By John Cona '87
How to spot poor management and understand its supporting, perpetuating cultures. A checklist of warning signs for the wary as observed at one man's real life clients...
Summary
Healthy job seekers beware! Poorly-run corporations make their presence known through easily recognizable symptoms. In this essay, I present the etiology of ineffectual company management; in a follow-on piece, I will prescribe some simple home remedies. Hopefully, this knowledge will empower those new to the white-collar workforce to be agents of change. New workers do not have to sit powerless against the abject silliness and non-common-sensical goings-on at most corporations. There is hope.
Introduction
As a Stony Brook alum (1987) and long-time independent Management Advisor and consultant, I was asked to write a series of blog-essays giving career development advice to new graduates.
I thought it best to write a warning.
Corporate bungling is rampant, especially in management. There
are many things to be managed in a large business, and they all falter where
basic management skills are lacking.
Why?
The common cause...The common cure...
My core observation - having directly helped over 70 firms and indirectly advised literally hundreds - is that there is simply a lack of discipline.
Common causes include:
- Ready acceptance of excuses to go off-plan
- A dearth of management skill to begin with
- Plain old incompetent, silly or unsettling behavior
- Accedence to a superior's own causes
- Surrender to short term thinking, or lack of its recognition and ramifications
And running like a bright vein of fool's gold through all of these sources is a lack of common sense.
The Checklist: Easily Recognizable Signs of Poor Management
I expand on and discuss these items in the following section:
Those instantly recognizable:
- Email Inboxes Containing Thousands Of (Usually Unread) Messages
- Consultant Dependency (which is just silly)
- PowerPoint Heck (which is just unsettling)
- Reliance (Even a Little Bit!) On Instant Messaging and Texting
- New Directions Every Day or Week. Hour?
- Requiring Face-to-Face Time Every Day. Hour?
- "Hallway Management"
- Crowds of People in a "Working Meeting"
- Addressing Actionable Emails to More than One Person
- Giving Multiple Resources the Same Job To Do.
- Lack of Quality, Lack of Productivity, and Heroic Efforts
- Operating Continually in Reactive Mode
- ~60% Cancellation Rate on Scheduled Meetings - Or Anything Over 10%
- People Late or Absent From Meetings
Exposition on the Signs of Poor Management
Those instantly recognizable:
- Lack of ability - or lack of willingness - to delegate. A manager who is involved in every conversation that his subordinates undertake does not trust them, or is not aware that he/she can/should trust them.
- A management style that does not scale. Simply put: once a person's plate is full, there is no more that they can do.
- Poor performance. Being spread too thin brings about a lack of quality output in anyone.
- Lack of an organizational model that matches the workload. If a single person is receiving too many emails, this means that too many recipients are addressed to, or copied on, emails inappropriately.
This sign indicates that management is not, on its own, producing good ideas. At many large companies, there is a tendency to forego an important decision until a consulting firm says it is OK. The approach is not completely wrongheaded; consultants can supply valuable insight where expertise is lacking. At some point, though a firm needs to recognize its own strengths and back its people when they make decisions that they should be counted on to make.
3. PowerPoint Heck
In recent years, operational and organizational management have changed so that, in many instances, they communicate solely in slide-speak. The displacement of more suitable forms of documentation and communication by PowerPoint is a sign of dependence and inefficiency.
Those Noticeable Within a Normal Work Week:
1. Reliance (Even a Little Bit!) On Instant Messaging and Texting.
This is a sign that communications have "backed up"; as mountains of unread emails accumulate, the need for attention-getting moves toward instant messaging. This replaces the managed, directed, purposeful and productive communications of email with tools marketed mostly to teenagers. To rely on texting or IM is to rely on happenstance - what if the recipient is not available at the time of the message?
2. New directions every day/week/hour
This is a clear sign that there is no proper planning. ‘What happened to yesterday’s direction? Is it on maternity leave?’ is an appropriate, common sense response (though perhaps should not be spoken aloud; leave it to me to express this).
3. Requiring face-to-face time every day/hour
When there is no active plan, there is no way for managers
to gauge the productivity of workers without watching them type. Common sense dictates that witnessing someone
at their desk does not necessarily show that they are being productive.
4. “Hallway Management”
This is the overwhelming urge for a manager to give people
things to do upon every greeting – even chance meetings in the hall or
cafeteria. The implication is that the
receiver of the new request was not fully allocated at the time. Another
implication is that there is no plan.
Optimally, everyone in a “working” meeting should contribute
evenly to maximize its efficiency. If
this isn’t the case, reallocated meeting topics and attendees should be
considered. Meetings need to have clear
agendas, a leader to keep the discussions on point, and a pass-the-conch-shell
mentality so that contributors are not shouted down.
6. Assigning the Same Job to Multiple People.
If the same job is assigned to several people, a supervisor
may forget who has been given which tasks. There is a common defense for this:
that it is done purposely as a way for managers to compare workers’ reactions. Whose solution was best? Who responded quickest? If this were done in
a management-theory experiment, it would be forgivable. The other 99.9% of the time, it is a sign of
inefficient operations.
7. Addressing Actionable Emails to More Than One Person
This is similar to the previous item but different in that this is also a communication-management problem.
Those That Take Time to See:
1. Lack of Quality, Lack of Productivity, and Heroic Efforts
Longer-term lack of quality deliverables is a more difficult symptom to recognize immediately. More easily observed are the heroic efforts required when deliverables are finally met – one person, or a team, working extra hours as a tightly-knit group, cheerlead by management to act “as one” , with redundant efforts and inefficient grunts and groans until the project is completed, forced over the goal line in a muddy scrum. A shortcut to recognizing this symptom is to look for braggadocio or corporate pride in individuals who regularly perform 50+ hour work weeks just to keep the status quo.
2. Operating Continually in Reactive Mode
This is not only an effect
of a lack of disciplined management; in many cases it is also a cause. Those who enjoy causing chaos in
order to mask a lack of management skill contribute to the resulting
plan-less-ness.
3. 60% Cancellation Rate on Scheduled Meetings - Or Anything Over 10%...
When high rates of cancellations occur – especially last
minute – it is a clear indicator of poor time oversight and the absence of a
respected, bought-into plan – more so when a manager cancels meetings that they
had called themselves.
4. People Late or Absent from Meetings.
Ditto.
Simple Steps Toward: The Right Way
In a follow-on piece, I will present some guidelines on the right way to organize and communicate in an organization - simple enough that an individual can put them into place.
Simple Steps Toward: The Right Way
In a follow-on piece, I will present some guidelines on the right way to organize and communicate in an organization - simple enough that an individual can put them into place.
To read a more complete version of this essay, click here.
As background, note that I have broad experience in
Information Technology, having started as a software developer directly out of
college – I was a mathematics major, and my first industry positions were in
actuarial departments (within large, complex insurance companies) as a
student-actuary and programmer. From
there my career proceeded along a typical arc:
technical leadership, architecture, enterprise architecture – and in
parallel I also followed an analogous path through management: project management, program management,
executive management.
That described, and though I am hired usually for executive
IT, custom software development, analytics management, most of my work now
boils down to solving generic management issues. And, further, most of the problems have
simple solutions found by everyday reasoning and using good, old-fashioned
common sense.
Email me with your questions, comments, tales of management
horror, and commiseration. Thank you.
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