I conducted a workshop last week for a group of new managers. It was a group of about 25 people from different organizations. As I was talking to the participants over breakfast, I learned that a lot of them had recently been promoted in the organization or given more responsibility.
Their company sent them to the training to learn some management fundamentals.
So these new managers were in the right place, but there was one message I kept repeating over the two-day training that continued to cause furrowed brows and shifting in seats: I continued to emphasize that having a relationship with your team members is the MOST IMPORTANT FACTOR to being an effective manager.This makes managers squirm. If a person is a new manager who has recently been promoted to manage their former peers, they are already friends, but they are looking to me to tell them to stop being friends and to focus on being a stern manager. If they have any HR background, they are queasy when they hear the words “relationship” and “friendship,” because they know the shadow side of HR means that you could someday have to write up or terminate your friend (and friendship).
If they are young managers, this seems quite natural, but they are still skeptical that they can have a good relationship with an employee and maintain a professional relationship. Many of us have been exposed to the command-and-control work style that perpetuates the view that employees are producers, not people. Command-and-control is fading fast; it’s time to see your employees as the whole human that they are.
So what do employees need from you, their manager, to feel like you understand them and have a healthy relationship?
We recommend you pick a space and time that is comfortable for you, so you can be at ease with your team members. This can be an off-site coffee break, a walk around the block or office, a quick pop-in, or a meeting invite. The managers I talk to notice that the more informal the conversation seems, the more natural it feels. So think of how you would approach a friend that you wanted to connect with. Draw from your natural language and style; don’t feel under any pressure to put on the mental business suit or the manager hat while connecting.
Let the conversation flow, and see how much you can discover.
Photo by William Warby // cc by: 2.0 //