Sunday, March 15, 2020
How I Went from Macro to Micro Manager - Your Career Intel
How I Went from Macro to Micro Manager - Your Career IntelBeing a macro manager means two things. One, I expect you to beas accountable as I am. Two, you must be able to read my mind, or have a photographic memory, or both. I consider myself a hands-off managerjust ask my sales team. I want the role to come as naturally to you as it did for me.The long and the short of management is that it isnt one size fits all. In fact, the best managers and leaders I know can adapt their style to each team member. To me the thought of being micro causes me to break out in a rash or opt for a hot stick to the eyeuntil now. Recently I tried micro, and I liked it. In fact, I found that many successful managers are micro in their leadership to various extremes, and it does exist in the arsenal of all great leaders.Heres how I put my micro management style into action with my sales team and lived to tell about it.Take short and deep dives into activity, strategy, and technique. Before you guess where your team needs more help from a management standpoint, take a look at the data and metrics available. Is there an issue that can be solved by tighter planning with a solid prospect list? Do you need to help your employee create healthy habits (i.e. call blocks, eliminating distractions)? Is it as simple as some active role play to help them tighten their technique, close the gaps?Create a repeatable and logical process. It should follow the K.I.S.S. model. I see my team creating processes that resemble complex algorithms. Impossible to follow and tough to recognize where, if at all, they are winning. Simplify your dailyprocesses into three moves or less. Prospect lists are now active and Prospects. Thats it.Stop and Listen. . Listen to their calls and their interaction with clients. We all need immediate coaching and feedback related to improved communication. Use this as an opportunity to auto-correct schwimmbad habits and praise the attempts at good ones. Parenting 101 Accentuate the positive, eliminate the negative. My team appreciates immediate feedback and they are applying the coaching I share with their peers to their own process people are listeningHelp your team recognize why they win. Connect with ten people? Thats a win. Help them recognize its the process, the plan and the execution that produces a win. The closed sale is really just the end result. Its NOT the win. Cement this new, winning behavior by meeting each week to talk about their success. Listening to them share their wins builds their recognition of why they win.Applaud. Applaud. Applaud. Believe it or not, this is the hardest part for me, because I personally dont need the praise and I am not a natural cheerleader. However, research says we must offer regular praise. This is where I have to adjust to meet the needs of my team. Everyone benefits from a pat on the back, a spontaneous note, recognition in a meeting or a thoughtful gift on their desk. Determine your style and stick with it . This small act produces some of the greatest and longest lasting results.If you made it this far and feel like it all seems daunting, Im with you. I thought so too, until I started building micromanagement in to my arsenal. I stick to allotted time for coaching, training and mentoring. I hold my team accountable to their side of the preparation. I give my energy to those who are benefiting and value the feedback. I pull back from those who dont. We celebrate when they are no longer in need of my micro focus. I secretly celebrate my return to my macro management style for a while. And we all get on with the business of winning.
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