Terrible experiences can make for great lessons. Working for a
terrible boss is stressful and unpleasant. Yet, you can grow a great deal from
the experience if you reflect on your work. With the proper mindset, we can
learn leadership lessons from saints and sinners. Here are some lessons you can
learn from your terrible bosses.
1. Always lead by
example
Terrible bosses lead by the example, whether they want to or not. If a
manager yells at people in order to solve problems, that approach will become
popular with the staff. In contrast, an effective leader will lead by example
by staying up to
date in their industry and showing courtesy to everyone.
2. Don’t keep people
waiting for decisions
The speed and quality of decision-making is one of the traits that
separates good bosses from terrible bosses. An ineffective boss makes decisions
very slowly and appears to act in a random way. The best approach is to explain
your decision-making process to your team — things like
clearly stating that certain requests must be submitted in writing — and
then make decisions using a consistent framework.
3. Don’t tolerate bad
meetings
Meetings are an essential tool in the professional world. Without
meetings, it would be incredibly difficult to assemble the facts, persuade
people, and move an organization forward. Poorly trained bosses run meetings in
a disorganized way that frustrates everyone involved. In contrast, an effective
manager begins and ends the meeting on time and uses a written agenda.
4. Understand the
importance of communication
Communication and persuasion are vital skills for managers and
professionals to use in their work. A terrible boss speaks in corporate slang
and makes no effort to connect with their team. Even worse, there are some
managers who do all of their communication by email. A better approach to
communication starts with recognizing the importance of communication skills.
The next step is to develop active listening skills. True masters of
communication take the time to studying public speaking methods and learn how
to persuade.
5. Don’t micromanage
Micromanaging a person frustrates the individual and wastes the manager’s
time. The bad manager will list each and every step and then dogmatically
enforce the steps. In contrast, effective managers learn effective delegation
skills: a clear scope and a deadline. A good manager would ask for
specifics — “Please send me a one-page proposal explaining which business
conferences you want to attend and why. The deadline for this proposal to me is
this Thursday at noon.”
6. Don’t insult your staff
There are many stressful situations at work – customer complaints, late
deliveries, budget cuts, and more. Terrible bosses are ineffective at working
through these challenges – they take their frustration out on their staff.
Insulting and abusing your staff will damage the relationship and cause the
best people in the department to start looking for new jobs. Rather than
yelling at your staff, learn stress management techniques to
address your feelings.
7. Don’t neglect vision and
inspiration
Without an inspiring vision, people gradually lose interest in their work.
Bad bosses ignore this problem and focus on day-to-day problems. The better
approach is to develop a vision for the department and deliver it with
enthusiasm. Learning how to inspire your people to achieve greater results
takes practice, but there are great resources out there to help you.
8. Don’t forget promises
Keeping promises is an excellent way to maintain your
credibility. Terrible bosses rarely think through their commitments and make
promises too quickly. A bad boss may promise a $10,000 raise immediately
when you demand it, rather than taking a day or two to review the budget
first. To avoid problems with communication, take a few extra moments to
clarify commitments. For example, if you receive a request from an executive,
clarify what you will provide — “I will provide a marketing plan regarding
the expansion to China by August 31.”
Vague commitments and promises tend to lead to
disappointment for everybody.
BY: BRUCE HARPHAM
Image: madamenoire.com

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