Management Traps and How to Avoid Them

Much has been written about the secrets of good management and few will
argue that the best managers are inspired, visionary, dedicated,
industrious, energetic, energizing and display integrity, leadership, common
sense and courage. So where is it that managers commonly fail or falter and
lose their precious foothold on the corporation's top rungs? The following
are ten of the most basic management traps and tips to avoid them:

*Weak managers set weak goals*

As a manager your role is to get specific jobs completed by employees in the
most optimal, efficient and innovative manner and in order to do that, you
need to set clear objectives. Successful managers set SMART goals - goals
that are specific, measurable, achievable, realistic and time-based. They
are able to communicate these goals clearly, simply and concisely to their
employees so that none are vague or uncertain about expectations. By all
means reach for the stars in your objectives but to do so without supplying
employees with the training, resources, flexibility and freedom they need to
accomplish their goals and a schedule of regular supervision and feedback is
to set them (and yourself) up for failure.


*Weak managers micro-manage - effective leaders inspire*

The days of command and control organizations are long over - today's
managers recognize that in order to leverage their skills and maximize their
team's output they need to adopt a flexible approach and 'lead' their teams
to excellence rather than closely supervise, instruct and control them. The
best leaders communicate to their employees a vision and ignite in them the
fire, motivation and desire to work towards making this vision a reality.
Good leaders unleash their employees to innovate and achieve optimal
solutions by communicating top-level goals and objectives and a suggested
blueprint for success then leaving the employees to determine how to get
there most optimally while ensuring they have the aptitudes, training,
resources and work environment necessary to achieve superior results. While
a program of regular feedback and supervision is essential, managers should
ensure that their management style is not repressive, meddling or overly
overbearing. The golden rule is to communicate the 'what' and the 'why' of
the work that needs to be done and leave the employees to determine the
'how' without burdening them with strict instruction manuals or prescribed
rules and patterns that are largely redundant and inconducive to speed,
creativity, progress and innovation.


*Weak managers are afraid of hiring/cultivating strong leaders*

Strong leaders/managers have the self-confidence to hire the best people,
take them to new levels and cultivate in them all the qualities needed to
make them in turn effective leaders of the future. Weak leaders replicate
themselves in their hiring decisions and hire mediocre players, mistakenly
believing that an employee with more skills, acumen or industry knowledge
than themselves will ultimately undermine them or make them look bad. The
best managers are characterized by an ability to stimulate their employees
to superior performance and through coaching, training, feedback as well as
by example, inspire in them all the qualities needed to make effective
managers. A good manager helps employees achieve their full potential and
constantly raises the bar so that employees never stop learning, innovating
and growing. Coaching, training, career planning and programs for ongoing
growth and development of key staff are high on the priority lists of the
best managers.


*Weak managers belittle their employees*

Bosses who favour the archaic 'tough' management style where employees are
singled out for public reprimand and negative feedback is plentiful while
recognition and positive reinforcement are scarce will fail to win the
loyalty, respect and commitment of their teams over the long run. Without an
inspired, fired up, self-confident employee base these managers set
themselves and their teams up for failure. Effective leaders by contrast,
respect their employees and give them regular feedback with intelligent
constructive criticism and loudly laud special accomplishments in both
public and private, while communicating any negative feedback ONLY in
private and focusing such criticism strictly on the job performance, not the
person's character. Strong leaders recognize and reward a job well done.
These leaders inspire their teams to perform at their best and are able to
elicit from them a high degree of loyalty and a 'hunger' to raise the bar
and continuously excel. In such organisations, employees are not afraid to
challenge their boss's ideas or upset the status quo in the interest of
innovation and excellence and are encouraged to take risks to elevate the
business to a new level. The autocrats and bureaucrats on the other hand sap
their employees' self-confidence, drive and energy with their overbearing
management style and fail to induce in them any motivation to raise the bar
or excel.



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*Weak managers have obsolete skills-strong leaders constantly reinvent
themselves*


In today's knowledge-driven economies and highly competitive environment,
skills, training and education rapidly become obsolete and effective
managers know that they must constantly re-educate themselves and update
their skills to maintain an edge. While over-confident managers with an
inertia to further education fall by the wayside, good managers regularly
take an honest inventory of their skills and abilities and upgrade their
technical knowledge and soft skills wherever appropriate. They encourage
their teams to do likewise with sound career planning and performance
appraisal programs and an emphasis on training and self-education.

*Weak managers have poor communication skills*
Good communication includes cultivating and maintaining open channels of
communication with the team and others in the organisation, giving
constructive, intelligent feedback, eliciting ideas through brainstorming
sessions or otherwise, articulating the company vision and mission in no
uncertain terms, setting clear objectives and listening attentively with an
open-mind to employees grievances, suggestions and any other issues.
Effective leaders have an open-door policy that welcomes input, suggestions
and feedback from employees and recognize that good ideas and the next best
idea/process/innovation can come from anywhere. Strong leaders listen; weak
leaders talk. Strong leaders pay attention to their employees and encourage
them to express professional opinions and ask for more responsibility; weak
leaders think they are above such open-door policies. Employees who are not
listened to and are not made to feel important or respected as professionals
or individuals are unlikely to innovate or express any exciting new ideas
that can move a company forward.


*Weak managers blame*

Everybody makes mistakes and strong leaders protect their good people from
taking the fall when they err. Good bosses recognize that the occasional
slip-ups are inevitable and can be learning opportunities and are ready to
take personal responsibility when the team makes a misstep. A good boss
realizes that his most promising employees want to succeed, will grow as a
result of their mistakes and are unlikely to repeat the same mistakes. They
do no set their people up as a negative example for the rest of the
organization nor point fingers when the going gets tough. Good bosses are
personably accountable for their actions as well as the actions of their
subordinates and do not allow a culture of blame to permeate the
organisation.


*Weak managers take full credit for their team's accomplishments*

While weak leaders usurp all the credit for a job well done by their teams,
the strongest leaders will give the full credit to the team as a whole or
the team member responsible for the project. Strong leaders motivate,
energize and inspire by giving credit where credit is due and being generous
with reward and recognition wherever appropriate. Strong leaders publicly
thank their employees for a job well done and recognize that a motivated,
successful, energized team will reflect directly on the boss.


*Weak managers thrive on bureaucracy*

Weak leaders are fond of, augment and live well with the layers and
bureaucratic shackles that tie an organisation down; strong leaders remove
them. Today's effective leaders recognize that in order to compete they must
operate like a small company with a high level of speed, responsiveness and
flexibility. They realize that to maintain their edge in today's marketplace
their organization needs to be responsive to changing market conditions and
remove the shackles, boundaries, layers, clutter and obsolete policies,
procedures and routines that get in the way of the freedom and free flow of
people, resources and ideas.


*Weak managers are divorced from their teams*

Effective managers genuinely care about their employees and take the time to
get to know them and to understand their strengths, weaknesses, what makes
them tick and their goals and ambitions. They also take the time to learn
something about their personal life. While weak managers will maintain an
outdated aloofness and a formal distance from their teams, exceptional
managers are able to bring out the best in every employee and win their
loyalty and respect by understanding their unique needs, motivations and
abilities and showing the team that they are important and personally
significant. Strong managers are team players and through their constant
involvement with their teams communicate to them that they are there for
them and supportive of them. Effective managers by building a supportive
work environment, build a camaraderie and team spirit that enthuses and
excites the team to new levels of performance.


"When you're lonely, I wish you Love!
When you're down, I wish you Joy!
When you're troubled, I wish you Peace!
When things seem empty, I wish you Hope!
*Have a Happy New Year!"*

*Vanakkam Subbu*

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