Friday, 19 September 2014




culled from:.thedevco.com

1. Don’t try to be someone you are not

The temptation is to emulate the previous manager. This is bad news as you are not the previous manager, you are you. Think about successful managers you have enjoyed working for and identify what it was they did that gave you that feeling. Also, think about managers you have not enjoyed working for and identify what it was they did that gave you that feeling. These two activities will give you a framework from which to start your career towards becoming a successful manager.

2. Start as you mean to go on

Set clear standards and then model them – always. People respond positively to certainty as they generally don’t like surprises. Everyone needs to know what is expected of them and clear standards will help them understand that this is the way we are going to do things around here. It doesn’t have to be dictatorial either. Why not ask your team to put together their ideas on what the standards should be and then agree them with you. That way they have the ownership so you don’t need to motivate them to live by the standards.

3. Share your department’s objectives with your staff and then ask them how they can help you achieve them 

People respond to being given responsibility. OK you always get one or two people who moan and groan about you abdicating your responsibilities to them. Get rid of these people, or re-train them, as they will be trying to infect the team against you. Being decisive like this will impress your team and show them that you care about your responsibilities and about them as people.

4. Hold regular team reviews to ensure everyone is clear about what is expected of them

You can do this both as a team and more regularly as individuals. Once a month on an individual basis is a good way to work. Talk to each person about what they are working towards and the resources they have to do it with. Give them feedback about how they are performing (good and developmental feedback) and agree what you can do to help them in the following month.

5. Initiate new rituals for the team

Or better still get them to come up with them. Rituals are important as they confirm to the team members that they each belong to something. This is a motivator in it’s own right. Such rituals might include regular social events, team building days and team meetings.

6. Give feedback openly 

Nothing engenders trust more than being honest and open. OK, so you also need to be sensitive about how you do it. But remember, feedback is not just telling someone they have got it wrong – it is also about telling them when they have got it right. When you give feedback, be specific. Don’t say, “You dealt with that customer well.” Do say, “I particularly liked the way you calmed down that angry customer. You showed empathy for her needs and yet still managed to help her understand that she was the one who had caused the problem.”

7. Acknowledge the expertise of your staff

You are now a manager which means that your job is to manage other people doing the work. If you find yourself doing the work, then you are not being a manager but an overpaid worker. If you look to their expertise in doing the job they will respect your expertise in managing them.

8. Encourage creativity in your team

Look to your team for the solutions to problems rather than try and solve them for yourself. People like problem solving and will be motivated by you involving them. Creativity is in all of us. It just needs encouraging out. They will probably come up with better solutions than you could have anyway.

9. Don’t be too weak to admit your mistakes

You will make mistakes – that is, if you are human! Be open about them and ask your team for help in avoiding making the same mistake again. If you make yourself approachable they will be relaxed about giving you feedback which may help prevent mistakes in the future.

10. Managing and leading are not the same thing

Some good managers are not good leaders. The art is in knowing when to delegate. You will be developing your staff if you delegate leadership experiences. You will still retain overall control because you will always retain accountability, so learn to trust your staff – they don’t have a choice with you.

11. Carry on developing yourself

Becoming a successful manager is not an end point but the start of a new direction in your career. Managing is a skill which needs to be learned and practised and then learned some more. You will never reach the point where you will not need training and developing, so get yourself on some good courses, read management books (some of them are fun to read believe it or not) and sign up for some e-learning.

12. You can still be friends with your staff

Just because you are now a successful manager, it doesn’t mean you have to change your friends. They need to understand that you are being held accountable for their work and so there will be times when you have to be directive but there will be more times when you have to rely on them to help you. Successful managers do not build barriers against people.

12 comments:

  1. a manager must formulate and interprete is policy to create is environment.

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  2. will be nice and cool with your subordinate.

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  3. Manage should give position of formal authority and status within the organisation. By: Ojekunle Olasunkanmi Idris.

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  4. to become a successful manager one must posses,human skill,computer skill,analytical skill,and decision making skill.

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  5. Don't be discouraged by other people's failure at trying the same strategy

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  6. a successful manager must learn how to plan, forcast, control his business

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  7. QUADRI KABIRU OLALEKAN
    A good manager must posses some qualities: honest, diligence, accuracy and precise,
    A good manager must plan,forecast, organize and control his organization

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  8. Akindele Folakemi Aminat
    To become a successful manager you must share your objective and goal with your staffs.

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  9. Motivate people. Why are the employees there? What keeps them with your organization and stops them from going somewhere else? What makes the good days good? What makes them stick with the organization after a bad day or a bad week? Don't assume it's money - most people are more complex than that.

    Remember, our values are what make us "tick." If you manage by respecting your team's values, they will give you their best effort.
    Ask the employees how they're liking their job on a regular basis. Encourage them to be honest with you. Then take action based upon what they tell you.
    Offer perks that your employees will value. If health is important to them, give them time to go to the gym and work out. If their family is important, respect the time they may need to send their kids off to school in the morning or pick them up in the afternoon.

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  10. For a manager to become successful requires great efforts and endurance. A manager shouldn't be found gossiping with other employees. Be yourself and practice the qualities. the style is expository and the language is simple and direct. AZEEZ MUSIBAU DAMOLA

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  11. To become a successful manager in an organization, don't pretend in the working place, always show the true collour of your self. any business you start always have it in mind that is a going concern and work towards it. share your opinion with the other staff of organization and always admit your mistake when it happens,don't be too ash to your workers and always know how to forgive when they make any mistake

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  12. Becoming a successful manager is to be self focus, self determined and have self confidence. Creating a platform for the subordinate to have a visionary value for the uplift of the organization one manages.

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