- Empowerment: how will you know when you're doing it right?
- 3 practical steps for empowering your technical teams
- Getting technology done: managing contractors and outside support
- (Re)structuring your team
- Getting big things done even when you can't change the big picture
- Corrections done correctly
- Advice for new managers: defending your core values
- The hard way: expressing your values and expectations in a formal presentation
- New leaders set the tone
- If leadership is a journey, how will you know when you're there?
July 25, 2007 | Comments: (0)
Empowerment: how will you know when you're doing it right?
One last motivation
If you need one last motivation on the benefits of empowering your people as a new leader, think of it this way: you are paying these people a lot of money for their time and expertise. Use it. Ask them their opinions and require them to solve problems. You’ll be creating new leaders by teaching them to see the bigger picture.
How will I know when I’m doing it all right?
You’ll know you’ve got it right when your team members can make the right decisions without asking you.
When this happens, they are informed of your goals and vision and are empowered by this knowledge with the ability to make the right decisions.
…and when I’m doing it wrong?
When you don’t inform, when you don’t infuse your goals and vision into others, then every decision made on every day is a mystery to them, and rightly so. With no context, how can anyone anticipate what decision is the right decision?
In this situation no one can do anything without your direct and personal involvement.
This is a very common situation that arises with managers who must control and who live in fear of failure. They don’t tell anyone what the vision is, so no one can criticize it beforehand or know whether they’ve failed afterward. The sad part is, developing an organization that hinges on the wisdom of one omnipotent decision maker sets you up for the biggest failures of all.
It’s worth the trouble; take the time to empower your teams.
This post is inspired by material in the book, The Only Trait of a Leader.
Posted by John West on July 25, 2007 08:02 AM
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