Consider the Culture of Your Workplace

Sometimes managers tell me, "This organization is very conservative. We don't believe in confrontation. We don't like to rock the boat . . . So the culture is very hands-off management." Just as often managers tell me, "This organization is very progressive. We let employees do their own thing. We don’t like to boss people around . . . So the culture is very hands-off."

Sometimes managers say, "Our organization is very large and there is lots of red tape and bureaucracy . . . So the culture is hands-off." Other managers say, "Our organization is very small and there is more of a family dynamic in the workplace . . . So the culture is hands-off."

Or else, "Our work is very technical . . . So the culture is hands-off." Or, "Our work is very creative . . . So the culture is hands-off."

Or else, "Our employees are much older . . . So the culture is hands-off." Or, "Our employees are much younger . . . So the culture is hands-off."

Or, "Our employees do low-level grunt work . . . So the culture is hands-off." Or, "Our employees are all high-level professionals . . . So the culture is hands-off management . . ."

You get the idea. Think about it. Corporate culture is the combined web of shared meaning and shared social practices that develop between and among people in an organization. Remember? There is an undermanagement epidemic throughout the workplace, at all levels in organizations of all shapes and sizes. So of course most corporate cultures support a hands-off status quo in which strong managers often feel like ducks out of water. What can you do about it?

Be different.

And don't keep it a secret. Let people know. Stand out as the manager who is serious about the work and always goes the extra mile when it comes to managing. If being strong makes you a maverick in your particular organization, be a maverick. Being the maverick can be uncomfortable. Do it anyway. Be the manager who is not afraid to be the boss. Be the manager who is strong. Be hands-on.

 

On sale wherever books are sold:
IT'S OKAY TO BE THE BOSS: The Step-by-step Guide to Becoming the Manager Your Employees Need (Collins, 3/13/07)

By Bruce Tulgan

Fight the Undermanagement Epidemic!

Be a great boss!!

STEP 1: Get in the Habit of Managing Every Day
STEP 2: Learn to Talk Like a Performance Coach
STEP 3: Take It One Person at a Time
STEP 4: Make Accountability a Real Process
STEP 5: Tell People What to Do and How to Do It
STEP 6: Track Performance Every Step of the Way
STEP 7: Solve Small Problems before They Turn into Big Problems
STEP 8: Do More for Some People and Less for Others


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Bruce Tulgan's
Winning the Talent Wars®
  148th Edition - November 27, 2007
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