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Avoid These Management Mistakes

This article is for those of you who have been recently promoted to manager or maybe have been managing for a while but have become a bit stale. It serves as a reminder that good management doesn’t just happen. Good managers develop certain skill sets that enable them to help make their respective companies a success. It also serves as a reminder that sometimes knowing what not to do is as important as knowing what is.

Here’s a short list of mistakes managers can make that will derail their efforts to move their organizations forward.

Mistake #1: Not getting the right people involved in decisions

In my opinion, this is the number one mistake managers make. Those of us who’ve been around management for a while know that the best decisions are made with the input of those folks actually doing the job. They know what works and what doesn’t. Get their opinion on operational decisions before moving forward. You may save a lot of time and money.

Mistake #2: Not creating a stable work environment

We live in a chaotic world, a time of tremendous change on almost every front. One of the smartest things you can do as a manager is to create a stable work environment. Don’t constantly change direction. Develop a plan for getting from where you are now to where you want to be, and stay with the plan. Make necessary course adjustments but don’t create a new plan every time you have a new idea, or jump into a new management fad.

Mistake #3: Not taking time to explain “why”

The days of “just do it because I told you to” are over. Two of the four generations in the workplace today were raised in the Information Age and have a burning desire to know why. It takes very little effort to give some background or context to a particular decision and will go a long way in gaining the support needed for successful completion of a project.

Mistake #4: Ignoring the value of training

Just because employees are a great workers, show up every day – on time, and have great attitudes, doesn’t mean they’ll be successful managers. It just means they’re good people! Add to their value by training to the position they are now in. Also require that they, in turn, pass that training along to the people they’re are working with. Create a culture of training and reward those who respond.

Mistake #5: Not having or utilizing clerical support

Managers need to focus time and attention on management. The primary role of a manager is to move important projects forward – not to spend a significant part of the day copying and collating. Good managers make very expensive copy machine operators.

Mistake #6: Underestimating the importance of work areas

Work areas are important to people. The more comfortable and aesthetically pleasing an employee’s work area can be, the more productive that person will be. Providing staff with clean, comfortable work areas only increases performance and productivity.

Mistake #7: Not promoting teamwork, collaboration and cooperation

Ken Blanchard, author of the business classic, The One Minute Manager, often reminds his audiences that: “None of us is as smart as all of us.” Pitting one work group against another is a recipe for failure. Successful companies understand the value of collaboration and, in fact, insist upon it.

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