Change Your
Management Mindset
By Jean Kelley
Whether you’re in a new leadership position due to a
promotion or being newly hired, you may have to learn to think in a
new way. To be successful, you need to shift your mindset so you can
focus on the new requirements and outcomes you’re being held
accountable for. In other words, you need to let go of many tasks
that have made you successful thus far and focus on what your team
can deliver. If you don’t, you won’t make the leap into your new
position successfully.
Unfortunately, many people don’t transition into leadership
roles well. Why? Sometimes they simply don’t know what’s expected of
them. Communication is poor in many companies, and few people
receive detailed instructions on how to lead and what competencies
it takes to lead. So while someone may get a new title, they have no
idea what to actually do in this new role. As such, they face
ambiguity every day. Other times people are moving from a technical
role into a leadership role, and they don’t want to let go of their
spreadsheets, maps, or other technical responsibilities. They enjoy
the details of the work and aren’t ready to delegate those details
to others. They claim that it will take them longer to teach someone
than to actually do the work themselves.
However, when you’re living with daily ambiguity or not
delegating the details, you quickly become overworked and
overstressed. That’s why you need to shift your mindset, let go of
who you were or what you did, and make the leap into your new
leadership role. The following tips will help you do that
successfully.
Learn the differences between supervisory management and
leadership:
The management job
involves planning, organizing, directing, and controlling, and a
good manager knows how to do all of that. Leadership takes all that
plus vision, passion, and influence. However, many managers fail
when they move into a leadership role because they don’t know how to
shift those responsibilities into a leadership position. They can’t
totally let go of those detail-oriented things because they’re still
accountable for them, just in a different way.
Realize that some
people are great leaders while they are still supervisors and
managers, while others are chosen for leadership because of their
superb technical skills and critical thinking ability. If you are
the latter, the climb for you is steeper.
So the first step is to find out what you’re being paid for
and what, specifically, is required of you in this new position. A
good question to ask is, “What am I getting paid for?” or “What do I
need to be doing that I’m not doing now?”
One way to develop a strategic and leadership-oriented way of
thinking is to start reading the “Harvard Business Journal” every
month. Very soon you will know how CEOs from around the world and in
various industries think. Additionally, stay away from industry
specific journals, because you’re probably an expert in that area
already. Rather, read about different companies and how they
attained success. Autobiographies of famous leaders are good sources
too.
Ultimately, a leader is paid for thinking strategically and
for making sure plans is executed. A supervisor is paid for
participating in getting those things done. So while you may not
individually be responsible for all the details any longer, don’t
fool yourself; you can’t drop the details. You need to be checking
them since you’re still accountable for them in some form. Inspect
what you expect.
Rebrand yourself:
Unless you are new at a company you already have a
reputation. A reputation is what you have; a brand is what you want
to be known for. Rebranding takes work. When you’re in a leadership
role, however, you must know what your reputation is, and you must
make a conscious decision on what you want to be in terms of your
brand. The best way to uncover this information is to ask people,
“What do others think of me?” As you do this, don’t waste time
asking your friends and family. They’ll be more concerned with
sparing your feelings than giving you honest feedback. Rather, ask
co-workers, upper management, past managers, and anyone else whom
you believe would give you thoughtful insight. Yes, it takes
boldness and humility to do this, but it’s information that can
guide your future career.
Once you receive the feedback, analyze it. Is it accurate?
Are the answers in line with what you thought about yourself? Do you
like the feedback? Using the replies you received from people,
decide where you need to make changes in your approach and what you
want to be known for in the company. Then take the steps to be the
type of leader you want to be.
Start building social capital right away:
Leaders have
willing followers. A good leader knows how to get things done
without formally delegated authority. A superb leader has built
social capital and knows how to spend it. Social capital is about
doing appropriate things to help others do their job. Can you offer
assistance on a project or give people needed information? If so,
and if you offer it, then you’re building social capital.
One of the ways to get social capital is during meetings with
your new executive peer group. Keep notes on every peer. Write down
everything you learn about them. And if you learn something new in a
meeting, go back immediately and write it down. It’s not possible to
remember all of this. As the old adage says, “The palest ink is
better than the best memory.” To be a successful leader, you have to
learn about your new peers, and you have to learn the functions of
their areas and how their function is tied to what you do. And yes,
it is tied; otherwise you wouldn’t be on the executive team.
Social capital is something you can spend, but you can’t
spend it if you don’t have it. Therefore, always offer to help your
peers. If there’s something you’re specifically good at, and you
know how to get some information that they mentioned in a meeting or
in passing, say, “I can help you with that!” That will build social
capital.
There are a lot of studies on reciprocity, and reciprocity is
done in every culture in the world. You give somebody something;
they give something back to you. That’s just the way the world
works. So if you haven’t done anything for anyone, then you don’t
have any chips to cash in when you need something. Then, when you’re
up at eight o’clock one night at the office and you need something
from another department, if you don’t have that social capital
built, it’s going to be really hard to call them at eight or nine at
night and ask them to come back up and help you.
Make the Switch
Today:
Moving into a
leadership position is both exciting and challenging. You begin to
stretch to reach new levels of achievement while letting go of tasks
that brought you to your current level of success. It’s a time to
reinvent yourself with a new peer group while perhaps transitioning
into a new persona for those you’ve worked with for years. By all
accounts, it’s a time for change and personal and professional
growth. Make the most of this time and transition wisely, as doing
so will reap the greatest rewards for both you and your company.
Read other articles and learn more about
Jean Kelley.
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