Monday, August 3, 2009

Delayed Flights and Managing People

I am sitting at an airport and my flight has been delayed by over two hours. With a patchy net connectivity, I don’t even have the choice of surfing the net. With nothing better to do, I decide to put my mind to do something that we seldom do – think. Somehow, my mind focuses on a topic very close to my heart – Leading people. As my thoughts crystallize, I get this sudden urge to document the thoughts in the form of bullet points.

• It is very important to select the right candidates for any job. A poor performer will directly impact your own performance.

• It is better to select people with the required competencies rather than hoping that one would be able to train people on the job.

• Selecting the right candidates is as important as selecting right clients. Once the chaff comes in, it makes matters very difficult.

• Having a cheerful temperament and enthusiasm is important but is not the only criteria on which one gets selected.

• It is necessary to have a rigorous interviewing process and select the best possible candidates.

• Ask lots of questions. And listen hard to the responses.

• Leading and Managing people is the most important job at any supervisory level. Spend at least half of your time doing this.

• This is one job that just cannot be delegated.

• The acid test is whether the employee has confidence in sharing his problems/dark secrets with you and trusts your intent and ability to resolve his problems.

• Leading by example is one of the best ways of leading a team to success. Set high standards for oneself.

• It is impossible to empathize with the problems of your team if you don’t get your hands dirty and live their life.

• There is a thin line between delegating and relinquishing control. Recognize it.

• When a team member needs help to perform better, offer specific tangible help as compared to global statements. He will be yours for life.

• Avoid forming impressions about people early on. It is very difficult to change one’s impression once it gets formed.

• As teams get larger, people who do not have a direct contact with you will depend only on your impression about them. This could make or break careers.

• Supervisors who do not get their hands dirty get information about team members only through their sources. It is necessary for the supervisors to ascertain the biases of their sources.

• Most people, most of the time want to work hard and grow in an organization. Always remember this when judging people.

• When two people get into a work related conflict, make sure both sides are heard. It always, always helps.

• In a work related conflict situation or working on the attitude of a team member or addressing the lack of performance of an employee, try to resolve the problem yourself first. Escalate only after your efforts don’t work.

• Senior officers of a company have the biggest influence to shape someone’s future. They also have the least information about these very people. Stay in direct contact with people.

1 comment:

Vishwanath Seshadri said...

Wow !! What a compendium of thoughts... It neatly captures your experience and learnings.. A separate blog may be written on each point !!

I am sure your readers will have their own thoughts and learnings which they may want to share.. It will be useful to break this down into more digestable and chewable smaller blogs..