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5 Tips to Become a More Effective Manager
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LEADERSHIP CAREERS NOV 10, 2020


5 TIPS TO BECOME A MORE EFFECTIVE MANAGER


LEADERS MATTER. BUT SO DO MANAGERS.

Listen to this article 11:16 Minutes
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Based on insights from

Carter Cast

Translations

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Lisa Röper

Based on insights from

Carter Cast

Translations

English

Português

Español

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In the rush to become a better leader, don’t forget to become a better manager.

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That’s the advice from Carter Cast, a clinical professor of entrepreneurship at
the Kellogg School. “We talk about inspirational leadership and brave
leadership, and I’m all for it,” he says. “But the power and strength of good
management doesn’t always get enough attention.”


After all, strong managers coax high productivity out of their teams; they also
free the executive team from much of the day-to-day operations so they can focus
on more tactical issues.

“Within a company, leaders create a vision, and managers create goals and lead
their group toward common objectives related to that vision,” Cast says. “You
can make a strong case that the real pulse of a company is its management
layer.”


So what does it take to become a strong manager? Cast offers five tips.


COMMUNICATE CLEARLY

As the lynchpin and catalyst between the company’s senior leadership and its
frontline workers, the manager must be able to communicate directions,
expectations, and the company leadership’s position. Managers need to be clear
about what they are asking people to do and why.

First and foremost, managers need to help their team members envision what
success looks like for their group. Cast says, “If I were to ask a manager’s
various team members to name 1) their department’s top two objectives for the
quarter and 2) the metrics by which they are measuring those objectives’
success, would they all say the same thing to me? If the answers I’d get back
are different, then that manager isn’t communicating their priorities clearly.

“You need to know that your team members are all aligned on what’s critical to
accomplish for the good of the team,” Cast says.


As for communicating with individual team members, Cast sees this as an
essential part of coaching and development and suggests organizing each
one-on-one meeting into three parts: performance indicators, progress on
initiatives, and people.


So, in an hour-long meeting, the first 20 minutes might include a review of the
performance dashboard agreed upon at the beginning of the quarter or year. The
second 20 minutes would be a conversation about progress on key initiatives,
focusing on resource needs and any barriers the manager may need to help lower
in order to complete the initiative on time. The final 20 minutes would then be
dedicated to personnel moves, opportunities, and issues, including the team
member’s own career development.

Cast suggests that managers ask direct reports to come prepared to each meeting
with a one-page summary of updates from these discussion topics. “I always write
all over that piece of paper in the meetings as we talk,” he says. “Then, I
later I pull those sheets out when I am working on performance reviews. They are
a good way to remind myself of what was accomplished over the course of the
year. I’m able to see things that they did really well, as well as things they
weren’t able to accomplish.”


TAKE OWNERSHIP OF THE PROCESS


As the people responsible for goal setting within the organization, managers
should always be thinking about how they will measure success—and how they will
hold their teams accountable for those metrics and timelines. This requires
collaboration between the manager and the team members on identifying the best
route to those goals.


“Average managers think their job is to stay in their lane and facilitate the
execution of initiatives. Great managers do that, but they also scratch their
heads and say, ‘Is there a better way to do this? I’m going to look into that,’”
Cast says.


For a manager, simply stating that sales goal isn’t going to help you or your
team reach it. Holding people accountable starts with outlining all the steps
you will take to get there, including clearly defining both the critical
“leading” and “lagging” measures of that goal. Cast notes that while both types
of measures are important, leading measures tend to be more actionable.


“If a team’s goal is $50 million in sales, a lagging measure of that goal might
be the number of new customers you acquired that quarter,” Cast says. “A leading
measure would be anything that impacts that customer acquisition, for instance,
the number of software demos that each sales person executes. Then the whole
team can be accountable by, say, working to run five demos per salesperson per
week.”


GET INVOLVED AND ADD VALUE

Of course, strong managers are not simply process facilitators. Most have
technical expertise within the area their team is operating. So to get the most
out of their teams, they have to know when to get directly involved. This might
mean stepping in at a time when the team is struggling, or taking the lead on an
important initiative related to their personal area of expertise.


“Great managers roll up their sleeves and work alongside the team when
necessary,” Cast says. “The more you understand your team’s work, the better
you’ll be at analyzing and improving it. And the best way to understand it is by
diving in and doing it.”

When he was the president of a division of Walmart, Cast arrived early to a
national meeting of store managers. Employees were busy setting up displays in a
full-scale store that was being assembled inside the Kansas City convention
center. When he walked through the simulated Walmart store, he noticed that the
merchandising team had fallen behind in assembling a set of display racks for
new products.

> “The more you understand your team’s work, the better you’ll be at analyzing
> and improving it. And the best way to understand it is by diving in and doing
> it.”
> 
> — Carter Cast

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“I looked over and there was the CEO on his back with a hammer, helping the team
construct a rack,” Cast says. “He realized that this was an important meeting
and that without the racks, the whole presentation would fall flat. He knew when
to jump in and help them get ready. It also signaled that he wasn’t above the
work.”


Cast acknowledges that diving in can backfire, and that teams can find it
demotivating if their manager is constantly swooping down to “help.” But there
are times when it is wise for bosses to flex their own expertise to improve
results. It can also help managers build credibility and trust within their
teams—and demonstrate that the manager has their backs.

“I have a background in marketing, so as a senior-level manager, I was able to
dive in when my team was working on, say, an advertising plan, and offer my
opinion when it was required. I could do that because I had done so much
advertising development and media planning and buying when I was younger,” Cast
says.


DEVELOP YOUR TEAM’S TALENT


Managers need to juggle both performance management and personal development for
their team members. These two tasks can come into friction when more immediate
expectations of on-the-job performance conflict with employees’ longer-term
professional-development goals.

“Think of yourself as a coach who’s there to unlock the potential of the
person,” Cast says. “You work with the talents and gifts of each person so they
can do more of what they do well.”


Cast recalls a former employee whose intelligence and technical expertise led
him to believe that he was ready for a promotion. He understood the technology
and the industry and was making steady progress on one of the company’s key
initiatives. But there was a catch.

“In talking to his peers, I heard very consistently that he was not a good
business partner—he didn’t have good listening skills, talked over people, was
in it for himself,” Cast says. “I had to warn him that his path to promotion was
at risk—that he wasn’t going to get a promotion so long as his peers didn’t want
to work with him. And boy, he didn’t take it well. It was heartburn for both of
us.”

He and Cast had a series of conversations where Cast offered example after
example of the “poor partner” issue and discussed how the employee might
recalibrate and bring others along. “Eventually, he got it,” Cast says. “But it
took several very hard, very direct conversations.”


More than a decade later, this employee, now a senior VP at a Fortune 50
technology firm, called Cast to tell him that their conversations had been
crucial to his career development.

“I couldn’t believe it,” Cast says. “Thinking back, those conversations were so
uncomfortable for both of us. But I think he realized later that I wouldn’t have
gone through the discomfort if I didn’t care about his development. He wasn’t a
lost cause. He was just missing an ingredient—the ability to enlist the support
of others effectively—and he had to go find it.”


HIRE WELL


Over his career, Cast has found that the most adept managers take recruiting and
interviewing talent quite seriously, looking for potential hires who can both
perform the task and enhance the team dynamic.


“Great managers know that ultimately their job is based on how well their direct
reports perform, so their ability to build a talented team is paramount,” Cast
says.


Yet surprisingly, this is an area where many managers fall short. A 2019 Gallup
survey found that 82 percent of hires have a skills mismatch for the job they
take.


How can managers hire better?


“One thing I recommend is to create a scorecard of the deliverables you’re
looking for in the job,” Cast says. “So when various people inside your company
are interviewing a candidate of yours, they are very clear on the 4–5 key
outcomes you, the hiring manager, are looking for.”


Those key deliverables might include outcomes such as business growth, margin
expansion, improving operational efficiency, or hiring a championship team. Next
to each outcome should be a list of several key performance indicators, the
metrics that show what success looks like. The hiring manager can use this
scorecard to craft interview questions around those important outcomes.

In addition to these outcomes, the scorecard should include a section listing
the key behavioral competencies and personality characteristics the hiring
manager is looking for in the position. If, for example, the person in the job
needs to be persistent because they are going to be navigating in a matrixed
organization, or if they are in a highly contentious job and need to be
resilient and open to criticism, it is helpful for the people interviewing the
candidate to know and probe for that in the interview.

“When you do the work up front to be crystal clear on what outcomes you’re
looking for in the new role, your interviews will be much more focused and
you’ll come away with a better fit in the selection process.”

Featured Faculty
Carter Cast

Michael S. and Mary Sue Shannon Clinical Endowed Professor; Professor of
Innovation and Entrepreneurship


About the Writer
Fred Schmalz is the business and art editor of Kellogg Insight.
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