On Careers

When Management Gets Ambushed By Small Things

By Michael S. Wade

Posted: April 17, 2009

We shy away from details because we don’t want to micromanage.

At the same time, we are reluctant to create systems because we don’t want to be bureaucratic.

And then we wonder why we get ambushed by small things and why our performance is inconsistent.

The details do not take care of themselves. Someone needs to check them. Unless we have put a system in place to do so, we are the likely monitor. We know that, and yet the stigma of micromanagement is so great that we deny the importance of details and pretend they will be magically addressed.

Systems sound boring. It can be so time-consuming to establish guidelines and procedures. If we don’t devote that time, however, we doom ourselves to reinventing the wheel and drift into the sort of irritating, morale-busting micromanagement that could have been prevented with a system. The sign of an effective system is that a high caliber of performance is attained regardless of which employees are involved. Standards are set, procedures are followed, and a predictable outcome is achieved.

To address details and establish systems while avoiding unnecessary micromanagement and bureaucracy is the challenge. The excesses, however, do not mean the concepts are inherently bad. The devil may be in the details, but the angels are in a creative balance between micromanagement and systems. As the systems grow and skills are developed, micromanaging should be rarely required.

Michael Wade writes Execupundit.com, an eclectic combination of management advice, observations, and links. A partner with the Phoenix firm of Sanders Wade Rodarte Consulting Inc., he has advised private and public-sector organizations for more than 30 years.

Systems

that actually HELP employees do a job well are always welcomed (after INITIAL fear of change) by the employees. They are the systems that grow and strengthen your company.

Systems that are put in place primarily to give top managers some promised "dashboard" and to create "exception reports" for the boss to hit people over the head with are the ones both you and your employees will regret. They rarely work very well at all, they can actually HAMPER your workers' real productivityjust to assemble unnecessary "management information", and your "use" of them (if you even can) will be a likely morale killer.

Systems are for the workers, not something else. Don't let a software vendor sell you a boat anchor in the name of "MIS".

Muser of NM @ Apr 17, 2009 11:47:34 AM

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