GOOD
BOSS BAD BOSS
How
to be the Best… and Learn from the Worst
ROBERT
I SUTTON, PhD
SECTION II
WHAT THE BEST BOSSES DO
CHAPTER
6: SERVE AS A HUMAN SHIELD
The best
bosses let the workers do their work. They
protect their people from red tape, meddlesome executives, nosy visitors, unnecessary
meetings, and a host of other insults, intrusions, and time wasters. A good boss takes pride in serving as a human
shield, absorbing and deflecting heat from superiors and customers.
A big part of
the job is shielding followers from unnecessary and destructive worries,
hassles, procedures, ingredients and intruders and idiots of every stripes.
Great bosses
avoid burdening their people. They invent,
borrow, and implement ways to reduce the mental and emotional load. Meetings are notorious time and energy
suckers. Too many bosses run them in
ways that disrespect people’s time and dignity.
Using arrival
time (arriving late) to display and grab power is an ancient trick. A related move is to insist that people stay
beyond the scheduled ending time, making them late for other meetings or
friends and families. Sometimes staying
late is necessary because of a pressing deadline.
If you want
your people to have more time to do work, be treated with dignity, and be proud
to work for you, start and end meetings
on time. You can glean some prestige
from having productive and grateful followers.
Don’t feel compelled to use all the scheduled meeting time if you can
wrap up early. Rather than automatically
scheduling a meeting, ask yourself if you really need it. The key lesson is that the best bosses keep
hunting for little ways to use everyone’s time and energy more efficiently and respectfully.
Good bosses
doggedly protect followers from outsiders.
Work is more fragmented now because emails and instant messages mean we
are bombarded with important and more often enticing but trivial interruptions
from anywhere in the world at any time. A
skilled boss shields his or her people by intercepting and dealing with many
messages, problems, people and assignments so the people can focus on their
work. Research shows that it takes
people an average of 25 minutes to recover from an interruption and return to
the task they had been working on – which happens because interruption destroy
their train of thoughts and divert attention to other tasks. Bosses also protect the people’s time by
buffering them from organizational practices that are annoying and excessively
burdensome.
Wise bosses
also remind themselves and their people that orders and procedures imposed from
on high that seem idiotic occasionally actually turn out to be useful and
necessary. Good bosses dig into facts,
follow the fate of fellow bosses who have implemented the apparently crummy
ideas before deciding whether to adopt or resist a new directive.
The best
bosses find the sweet spot between acting like spineless whims who always do as
they are told versus insubordinate rabble-rousers who challenge and ignore
every order and standard operating procedures.
Good bosses try to cooperate with supervisors and do what is best for
their organizations. Sometimes a boss
can avoid open disobedience by simply ignoring a supervisor’s idiocy and just
doing what is best.
“Anything
worth doing is worth doing well.” There are
times when smart bosses do a lousy or half-assed job on purpose. Good bosses focus their attention, and their
people efforts on small number of things that matter most. The best bosses learn when they can and
should ignore the least important demands from others.
Good bosses
protect their people from destructive and despised outsiders, from enemies up
the chain (especially bosses who undermine their chargers ability to get work
done and make them miserable). Remember,
it is wiser to be subtle and civilized, but fight for your people just as hard.
When you are
the boss, part of your job is to protect your people when they screw up. It is painful but often effective. Bosses who take the heat for their people
build loyalty. People need to feel safe
to learn new things, take risks and act without undue fear. Figure out what you learned so you can avoid
making the mistake again, announce and implement the resulting lessons, and in
doing so reinforce beliefs that you control the fare of your team or
organization.
to be continued....
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