(EXTRACTION
FROM LEADERSHIP SKILLS at http://www.mindtools.com)
Experience is the name every one gives to their
mistakes.
– Oscar Wilde
Avoiding
Universal Pitfalls
It's
often said that mistakes provide great learning opportunities.
10 COMMON
LEADERSHIP AND MANAGEMENT MISTAKES
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Lack of Feedback
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·
Failing to provide feedback is the most common
mistake.
·
Provide prompt feedback and giving people opportunity
to improve their performance.
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Not Making Time
for Your Team
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·
So wrapped up in your own workload that you don't
make yourself available to your team.
·
Learning how to listen
actively to your team.
·
Develop emotional
intelligence so that you can be more aware of your team and their needs.
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Being Too "Hands-Off"
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·
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.
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Being Too
Friendly
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·
People are happier working for a manager that
they get on with.
·
Get the balance right between being a friend and
being the boss.
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Failing to Define Goals
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·
People can't be productive if they have no idea
what they're working for, or what their work means.
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Misunderstanding
Motivation
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·
Many leaders make the mistake of assuming that
their team is only working for monetary reward.
·
Find out what truly drives your people.
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Hurrying Recruitment
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·
It’s important to have a full team when your team
has a large workload.
·
Hurrying recruitment can lead to recruiting the
wrong people for your team: people who are uncooperative, ineffective or
unproductive.
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Not
"Walking the Walk"
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·
Need to be a role model for your team.
·
If you want to shape your teams’ behavior, start
with your own. They'll follow suit.
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Not Delegating
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·
Delegation does take a lot of effort up-front,
and it can be hard to trust your team to do the work correctly.
·
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.
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Misunderstanding
Your Role
|
·
Once you become a leader or manager, your
responsibilities are very different from those you had before.
·
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.
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