How To Become A Great Manager

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Managing other people is not about control. It is not about telling them what to do. Managing other people is about love. If you do not love people, you can’t work with them.

Love means you care. Love says, ‘I see you. I am with you.’ The question is, ‘Are you a great change manager? Do you care about your people? Are you in the game for yourself? Or are you in it for others?

According to Scott Miller, ‘One of your key assignments is to help change feel participatory for your team.’

‘As effective as your first communication might have been, your team will need time to process and understand the change.’

‘Information and action are the antidotes to fear.’

‘… Communicate comprehensively and constantly.

‘Communicating change simply, clearly, and with respect for the concerns and experience of your direct reports is key to kicking off a change initiative in a positive way.’

‘Don’t make your direct reports guess your motivations for requesting feedback.’

‘Leaders provide feedback to help people see what they are not seeing.’

‘When a leader delegates and gets back a poor result, it is usually the leader’s responsibility.’

‘Great leaders plan goals with their teams rather than for them, and delegate tasks without abandoning or micromanaging. They shift from telling team members what to do, to aligning their work to greater purposes and supporting their efforts.’

‘Because you’re a leader, you’re noticed. Every time you communicate, every time you open your mouth, you create culture.’

Source:

Scott Miller, Todd Davis and Victoria Roos Olsson (2019). Everyone Deserves a Great Manager: The 6 Critical Practices for Leading a Team

RecruitTheBest Daily Digest- Why Do Great Leaders Lead With Love?

Leading people is a lot like creating work family. There are joy and tears, fun and fears.’

Love matters. It matters because with all that we have learned with respect to phenomenal leadership approaches, models, and philosophies, we still fail.’

When we fail to recognize the human need and capacity to love, we fail as leaders.’

Love is the crucial component in our lives, and our very survival depends upon its presence.’

Leaders who love create environments of compassion and caring.’

When people in the workplace are bonded by love, they forged solid bonds with one another that keep them together.’

Love enhances the feeling of ‘us’ along with a sense of purpose.’

When love is present, when care for one another rules, and when there’s an abundance of empathy, organizations take on the very human qualities toward which we should all strive.’

Love knows no titles. And hanging our importance or stature on the title in front of our name serve no purpose other than to inflate our ego.’

‘We depend on one another.’

We need one another.’

Source:

Zina Sutch and Patrick Malone (2021). Leading with Love and Laughter: Letting Go and Getting Real at work