The Inside Job

How to Talk to Your Boss

By Liz Wolgemuth

Posted: August 4, 2008

One of the most regular office puzzles is what we should share with the boss. We don't want to say too much or share bad news unnecessarily, but we also don't want to keep them out of the loop on something they need to know. When it comes to those conversations, employees can really distinguish themselves with over-information and manipulation, or with concise and useful communications.

These tips come from Andy Lester's "How to Speak Manager" slideshow (Lester pens "The Working Geek" blog):

What not to tell the boss:

  • Every normal thing that goes on (unless he wants that).
  • Your problems without potential solutions.
  • Problems you can solve yourself.

What to tell the boss:

  • Good things and their effects.
  • Bad things and how you fixed them.
  • Always say: Should I do X or Y?
  • Never delay bad news hoping it will get better.

There's a phrase for these kinds of judgment calls: You're managing your boss. To some, it sounds straight out of consultant-speak 101, but the idea is that the attention a manager pays to an employee's strengths and tendencies should also be paid by an underling to a supervisor.

chairperson

how do i tell my pastor, he is causing division in my ministry without hurting his feeling. By reconizing everyone except one of the most important ministry in the church, the ushers who work very hard.

elizabeth of GA @ Oct 26, 2009 13:33:33 PM

Colombianos?

"los felicito por todos somos unos sabios y podemos" <----- Leelo colombiano sabio. Ya...? Pefecto. "Por todos somos?" Para ser un sabio tienes muchas faltas de (coherencia!!) gramatica compadre.

Sergio of OK @ Aug 21, 2009 19:23:59 PM

disagree

Sometimes you have to ask what the deal is. Walk with the manager, find out if you are getting everything done that needs to be done and also see if there is anything you can do to better yourself.

Good Luck to all and work hard

PS. being a manager the thing i hate the most is people showing up late and people that dont get anything done.

JA of MA @ Aug 01, 2009 00:48:53 AM

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The Inside Job

The Inside Job

You're taking a break from your job-hunting and job-hopping ways and have decided to stay put in your current position. Liz Wolgemuth’s careers blog will show you how to make the very best of your job, each day.

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