GOOD
BOSS BAD BOSS
How
to be the Best… and Learn from the Worst
ROBERT
I SUTTON, PhD
CHAPTER 1: THE RIGHT MINDSET
5
beliefs to be embraced by best bosses as stepping stones to effective action
Belief Number
1: Don’t Crush The Bird
Lasorda’s law states that managing
is like holding a dove in your hand. If you
hold it too tightly, you kill it, but if you hold it too loosely, you lose it. Managers who are too assertive will damage
relationship with superiors, peers, and followers; but managers who are not
assertive enough won’t press followers to achieve sufficiently tough goals.
Effective bosses know it is sometimes
best to leave their people alone. Followers
who are closely monitored become less creative.
William Coyne, 3M’s R&D director believed a big part of his job was
to leave his people alone; as he puts it: after
you plant a seed in the ground, you don’t dig it up every week to see how it is
doing.
Bosses need to coach people,
discipline, communicate directions, and interject in hundreds of other little
ways.
Belief Number
2: Grit Gets You There
The word grit
is to describe the mindset define as ‘perseverance’ and passion towards
long-term goals. It entails working
strenuously towards challenges, mentoring effort and interest despite adversity
and plateaus in progress.
Gritty bosses
create urgency without treating life as one long emergency. They are driven by the nagging conviction
that everything they and their people do could be better if they tried just a
little harder, or were just a bit more creative.
Belief Number
3: Small Wins Are The Path
Great big
goals set direction and energize people, but if goals are all you’ve got, you
are doomed. The path to success is paved
with small wins. According to Karl
Weick, author of classic article ‘Small Wins’, people think and act more
effectively when they face and can conquer more modest and controllable
challenges. The best bosses realize that
when they focus on the little things, the big things take care of themselves.
The best
bosses breakdown problems into bite-size pieces and talk and act like each task
is something that people can complete without great difficulty. Doing so instills calmness and confidence,
and spurs constructive action.
Belief Number
4: Beware The Toxic Tandem
Being a boss
I much like being a high-status primate in any group the creatures beneath you
in the pecking order watch every move you make – and so they know about
them. People pay attention to those who
control their outcomes.
The toxic
tandem (part of power poisoning): people in power tend to become self-centered
and oblivious to what their followers need, do and say. When people wield power, they:
·
Become more focus on their own needs,
and wants;
·
Become less focused on others’ needs,
wants, and actions; and
·
Act as if written and unwritten rules
others are expected to follow don’t apply to them.
Belief Number
5: Got Their Backs
Effective
bosses protect their people. Great bosses
battle on their people’s behalf even when they suffer personally as a result.
to be continued....
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