hard to trust your team to do
the work correctly. But unless you delegate tasks, you're never going to have
time to focus on the "broader-view" that most leaders and managers
are responsible for. What's more, you'll fail to develop your people so that
they can take the pressure off you.
10. Misunderstanding Your
Role
Once
you become a leader or manager, your responsibilities are very different from
those you had before.
However,
it's easy to forget that your job has changed, and that you now have to use a
different set of skills to be effective. This leads to you not doing what
you've been hired to do – leading and managing.
Managers provide
more information on the additional skills that you need to develop to be an
effective manager. Make sure that you learn these skills – you'll fail if you
try to rely on technical skills alone, however good they are!
Key Points
We
all make mistakes, and there are some mistakes that leaders and managers make
in particular. These include not giving good feedback, being too
"hands-off," not delegating effectively, and misunderstanding your
role.
It's
true that making a mistake can be a learning opportunity. But, taking the time
to learn how to recognize and avoid common mistakes can help you become
productive and successful, and highly respected by your team.
Source: http://www.mindtools.com
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