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Is Your Management Causing Employee Issues and Slow Business Growth?Employee issues are most often symptoms of inconsistent or failing management; deal with supervisor/manager competency and impact and you not only have engaged employees but also an effective, productive and efficient organization. Could your management team be creating unnecessary employee issues that are leading to: . Low employee engagement While not so comfortable to ask, and even more challenging to be accountable for, here are 7 key questions to help you determine if your management is causing the above common concerns: 1. Does every member of your management team know (internalize) the company's Mission/Purpose and Vision (ideal future state)? If you said "NO" to any of the questions above then you likely have employee issues as a result of your management problems. When Addressing Employee Issues, Ensure You Have Sound Management First If you want to improve your business, you must start with your managers. These are the people who are the direct link to your front line employees. These managers include: . Department managers Yet unfortunately, the role and impact of the direct supervisors are often overlooked when senior management or business owners contemplate improvement questions such as: . How can we improve morale? Simply stated, as long as you do not deal with supervisor/manager competency and impact, you cannot effectively deal with any of the questions raised above. It's like trying to come up with a model to explain how our solar system works using the earth as the center of the system. It just won't work, no matter how hard you try. Replace the earth with the sun and it works beautifully. Money spent to improve the effects of management is wasted unless it's spent to address poor management first. Five Required Steps to Identifying and Addressing the Issue of Poor Management 1) First, get senior executives to function as an aligned team and to translate this manager's to promote (by demonstration not lip service) the stated values of the business. Remember, employees watch their leadership team for cues on how to behave and how to manage. They look to managers to see what's acceptable and what is not! 2) Carefully select employees for management positions. This means you need to have a succession plan that incorporates a management development plan for high potential candidates. 3) Support the transition from employee to manager. Not all newly promoted managers will be ready for their new role. In fact, in many organizations, it's possible that most aren't yet ready for prime time but are needed there. (A good coach or mentor can be very valuable in these situations.) 5) Then, insure your managers/supervisors are responsible for performance management and instilling employee accountability using these four fundamentals with their employees: A. Clarifying expectations of their role individually and within context to the larger organization Service excellence, cost-effective performance and innovation, start with engaged employees. And employees leave their organizations most often because of a bad boss and a poor-working relationship. If you believe that your employees are not engaged to the extent you want them to be, don't start with employee remediation efforts. Start first, with the leaders and the managers. If employees don't have a good boss and working experience with them, save your money; as nothing else will work, at least for very long. It may be the most difficult place to start Article Tags: Employee Issues, Management Team, Every Member Source: Free Articles from ArticlesFactory.com
ABOUT THE AUTHORSara LaForest and Tony Kubica are management consultants with more than 50+ years of combined experience in helping organizations improve their business performance simply by improving the leadership effectiveness of top management. Now, get their "Self-Sabotage in Business White Paper" at: http://www.kubicalaforestconsulting.com/resources.php and uncover the common, subtle ways your management team is harming your overall business performance. |
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