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FIRST, BREAK ALL THE RULES: WHAT THE WORLD'S GREATEST MANAGERS
DO DIFFERENTLY
Article by Herb
Rubenstein
CEO, Herb Rubenstein Consulting
Introduction
One factor in
determining how long an employee is willing to stay with an organization
is the quality of the management to whom the employee reports. Contrary
to popular belief the more talented the employee, the more (better)
management that employee requires to reach his or her potential.
These and other valuable lessons are published in this book summarizing
interviews with over 80,000 managers in over 400 companies performed
by the Gallup organization.
Key
Concepts in the Book
- Great managers
“individualize.” They do not try to create one set
of rules that applies to each employee, each customer or each
situation. Great managers are “judgment based” not
“rules based” decision makers.
- Each manager
must develop and perfect his or her own style and apply it consistently.
- Managers
and great employees must be brilliant at anticipating.
- Managers
must make each employee comfortable with the way they are, not
insecure and not be so demanding on the employee that the employee
constantly lives outside his or her comfort zone, always insecure
and fearful.
- Managers
must listen to employees and be interested in them as human beings,
not just tools to achieve quarterly goals.
- If one is
going to fire someone, do it fast.
- If a manager
gives an order, it must be supported 100% backed up by the manager.
Saying “Corporate made me do it,” poisons the well.
- Managers
should make few promises and must keep all of them.
- Goal of
management –turn talent into performance.
- Profits
and a successful business begin by building a work environment
that attracts, focuses and keeps talented employees (citing The
Service Profit Chain by Heskett, Sasser & Schlesinger.
- Today, there
is no simple and accurate measuring stick to tell how well a manager
is doing.
- Pay for
performance systems are vital to high productivity.
- Workers
need 1) to know what is expected of them, 2) have the right materials,
3) must be acknowledged regularly, 4) be listened to, and 5) be
able to learn and grow on the job.
- Great managers
do not try to change people. They hire people that fit into what
they need. Then they maximize the potential the employee already
has.
- Self managed
teams are usually a disaster. Every team needs a manager, a leader.
- The distinction
between great managers and great leaders is one of focus. Great
managers focus inward, getting the best out of what they’ve
got. Great leaders look outward, toward the future, seeking alternatives,
patterns, connections and pursuing a vision that only a few can
see.
- The four
basic roles of managers are 1) select people; 2) set expectations;
3) motivate people; 4) develop people.
- Behavior
is generally recurring, forming a pattern. The manager must discern
behavior pattern very quickly. Behaviors, once formed into patterns,
are very difficult to change in the work context without extraordinary
interventions and investments.
- Managers
must know and be able to measure the range of performance outcomes
that are reasonable to expect in each person and in each job.
Managers must know the minimum, the maximum and the average expected
performance level and must set expectations as to what is acceptable,
not acceptable and what is to be considered outstanding performance.
This is the setting of standards.
- Managers
must assist workers in learning, knowing what new things they
need to know, widening their perspective and focusing them on
where they need to excel.
- Many jobs
require precision. Generally, either a person loves precision
or does not consider it important. Either way, it is difficult
to change an adult’s view in this area.
- The three
basic categories of talent are: 1) striving; 2) thinking; and
3) relating.
- Attitudes
and “drive” form key parts of a person’s recurring
patterns of thoughts, feelings and behaviors. Attitudes and drive
of workers are very difficult for managers to help employees change.
- Every job
requires a special set of talents and each manager must know what
talents are required for each job.
- Managers
are always “on the stage.” Employees must also act
like they are always on the stage.
- A list of
well recognized talents.
o empathy, warmth
o discipline
o precision, accuracy
o on-time
o desire/ability to learn
o creativity
o joyful, happiness
o realism
o organization
o coachable
o memory
o sincerity
o motivation
o visionary
o leadership
o planning, strategic thinking
o thinking, insight, focus
o physical strength
o independence
o trustful
o role player
o gregarious
o thrifty
o discernment
o exciting
o assertiveness
o ethical, honesty
o long term focus
o short term focus
o confrontation
o cooperative
o calm
o flexibility
o respectful
o confidence
o responsibility, dependability
o listening, understanding, observing
o drive, achievement focus,
o goal oriented
o courage, ability to perform in face of fear
o communication (writing, speaking)
- Managers
must not micromanage their employees. Managers must decide the
right, sought after outcomes. Employees must develop the best
road for them to achieve these outcomes.
- Managers
must not be “suckered” into buying into excuses for
a worker failing to meet a performance objective, especially if
the objective is not met on a regular basis.
- Managers
must recognize those patterns of behavior that lead to success
and failure and demand that patterns that lead to success be strengthened
and those that lead to failure be eliminated.
- When creating
steps for a company to follow, or “plays” for a sports
team to follow, always go from the players to the plays and not
vice versa.
- A manager
can describe in great detail the unique talents and strengths
of each employee.
- A manager’s
job is to “cast” their employees properly, showcasing
their strengths.
- Managers
treat each employee as that employee should be treated, not “like
the manager would like to be treated.” Good-bye Golden Rule.
- Managers
should ask employees how each wants to be treated, managed.
- Managers
should spend the most time with their best, most productive people.
Time = investment.
- Each employee
should be given a unique set of expectations by each manager,
often after hearing the employee’s point of view on what
should be expected of them.
- Managers
notice and deal with “non-performance” immediately.
- Managers
notice and acknowledge/reward excellent/outstanding performance
immediately.
- Managers
should encourage workers to form partnerships with other workers.
- Managers
create “heroes,” by creating and articulating levels
of achievement and creating the “hero category.”
- The key
to a healthy, successful career is “self-discovery”
- - discovery of what you do/like best and then doing it better
and better over time through growth and learning. Self-discovery
is a great source of energy and enthusiasm.
- Feedback
for employees should be constant and should focus primarily on
the future. I call this “feed forward.”
- Great managers
ask “why” when standards are not met and then decide
on a course of action.
- Managers
should create performance systems where employees keep track of
their own performance.
Conclusion
These 44 rules
are the new rules of running a business, a non-profit or educational
organization. We hope you find them useful in your organization.
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