Posts Tagged ‘managers’

Good communicators make better managers

Friday, July 31st, 2009

The explosion in communication tools, in the last ten years, with corporate websites, e-mail, mobile phones, SMS and the current buzz surrounding social media seems to have blurred the art of communication

Which is the most effective way to communicate with superiors, staff, and clients in the electronic age?

Being a good communicator is not necessarily a natural skill but rather one we learn. Great managers are those individuals who recognise clear communication is an essential part of their job and constantly work to improve their skills.

Effective communication should be open and honest exchanges of information with clear, easy to understand materials and a two-way feedback system. 

Great managers never lose sight of the importance of providing a clear demonstration of their interest in their staff and delivering all the news – both the good and the bad

A recent survey of employees in the US showed less than half (45%) said senior leadership both talks and listens, creating an environment of two-way communication.

Similarly, less than half (49%) say there are procedures in place to raise questions and issues with senior leadership or inform employees on a timely basis about major decisions and developments.
 
Conduct your own communication audits and ask yourself do your communications develop interest and encouraging response as opposed to simply presenting information.

Managers who stifle creativity!

Friday, July 3rd, 2009
As a manger and the leader of your team, you have the authority to authorise, encourage or restrict most aspects of your employees working day, and this places you in a position of power and responsibility.
Sadly, the way many organisations approach the management of people and projects kills the incentive to be creative and stifles creative ability.
Some of you will recognise this business model:
Always pretend to know more than everybody around you.
Get employees to fill in time sheets
Run daily checks on progress of everyone’s work
Ensure that highly qualified people do mundane work for long periods
Create barriers between departments
Never speak personally to employees, except when announcing increased targets, shortened deadlines and tightened cost restraints
Ask for a multi page documents to justify every new idea
Call lots of meetings
Place all the emphasis on the budget
Buy lots of computers
To get the best results you have to be good at managing people. Yes success is all about people, great managers make it a priority to build relationships and spend time listening to their people.
What great ideas do you have to motivate your team?

As a Manager and the leader of your team, you have the authority to encourage or restrict most aspects of your employees working day, and this places you in a position of power and responsibility.

Sadly, the way many organisations approach the management of people kills the incentive to be creative and stifles ability.

Some of you will recognise this style of management:

  1. Always pretend to know more than everybody around you.
  2. Insist employees to fill in time sheets
  3. Run daily checks on progress of everyone’s work
  4. Engage highly qualified people in mundane work for long periods
  5. Create barriers between departments
  6. Never speak personally to employees, except when announcing increased targets, cutting deadlines and tightening cost restraints
  7. Ask for a multi page documents to justify every new idea
  8. Call lots of meetings
  9. Place all the emphasis on the budget

To get the best results you have to be good at managing people.

Success is all about people, great managers make it a priority to build relationships and spend time listening to their people.

Do you have some great ideas to motivate a team and get the best out of them or how you deal with a manager who stifles your creativity?