04 May, 2010

Eight Manager Hats: Which one are you wearing today?

Sometime ago, My 3 yo asked me “What color is your manager?” I was surprised. I didn't know what to answer. For several days, this question kept lurking in my mind.

A few days later, I thought managers may not have colors, but could wear different hats (managerial styles). The hats they wear could make or break the teams they manage and even have positive/negative impact on entire organization.

The Destructive Manager hats
The Micromanager hat
The Micromanager is always in control of every project executed by his team. It could be as simple as an email sent to a programmer who sits a cubicle away. He would in fact want to review every email before you send it. He loves to micromanage, at least that is what he thinks he is hired for. He keeps a log of non-company websites visited by his team, so he could get them blocked by the Admin team. He often reminds the team how the organization has given lots of freedom (read as free internet access including job websites, ability to chat on Yahoo or Gmail, play games etc). Yet, he says that you are abusing (yeah, abuse not misuse) the facilities given. He will say that his team is the richest team in the entire organization based on the number of machines given per person! He himself does nothing than pushing emails from one person to another. He won’t read his emails 99% of the time. He expects people who sent emails to remind him to read the emails they sent. A typical email from a technical support guy (via his manager) takes about 2.7 days to travel to his team member. The team member is supposed to give an update in 2 hrs time (total execution time was 3 days!). He MICRO MANAGES until the team member finds a better option or moves to a different team.

The Torturer hat
The Torturer tortures the team because he thinks there is no better way to get things done effectively. He tortures not just his team members, but also other teams and its managers. He has a loud rude voice good enough to be heard clearly from a large football stadium. If you don’t wish him Good Morning, he will come to your cubicle and stare at you until you stand up and wish Good Morning. Followed by this, you will be invited to his cabin (the Gas Chamber) to teach you about “How to respect your manager”. He is proactive in taking decisions related to projects scheduled in the next one year – all this without thinking about the new customer escalation that just came in. He says ‘I know what is best for the team’. On some days, he leaves office very early only to come back 20 minutes later to check who else in the team has left. Next day, Gas Chamber awaits the person who left after he left, but did not come back after 20 minutes. And the TORTURE continues……

The Divide and Conquer Manager hat
The Divide and Conquer Manager confuses simplification for divide and conquer rule. He’ll call each team member individually and tell them that they are one of the top performers in the team. Post hike cycle, he’ll even tell each one that they have got maximum hike in the entire team and hence should not reveal it to anyone! And the bakras (as we call it in India meaning fools) give in to it. Divide and Conquer managers will not like it if the team is united. He won’t like it if two people from his team are good friends. He won’t like it if two people are working closely to get a common problem resolved. All he wants is people work in silos as this will give him a chance to prick on their weaknesses and overlook their strengths. If you have improved in the last one year based on the feedback you received the previous year, he will not even acknowledge it. ‘Big Deal! You did what you were told to. Maybe, if you did it right the first time, I would appreciate that.’ And by the way, Divide and Conquer manager will CRUCIFY you if you fail!

The Selfish Manager hats
The I, Me, Myself manager hat
The I, Me, Myself (IMM) belongs to an irritating breed of managers. An IMM manager always puts himself ahead of the team. Instead of leading from the front, he keeps running ahead while the team struggles to come out of the trench. He appears to be supportive of his team’s actions in weekly team meetings, but in front of other teams, he speaks as though he disowns the team. He makes the team feel orphaned whenever he really had to stand up, fight for and support the team. After goofing up, he will schedule urgent meetings during lunch breaks to apologize to the team that he behaved that way to please some people in the senior management. He lets people fail even if he knows that they are failing simply because he can put a red mark in their performance evaluation forms. He forces the team members to wear a yellow shirt with red trousers and a black tie to showcase team unity to other teams during Christmas/New Year party. In the background, team members would know that if they didn’t showcase unity, they would be accused of being loners and poor team players (-1 point on their performance evaluations). By doing all this crap, IMM manager would still have managed to give good impression about himself and how passionately he has been struggling to bring up such a DISINTEGRATED team to speed for the benefit of the organization.

The Passive Manager hat
The Passive manager a.k.a Yes Boss works from the safest place possible. Given any challenge, he figures out a safe way to hang in there without inviting anyone’s wrath. He is an excellent listener, yet hardly empathizes with anyone. He does nothing after listening to team’s problems, in turn starts whining about what problems he is facing from the senior management and how he is tackling them. He indirectly hints “Can’t you see how helpless I am. Why don’t you do something about it yourself? Hopeless fellows!” He is passive to an extent that he does not know how to communicate his own problems to management, forget about the challenges that his team is facing. He continues to be passive until all hell breaks loose by one incident which senior management caught attention of. This is when he puts his scary avatar of a responsible manager to use and starts yelling at his team on how it happened. After a day, he goes back to his passive state, calls his team and apologizes in public. After all, being EGO-FREE is good. At least, it does not give birth to new enemies.

The Helpful and Productive Manager Hats
The Provider hat
The Provider provides for what the team members need. He often provides only what he thinks the team members need, not what the team members actually need. It’s obvious that he thinks he is one of those good Samaritans who takes care of his team so well. He gets provoked when his 360 degree feedback says he has to improve in some areas. He takes examples of other managers who are supposedly bad according to him and hints at how good he is when compared to them. He stands up for the team and sympathizes with them, but does not emphasize. Many team members think about him like this: ‘He did not do X, Y, or Z appropriately. But, he is a very good human being’. He gets things done, but may not be able to RETAIN employees in the long run.

The Motivator hat
The Motivator motivates the team. “Work hard, Party harder” is his motto. Motivator gives you all that you need to be your best self to get things done better. He removes all the obstacles that block you. He might even pitch in to help you. He’ll not just sympathize, but also empathize with you. He will understand if a project gets delayed as long as there is a valid reason - more often, he respects reasons as valid. He will be involved in your project at every stage. If you don’t follow-up, he won’t mind. He will follow up with you thinking that it will save some time of yours that you can use to accomplish your task. He will buy you lunch and deliver them to your desk while you are busy working on weekends. He will not mind if you play Ping Pong to de-stress yourself during high priority releases. He leads from the front, yet keeps looking back to check if the team is catching up. He says ‘It’s OK to fail. But, learn the lesson’. He practices what he preaches. He MOTIVATES!

The Nurturer hat
The Nurturer nurtures his team. He truly believes in Team Work. He helps each and every team member grow based on their key strengths. He also works closely with the team by providing timely feedback about what is lacking within the team, what is the action plan and how to go about executing the plan. Nurturer brainstorms solutions to problems along with the team instead of pushing his decision. He puts the team ahed of everything and everyone including himself. He assigns tasks to the team based on their interests, skills and expertise. Nurturer does what is best in the interest of the team keeping his own ego aside. Nurturer is one of the best breed of managers who NURTURES not just teams, but organizations as a whole.

Wanna throw your bad hat?
With the advent of 360 degree feedback for managers and the annual performance evaluation cycles, it is highly unlikely that the senior management is unaware of the different hats (managerial styles) of managers within the company. It is up to the senior management starting from the CEO to take a call on how employees are being managed in the organization and check if its appropriate. The first few steps could start with as simple as assigning a mentor to each manager just like each employee would have a mentor (in most organizations). This way, it would be good to inspire and motivate managers to lead teams. Managers could be sent to leadership workshops (e.g. Problem Solving Leadership workshop) where they interact with other managers and discuss day to day challenges. Introducing incentives like gifting company shares, books, family trips, gift vouchers etc whenever a manager excels in the team will further encourage people to manage well.

If you are a manager who is wearing one of these bad hats, don't feel like a version 1.0 in a 6.0 world. Fight all the shy bones in your body bravely. Treat your team members as humans rather than resources. Consult your manager. Consult your team members in a group or individually. It could be in the farthest meeting room in your workplace. Ask for feedback frequently - once in a quarter has worked for my managers :). Weigh down pluses versus minuses. Work on the areas of improvement suggested. A few years later, you will become dust or shine elsewhere.

Manage yourself as a Manager. Manage your Manager. Today!

Regards,
Parimala Shankaraiah

14 comments:

  1. :D A great categorization on the basis of manager's nature. After going through all the category, I found my manager wears "The Passive Manager hat". Although he is not good but still better than the Destructive Managers. (I hope my Manager will not read this)

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  2. Great post! 360 reviews are great, I always value input from the people I work with and work for. Being able to give reviews on your managers also makes you feel heard and involved. It is such a great tool for professional growth- and so important to remember to think about how your co-workers see you.

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  3. Good thought about different Manager types!360 degree feedback are ok.Even in such systems there are chances that Person 1 will tell Mr.x is good but Person 2 will tell Mr.x is bad.But it's a manager's responsibility to deliver the correct feedback after filtering the wrong ones to Mr.x.If Mr.x is received with a wrong feedback then the scenario becomes more worst.

    How a person reacts to the situation matters a lot.Who faces success are called as good Managers and those who fails are called as bad managers. Ideally, all are situational leaders/mangers only.All good managers are not good at all the times and all bad managers are not bad at all the times.

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  4. I agree, 360 Degree Feedback is critical for managers to understand their management styles.

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  5. @Mohit
    I hope my Manager will not read this


    This is exactly one of the problems. We don't want our managers to know what we think about their working style. Figure out a way to let your manager know what you are thinking about him/her. Let him know through you or through a common friend or even his manager or the HR team. I know you need to be ready to face the consequences - good or bad. Why not take a chance and sort it out instead of saying "Well, he'll not listen. He'll anyway not change. He'll torture me futher". Take the lead, talk to your manager today!


    @Devon
    I always value input from the people I work with and work for. Being able to give reviews on your managers also makes you feel heard and involved. It is such a great tool for professional growth- and so important to remember to think about how your co-workers see you.


    I am glad you made this point Devon. It takes a lot of courage to be able to solicit feedback and work on areas of improvement. One of the directors at our shop always says 'People leave either because of their managers or because of the employees'. I am not sure how far this is true. But, I do believe that managers play a key role in driving the organizations towards success or failure.


    @Ram

    360 degree feedback are ok.Even in such systems there are chances that Person 1 will tell Mr.x is good but Person 2 will tell Mr.x is bad.But it's a manager's responsibility to deliver the correct feedback after filtering the wrong ones to Mr.x


    At the end of the day, not all feedback will be used against you unless you are a junior level employee and not many know about your work. In case of managers who work with many cross functional teams to clear team's obstacles and getting things done, it's not that hard to filter out good feedback from bad ones.

    Again, it's all relational and biased. what is good to you may not be good to me and vice versa.Some people might blindly favor few managers over others. Some may be in the good books of some people and in the bad books of some others. This is where I have seen 360 degree feedbacks help. In the organization I work for, gathering anonymous feedback about managers works really great.


    Ideally, all are situational leaders/mangers only.All good managers are not good at all the times and all bad managers are not bad at all the times

    Great point.


    Regards,
    Parimala Shankaraiah

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  6. Hi Pari,

    Did you read Bhagavad Gita, ramayana, mahabharata or any sacred scriptures for that matter? What did all they say? For centuries, they are there and till today we don't see everyone following those same protocols. If everyone follow those thoughts, the world would have been better than what we imagine "Heaven". But still, we all are human beings and the other thing is, there is no thing called good/bad or right/wrong if u analyze things layer by layer. Every action will have a unique story behind them. There are many things which are out of your or our understandings. When you explain about these hats/behaviors, you are not taking many things in account. It’s a field of psychology in general, where you bought these characters from and not very specific from testing field. When you see things in terms of business, competition, cost cutting, efficiency, effectiveness, organizational and local culture, ethics, mission, morals, aggressiveness in terms of market capture etc, you will get many combinations and the reasons why these hats exists and how few of these hats can be used as effective weapons. You might see few hats as not good types, but can be used effectively against few scenarios and people.

    Anyways, as usual, it's a nice read...

    Vijay...

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  7. Hi,
    You might have kept the heading of micromanager to negative micromanager. And the
    Nurturer as positive micromanager.
    What do you say?

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  8. Hi Parimala,

    Thanks for a very interesting post – the 2 bits that stand out for me are that, as managers we each have our ‘default setting’ or ‘preferred management style’ and that whilst this may have its advantages in some circumstances, it doesn’t necessarily work all of the time. My second thought is linked to how people want to be managed – for example some will prefer to be ‘told’ others ‘nurtured’ others ‘motivated’ etc. This all comes back to being aware of your style and having the flexibility to change it to meet the job in hand and the individuals you are managing. I agree that 360 is a great way of becoming more aware of the pros and cons impact of your style.

    On the 360 front - I have spent the last 10 years developing 360 Degree Feedback questionnaires for 100’s of clients and we have never developed one based on management styles which may be food for thought in the future 

    Finally, if you are interested in 360 degree feedback, try this 30 online community site

    David

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  9. @Hari Sreekanth Upadrasta
    Possible. The managers I imagined while writing this post were neither negative micromanager nor positive ones. I think that micromanaging itself is bad because it takes away the trust factor.

    @David Cooper

    On the 360 front - I have spent the last 10 years developing 360 Degree Feedback questionnaires for 100’s of clients and we have never developed one based on management styles which may be food for thought in the future


    I am glad if this comes up in future. Thanks for your time on my blog.


    Regards,
    Parimala Shankaraiah

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  10. Hm, nice perspective about manager types. Also I like your blog. Keep it up!

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  11. Eusebiu Blindu

    Thank you for your kind words.

    Regards,
    Parimala Shankaraiah

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  12. Hi Parimala,

    That was a good categorization - fits well with the current industry.
    I was able to map each of the categorization with the managers with whom i have worked.... :-)

    Even the best managers in the world would some time tend to fall in wrong categories unknowingly.... Such posts gives us awareness as where we are and where we have to improve upon.

    Good one.

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  13. @Sathya
    Even the best managers in the world would some time tend to fall in wrong categories unknowingly


    After all, we are all humans. Isn't it? I saw a tweet by Ester Derby which read 'As a manager, are you more like a parent or a partner'. It struck home for me as most of us think of managers as heartless creatures who hardly care for us. Introspecting on how we are as managers helps a lot in long run.

    Regards,
    Parimala Shankaraiah

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  14. I have seen few worst managers, the worst of worst were from LOGICA and i will remember their names till my last breath :

    Venkat Limbekar
    Karthik Mathivanan
    Sriram Kalyan

    I would say these people are Suvvars of IT Industry.

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