Sunday, December 1, 2013

10.4 THE SKILLS YOU NEED TO BE A GREAT BOSS: Avoiding Micromanagement

(SHORT NOTES FROM TEAM MANAGEMENT: Delegating Effectively at http://www.mindtools.com)
 

Micromanagers take perfectly positive attributes to the extreme.  They give great attention to detail and have a hands-on attitude.  Either because they're control-obsessed, or because they feel driven to push everyone around them to success.  Micromanagers risk disempowering their colleagues.  They ruin their colleagues' confidence, hurt their performance, and frustrate them to the point where they quit.

Signs of Micromanagement
Resist delegating
Immerse themselves in overseeing the projects of others
Start by correcting tiny details instead of looking at the big picture
Take back delegated work before it is finished if they find a mistake in it
Discourage others from making decisions without consulting them

Good managers empower their employees to do well by giving opportunities to excel.  Micromanagement restricts the ability of micromanaged people to develop and grow, and it also limits what the micromanager's team can achieve, because everything has to go through him or her.  When a boss is reluctant to delegate, focuses on details ahead of the big picture and discourages his staff from taking the initiative, there's every chance that he's sliding towards micromanagement.


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