The McKinsey Quarterly

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Why good bosses tune in to their people

Know how to project power, counsels Stanford management professor Bob Sutton, since those you lead need to believe you have it for it to be effective. And to lock in your team’s loyalty, boldly defend their backs.

Bosses matter. They matter because more than 95 percent of all people in the workforce have bosses, are bosses, or both. They matter because they set the tone for their followers and organizations. And they matter because many studies show that for more than 75 percent of employees, dealing with their immediate boss is the most stressful part of the job. Lousy bosses can kill you—literally. A 2009 Swedish study tracking 3,122 men for ten years found that those with bad bosses suffered 20 to 40 percent more heart attacks than those with good bosses.

Bosses matter to everyone they oversee, but they matter most to those just beneath them in the pecking order: the people they guide at close range, who constantly tangle with the boss’s virtues, foibles, and quirks. Whether you are the CEO of a Fortune 500 company or the head chef at a restaurant, your success depends on staying in tune with the people you interact with most frequently and intensely.

All bosses matter, but those at the top matter most. Whether or not they know it, their followers monitor, magnify, and often mimic their moves. I worked with a large company where the CEO did almost all of the talking in meetings, interrupted everyone, and silenced dissenting underlings. His executive vice presidents complained about him behind his back, but when he left the room, the most powerful EVP started acting the very same way. When that EVP left, the next-highest-ranking boss began imitating him in turn.

The ripple effects of this CEO’s style are consistent with findings from peer-reviewed studies showing that senior executives’ actions can reverberate throughout organizations, ultimately undermining or bolstering their cultures and performance levels. When CEOs have far more pay and power than their direct reports do, for instance, performance can suffer if their subordinates feel they can’t stop them from making and implementing lousy decisions. A few years ago, I did a workshop with a management team struggling with “group dynamics” problems. Team members felt that their boss, a senior vice president, listened poorly and “ran over” others; he called his people “thin-skinned wimps.” I asked the team—the senior vice president and five direct reports—to do an exercise. The six of them spent 20 minutes brainstorming potential products and then narrowed their choices to the most feasible, the wildest, and the most likely to fail.

As they brainstormed, I counted the number of comments made by each team member and the number of times each interrupted someone else and was interrupted in turn. The senior vice president contributed about 65 percent of the comments, interrupted others at least 20 times, and was never interrupted. When I had him leave the room, I asked his subordinates to estimate the results, and they did so accurately. Then the senior vice president returned. He recalled making about 25 percent of the comments, interrupting others perhaps 3 times, and being interrupted 3 or 4 times. When I showed him the results and explained that his direct reports had estimated them far more accurately, he was flabbergasted and annoyed.

Being a boss, as this exercise shows, often resembles the role of a high-status primate: your subordinates watch you constantly, so they know more about you than you know about them. Likewise, anthropologists who study chimpanzees, gorillas, and baboons report that followers devote far more attention to their leader than he devotes to them. (Studies of baboon troops show that typical members glance at the dominant male every 20 or 30 seconds.) As Princeton University psychologist Susan Fiske observes, primates—including ourselves—“pay attention to those who control their outcomes.”

Linda Hudson, CEO of BAE Systems, got this message after becoming the first female president of General Dynamics. After her first day on the job, a dozen women in her office imitated how she tied her scarf. Hudson realized, “It really was now about me and the context of setting the tone for the organization. That was a lesson I have never forgotten—that as a leader, people are looking at you in a way that you could not have imagined in other roles.” Hudson added that such scrutiny and the consequent responsibility is “something that I think about virtually every day.”

The best bosses work doggedly to stay in tune with this relentless attention and use it to their advantage. They are self-absorbed, but not for selfish reasons. On the contrary, they know that the success of their people and organizations depends on maintaining an accurate view of how others construe their moods and moves—and responding with rapid, effective adjustments.

That view is invaluable for bosses as they try to carry out their first and most important task: convincing others that they are in charge. Bosses who fail to do this will find their jobs impossible, their lives hell, and their tenures short. Of course, taking charge effectively isn’t enough. The best bosses also boost performance by watching their people’s backs: making it safe for them to learn, act, and take intelligent risks; shielding them from unnecessary distractions and external idiocy of every stripe; and doing hundreds more little things that help them achieve one small win after another—and feel pride and dignity along the way.

Taking control

James Meindl’s research on “the romance of leadership”1 shows that leaders get far more credit—and blame—than they deserve, largely because, cognitively, it is easier and more emotionally satisfying to treat leadership as the primary cause of performance than to consider the convoluted and often subtle mishmash of factors that actually determine performance differences. It is especially difficult to resist demonizing the bosses of failing organizations, however irrational that may be. This bias toward glorifying and vilifying individual leaders (and downplaying the role of systems, collective action, and external factors outside management’s influence) is especially strong in the United States and many European nations.

 

Yet the best evidence shows that bosses rarely account for more than 15 percent of the gap between good and bad organizational performance—although they often get more than 50 percent of the credit and blame. If you are a boss, this is your lot in life; make the best of it. If you claim that you don’t have much influence over what happens to the team or company you lead, your people will lose confidence in you and your superiors will send you packing. Here are four suggestions for magnifying the illusion of control (for more ideas, see the sidebar, “Tricks for taking charge”):

1. Express confidence even if you don’t feel it

In 2002, I heard Andy Grove, Intel’s legendary CEO (1987–98), interviewed by Harvard University’s Clay Christensen, who asked Andy how leaders can act and feel confident despite their doubts. He answered, “Investment decisions or personnel decisions and prioritization don’t wait for that picture to be clarified. You have to make them when you have to make them.” That’s why executives need to use what I call the faking-it-until-you-make-it strategy, which he also touched on: “Part of it is self-discipline, and part of it is deception. And the deception becomes reality. It is deception in the sense that you pump yourself up and put a better face on things than you start off feeling. But after a while, if you act confident, you become more confident.”2

Research showing that “belief follows behavior” supports his argument. And confidence is especially crucial for inspiring your followers, because like all emotions, it’s contagious—especially when displayed by closely scrutinized bosses.

2. Don’t dither

Indecision, delay, and waffling are the hallmarks of a crummy boss; the best ones know that crisp and seemingly quick decisions bolster the illusion (and reality) that they are in charge. As late stage director Frank Hauser said, “You have three weapons: ‘Yes,’ ‘No,’ and ‘I don’t know.’ Use them. Don’t dither; you can always change your mind later. Nobody minds that. What they do mind is the two minutes of agonizing when all the actor has asked is, ‘Do I get up now?’”

3. Get and give credit

A great thing about being the boss is that when your people do good work, you usually get too much of the credit. Smart bosses often use this to their advantage, knowing that people want to work for and do business with winners.

As a boss, you may already use subtle tactics to get credit, such as collaborating with people who are likely to praise you (so that you don’t have to brag) and, when you do mention your accomplishments, giving copious credit to others. David Kelley, the modest chairman and founder of design firm IDEO, is a master of the art of giving his people credit. I believe that one reason IDEO became a renowned innovation firm under David’s leadership is that he relentlessly thanks others for making him look good, gives them credit when the company does something great, and downplays his contribution—something I have observed him do hundreds of times over the past 15 years.

Indeed, the best bosses routinely give their followers more credit than they probably deserve. And when bosses do this, everyone wins. As the boss, you will get the lion’s share of credit because of the romance of leadership. Your immediate team will regard you as truthful. And your modesty and generosity will be admired—especially by outsiders, who will see you as both competent and generous.

4. Blame yourself

In August 2008, I listened on the radio as Maple Leaf Foods CEO Michael McCain made a statement about the deaths and illnesses traced to tainted meats produced by one of his company’s plants. McCain’s voice quivered as he announced its closure, apologized to the victims, and said that the people at Maple Leaf—including himself—were responsible and that it was his job to restore faith in the company.

Bosses who ignore and stomp on their subordinates’ humanity sometimes generate quick gains. But in the long run, such shortsightedness undermines creativity, efficiency, and commitment.

His response is striking because it is so rare yet so consistent with research on how to fuel the illusion (and reality) that the boss is in charge. Unlike many people in such a predicament, McCain accepted the fact that he would be held responsible for what his people did, no matter what. When something important happens, the boss is expected to know. Rather than blaming others, McCain understood it was wiser to accept the blame and learn from it. Leaders who denounce outside forces for their troubles come across as disingenuous and powerless. By refusing to take responsibility, they implicitly raise a damning question: “If you didn’t have the power to break it, how can you have the power to fix it?” The public also sees a boss’s refusal to accept responsibility as a sign that nothing has been learned from the errors.

If you as a boss want to enhance the perception that you are in charge—and fuel performance at the same time—taking at least some of the blame is usually necessary. Experiments by University of Michigan professor Fiona Lee and her colleagues show that managers who take responsibility for problems like pay freezes and failed projects are seen as more powerful, competent, and likeable than those who deny responsibility. In another study, Lee’s group examined stock price fluctuations in 14 companies over 21 years. They found that when top executives accepted responsibility for problems, stock prices were consistently higher afterward than when CEOs denied responsibility.

The key, though, is not just to accept blame and apologize. You must also take immediate control in whatever way you can, show that you and your people have learned from failure, announce new plans, and, when they are implemented, make sure everyone understands that things are improving because of them—just as Michael McCain did. Although no one can predict his company’s ultimate fate, the Canadian press praised McCain for his clarity, compassion, and control. A nationwide survey in December 2008 showed that among Canadians, confidence in the Maple Leaf brand had risen to 91 percent, from 60 percent, since August of that year. Although the company reported losses in 2008, it returned to profitability in 2009. As McCain said in February 2010, “The packaged-meats business continues to recover. Our brands and our reputation are intact”3—an assessment most analysts and customers echoed.

Bolstering performance

Bosses who ignore and stomp on their subordinates’ humanity sometimes generate quick gains. But in the long run, such short-sightedness usually undermines their followers’ creativity, efficiency, and commitment. The best bosses focus on boosting the performance of their people through stratagems such as the three that follow:

1. Provide psychological safety

Good bosses spark imagination and encourage learning by creating a safety zone where people can talk about half-baked ideas, test them, and even make big mistakes without fear of ridicule, punishment, or ostracism. I witnessed the power of psychological safety at a large media company where a new CEO was determined to drive out fear. A vice president had launched a magazine that ended up being an expensive, well-publicized flop. She would have been demoted and fired—and probably publicly humiliated—under past regimes. Instead, the CEO spoke at a gathering and congratulated her for her courage and skill. He emphasized that the decision to start the magazine wasn’t just hers; senior management had backed it. After his speech, every executive I spoke with portrayed the CEO’s comments as a watershed event.

An absence of psychological safety, in concert with fear of the boss, can be dangerous or downright deadly. Studies by Harvard Business School professor Amy Edmondson and her colleagues show that when nurses fear their supervisors will punish and humiliate them for making mistakes, they hesitate to report their drug-treatment errors. The hazards of fearing authority also emerge from research with commercial pilots in flight simulators. One study showed that when pilots faked mild incapacitation toward the end of a rough and rainy simulated flight, their copilots failed to take the controls 25 percent of the time—resulting in simulated crashes. The copilots knew the pilots were incapacitated yet failed to question their authority. Dysfunctional deference can kill real flight crews and passengers too. In 1979, a commuter plane crashed, in part, because the second officer failed to take control when the captain, a vice president known for gruffness, became partly incapacitated.

2. Shield people

The best bosses invent, borrow, and implement ways to reduce the mental and emotional load heaped on their followers—and protect them from the incompetence, cluelessness, and premature judgments of fellow bosses or others who can undermine their followers’ work and well being. Followers who enjoy such protection (and who may be bosses themselves) have the freedom to take risks and try new things.

Annette Kyle, for example, managed some 60 employees at a Texas terminal where they loaded chemicals from railcars onto ships and trucks. In the mid-1990s, Annette led a “revolution” that dramatically raised her unit’s performance through a host of changes, including better planning, greater responsibility at the lowest levels, improved and more transparent metrics, and numerous cultural changes. She personally sewed “no whining” patches on workers’ uniforms, for example, to discourage the local penchant for complaining and auctioned off her desk to workers for $60 because, as she explained it, “I shouldn’t be sitting behind a big desk. I should be contributing to team goals however possible.”

This transformation virtually eliminated the penalties that were levied when ships arrived at the terminal’s dock but (despite considerable advance warning) workers weren’t ready to load them. These “demurrage charges,” which cost the company $2.5 million the year before the revolution, were down to $10,000 the year after. Previously, it had taken more than three hours to load an average truck. Afterward, more than 90 percent were loaded within an hour of arrival. Surveys and interviews by University of Southern California researchers showed that employees became more satisfied with their jobs and felt proud of their accomplishments. I asked Annette how she could make such radical changes in her giant company. She answered that her boss shielded her from top-ranking managers—he found the resources and experts she needed but never discussed these moves with senior management until they succeeded.

Good bosses are especially adept at protecting their people’s time—for example, by eliminating needless meetings. Take a cue from Will Wright, designer of computer games such as The Sims: rather than automatically scheduling meetings, ask yourself if they are really needed. Wright employed a clever trick. Every time someone called a meeting, he charged that person a dollar. Although he collected a lot of dollars, this requirement made people “think twice, even though it was only a dollar.” He also used an employee-centered method to keep meetings short—inviting the creative but impatient artist Ocean Quigley, “the canary in the coal mine.” When Quigley raised his hand to be excused, “we knew that the meeting had hit diminishing returns.”

3. Make small gestures

The late Robert Townsend, CEO of Avis and author of the masterpiece Up the Organization, called the phrase “thank you” a “really neglected form of compensation.” The broader lesson for bosses is the importance of “the attitude of gratitude,” a line borrowed from Kimberly Wiefling, founder of Wiefling Consulting, who argues that too many projects end without acknowledgement and celebration and that whether a project succeeds or fails, the best managers take time to express appreciation. Conveying this attitude is especially crucial when the stench of failure fills the air—precisely the time when people most need support from the boss and one another. Bosses with the will and the skill to provide that kind of support set the stage for learning from fiascos. Unfortunately, too many bosses have the opposite response and use such occasions to conduct “blamestorms” or “circular fire squads,” where the goal is to point fingers, humiliate the guilty, and throw a few overboard.

Good bosses don’t just get more from their people and do it in more civilized ways; they attract and keep better people. If you think your employees are deadbeats, downers, and jerks, look in the mirror. Why don’t the best people want to work for you? Why do people who appeared to be stars when they joined your team seem to turn rotten?

Of all the skills and aspirations good bosses must have, self-awareness is probably the most important. Cornell University’s David Dunning has shown that poor performers consistently overestimate their intellectual and social skills. In contrast, the best performers accurately judge both their strengths and their flaws. Dunning’s research has crucial implications for leadership. The best and worst bosses alike suffer from overconfidence and insecurity, from weaknesses and blind spots. Such is the human condition. Yet the best bosses are keenly aware of their flaws, work to overcome them and to reverse the resulting damage, and enlist others who can compensate for their weaknesses.

The most effective bosses devote enormous effort to understanding how their moods, quirks, skills, and actions affect their followers’ performance and humanity. They constantly make adjustments to be a bit more helpful and constructive tomorrow than they were yesterday. To be a great boss, you must constantly ask and try to answer many questions. Perhaps the most crucial is, “What does it feel like to work for me?” If your people answered this question honestly, would they say that you know the impact your words and deeds have on them—or that you are living in a fool’s paradise?

About the Author

Robert Sutton is a professor of management science and engineering at Stanford University. This article is adapted from his forthcoming book, Good Boss, Bad Boss: How to Be the Best . . . and Learn from the Worst, to be published by Business Plus in September 2010.

Notes

1 James R. Meindl and Sanford B. Ehrlich, “The romance of leadership and the evaluation of organizational performance,” Academy of Management, 1987, Volume 30, Number 1, pp. 91–109.

2 Clayton Christensen interviewed Andrew Grove at a Harvard Business School Conference in Cupertino, California, on October 3, 2002. I attended this session, and the organizers provided me a transcript, which is the source for these quotations from Andy Grove.

3 John Spears, “Maple Leaf Foods returns to profit,” Toronto Star, February 25, 2010.

Recommend (366)
  • 7 JANUARY 2011
    Andrew Tarvin
    Corporate Humorist
    Humor That Works
    New York, NY USA

    One of the traits of a good boss that is noticeably absent is a sense of humor....

    .
    Andrew Tarvin
    Corporate Humorist
    Humor That Works
    New York, NY USA

    One of the traits of a good boss that is noticeably absent is a sense of humor. Using humor as a boss not only helps with the perception of leadership (studies have shown people perceive someone as being in control and confident when they use humor), it will also help you connect with your direct reports.

    The anecdote about the scarf is fascinating, I wonder how many top leaders ever think about how their behavior impacts their organization. I’m also curious how long the ripple-down effect takes.

    .
  • 29 DECEMBER 2010
    Alwyn Joseph
    Program Manager
    consultancy services
    chennai india

    ...What I like the most in this article is the importance of psychological safety and creating an environment of trust, belongingness, and accountability....

    .
    Alwyn Joseph
    Program Manager
    consultancy services
    chennai india

    Wonderful article. I had a similar experience in an organization where I was consulting. The senior VP would come up with an agenda for his department, however, people below him wouldn’t be empowered to make decisions to fulfill the agenda. After a year, any initiative from this particular SVP became less significant and people lost interest even to talk about it.

    What I like the most in this article is the importance of psychological safety and creating an environment of trust, belongingness, and accountability. I always used to say to my team that its OK to fail as a team rather than having few successful individuals amidst a failure project.

    .
  • 14 DECEMBER 2010
    Prashanth Srinivas
    Business Analyst
    Genpact
    India

    While recognition is important, timely recognition is also equally important. It makes more sense to call ‘milk’ a milk before it turns to ‘curd’ or ‘yogurt’

    .
    Prashanth Srinivas
    Business Analyst
    Genpact
    India

    While recognition is important, timely recognition is also equally important. It makes more sense to call ‘milk’ a milk before it turns to ‘curd’ or ‘yogurt’

    .
  • 4 OCTOBER 2010
    Ramadevi Lanka
    Senior Manager
    NISG
    Hyderabad, India

    ...The most difficult thing for bad bosses is to become aware of their flaws. Because if one is not aware of one’s flaws, then there is no way that he/she can do something to overcome those flaws.

    .
    Ramadevi Lanka
    Senior Manager
    NISG
    Hyderabad, India

    Well, in this highly competitive world, it requires great leadership quality to take the blame for mistakes and shield the subordinates from getting the blame. The most difficult thing for bad bosses is to become aware of their flaws. Because if one is not aware of one’s flaws, then there is no way that he/she can do something to overcome those flaws.

    .
  • 3 OCTOBER 2010
    Rajinder Gandotra
    AVP
    Infosys Technologies Ltd.
    Bangalore, India

    I completely agree with Robert Sutton. I have successfully applied these techniques in my work – outcome is an excellent team performance.

    .
    Rajinder Gandotra
    AVP
    Infosys Technologies Ltd.
    Bangalore, India

    I completely agree with Robert Sutton. I have successfully applied these techniques in my work – outcome is an excellent team performance.

    .
  • 1 OCTOBER 2010
    Ashish Sinharoy
    VP Communications and Corporate Affairs
    Renault India
    Mumbai India

    ...if you have personal conviction, it does not take much to tackle most “Bossy” bosses. Challenge them often, tell them they are wrong, let them know in front of others that s/he cannot talk demeaningly about you...

    .
    Ashish Sinharoy
    VP Communications and Corporate Affairs
    Renault India
    Mumbai India

    Most “bossy” people are very insecure and behave similarly even in their personal lives.

    However, if you have personal conviction, it does not take much to tackle most “Bossy” bosses. Challenge them often, tell them they are wrong, let them know in front of others that s/he cannot talk demeaningly about you and you will see a change in their behaviour towards you (I am talking from personal experience).

    On a lighter note, you might end up having to put in your papers, but what the hell, life is absolutely not about living in the shadow of humiliation. In most cases it is the organisation’s loss, not always the departing employee’s.

    .
  • 29 SEPTEMBER 2010
    Lena MacRae
    Director
    seatedmassage
    Australia

    I found this article and all the comments really interesting—an old boss of mine used to say “a fish stinks from the head down.”

    .
    Lena MacRae
    Director
    seatedmassage
    Australia

    I found this article and all the comments really interesting—an old boss of mine used to say “a fish stinks from the head down.”

    .
  • 28 SEPTEMBER 2010
    JB Holston
    CEO
    Newsgator Technologies
    Denver, CO USA

    ...Very curious as to how tuning to relentless attention changes in social media world; twitter, linkedin, internal social nets, and even facebook, all generate attention to the boss too, now....

    .
    JB Holston
    CEO
    Newsgator Technologies
    Denver, CO USA

    Shared this with my executive team, thank you. Very curious as to how tuning to relentless attention changes in social media world; twitter, linkedin, internal social nets, and even facebook, all generate attention to the boss too, now. In many virtual companies, that attention via social networks may be more substantive than in person—certainly more frequent.

    .
  • 23 SEPTEMBER 2010
    Jagdish Adlakha
    COO
    Sandhar Components
    Delhi, India

    ...one still wonders, with so much material available on the subject are the bad-boss numbers coming down? What is really required is methodology of changing their behaviour.

    .
    Jagdish Adlakha
    COO
    Sandhar Components
    Delhi, India

    This is quite good coverage on an important subject. However, one still wonders, with so much material available on the subject are the bad-boss numbers coming down? What is really required is methodology of changing their behaviour.

    .
  • 15 SEPTEMBER 2010
    Kathie Ward
    Senior IT Solution Analyst
    Telstra Corporation
    Melbourne, Australia

    ...I am curious to see how these behaviours will translate from a ‘westernised’ approach into other cultures. In information technology, for example, we deal constantly with people from other cultures...

    .
    Kathie Ward
    Senior IT Solution Analyst
    Telstra Corporation
    Melbourne, Australia

    Very good article. It made me appreciate how lucky I have been to have worked with a few people who embody the behaviours described. And how deeply thankful I am to have survived those who don’t! I am curious however to see how these behaviours will translate from a ‘westernised’ approach into other cultures. In information technology, for example, we deal constantly with people from other cultures which can compound the complexity of interactions. Agreed that some of the management behaviours cited here are in effect, but they appear to be the exception. Instead, it is often obvious that the people we interact with have a completely different management paradigm operating at their end. Perhaps this is something that needs to develop—time will tell.

    The only flaw in the article is the section on taking charge which appears to be favouring a less emotionally intelligent approach.

    .
  • 13 SEPTEMBER 2010
    Achal Mishra
    Consultant Psychiatrist
    Northumberland Tyne and Wear Foundatio NHS Trust
    Newcastle upon Tyne, UK

    ...As for the question of improving performance under stress, there is a bell-shaped relationship between stress and performance. Increased stress/pressure leads to an improved performance to a point, whereafter there is a decline....

    .
    Achal Mishra
    Consultant Psychiatrist
    Northumberland Tyne and Wear Foundatio NHS Trust
    Newcastle upon Tyne, UK

    Interesting article focussing on various aspects of being a boss/leader. It made me recall an old quote, can’t remember who said it: “leaders lead from the front”. To have the trust (of your fellow team members) is most important for the boss/leader. Being in tune with the feelings of your team and to be able to reflect (on your own emotions and behaviour) are equally important. One of the things bosses can face when their views/visions differ radically from that of the team is ‘collective sabotage’, i.e. passive-aggression. Once this takes on a critical mass it can be difficult to deal with.

    The ability to take the flak when things go wrong is probably one of the most important qualities and earns respect, as in the McCain story quoted.

    I find the page on tricks on taking charge aimed at men and may work in certain industries, definitely not where I work. Anger and finger jabbing suggest that the boss is losing control of his emptions and is likely to attract ridicule. This would not be something I would like to see spread (or mimicked) in an organisation.

    As for the question of improving performance under stress, there is a bell-shaped relationship between stress and performance. Increased stress/pressure leads to an improved performance to a point, whereafter there is a decline. The ideal is to find the optimum.

    .
  • 11 SEPTEMBER 2010
    Michael Cushman
    President
    Key Change Institute
    Denver, CO USA

    ...Note that the author is selling a book on how to become a good boss. However, only good bosses would buy a book on self-improvement. Bad bosses don’t see their faults (don’t think they have any)...

    .
    Michael Cushman
    President
    Key Change Institute
    Denver, CO USA

    Excellent article, with one problem—one very big problem.

    Following the logic...
    Bad bosses are costly.
    Good bosses are self-aware and look to improve themselves, while bad bosses lack self-awareness, overestimate their abilities, and don’t grow.
    Note that the author is selling a book on how to become a good boss. However, only good bosses would buy a book on self-improvement. Bad bosses don’t see their faults (don’t think they have any) and therefore don’t seek or hear feedback. So, the book will only help those who are already good bosses.

    There are thousands of books on how to become a better leader, and the irony is that those who need the most help, and whose improvement would do the most good, are not interested in getting better (because in their own mind, they are just fine as is).

    Isn’t the real leverage, the big breakthrough in business (and in lowering people’s stress at work), finding a way to systematically transform bad bosses into good one?

    Wouldn’t every HR leader and CEO love that ability? Wouldn’t it be far less expensive than firing and replacing bad bosses? Wouldn’t the performance improvement and higher quality of work-life be amazing?

    Isn’t it surprising the author doesn’t seem to see the irony?

    .
  • 11 SEPTEMBER 2010
    Sardar Azhar Rafiq
    Telenor Pakistan Pvt Ltd
    Islamabad, Pakistan

    ...People usually have unrealistic assumptions and expectations about the nature of boss-subordinate relationships. They fail to recognize that it is one of mutual dependency between two fallible human beings...

    .
    Sardar Azhar Rafiq
    Telenor Pakistan Pvt Ltd
    Islamabad, Pakistan

    There will always be those who view the concept of managing upward as flattery and manipulation. Others hold the common belief that if bosses are wise, they do not need to be managed and such efforts will be viewed solely as attempts to play office politics.

    But managing upward is not about ambition, promotions, or raises. It is about the job and how to be effective at getting things done.

    People usually have unrealistic assumptions and expectations about the nature of boss-subordinate relationships. They fail to recognize that it is one of mutual dependency between two fallible human beings, so they avoid managing the relationship altogether or do so ineffectively.

    Some managers behave as though their bosses are not dependent on them. They do not see how much the boss needs their help to do his job efficiently; how their actions can severely hurt him; and how they truly need to be cooperative, dependable, and honest.

    Other managers see themselves as completely independent of their bosses. They gloss over how much information they need from the boss to perform their jobs well.

    A boss can play a critical role in linking managers to the rest of the organization, making sure priorities are consistent with organizational needs and securing necessary resources. But some managers see themselves as self-sufficient.

    Other managers assume the boss is a clairvoyant who will magically know which information or help is needed and magically provide it. This is dangerously unrealistic.

    Managers must recognize that mutual dependence between two fallible humans requires two components:

    1. Having a good understanding of the other person and yourself, especially regarding strengths, weaknesses, work styles, and needs

    2. Using this information to develop and manage a healthy working relationship that meets each others most critical needs

    .
  • 10 SEPTEMBER 2010
    Steve Wallis
    General Manager
    Dignity
    Birmingham, United Kingdom

    ...Good to see so many comments, and surely we can all see that the article is about leadership at every level—does it have to have the leadership label on it?...

    .
    Steve Wallis
    General Manager
    Dignity
    Birmingham, United Kingdom

    I thought this was a good article. It reminded me of some of the things I know I should do but don’t always. Good to see so many comments, and surely we can all see that the article is about leadership at every level—does it have to have the leadership label on it? Perhaps also worth remembering it is only an article, and not a book, so it can never cover every angle or topic.

    .
  • 10 SEPTEMBER 2010
    Anish Shah
    Chartered Accountant
    Mumbai India

    Most articles deal with leaders and managers, but not with bosses. Bosses are reality and all pervasive—on the other hand, leaders and managers may or may not exist....

    .
    Anish Shah
    Chartered Accountant
    Mumbai India

    Most articles deal with leaders and managers, but not with bosses. Bosses are reality and all pervasive—on the other hand, leaders and managers may or may not exist. Hence a need for such article was felt and the author has delivered.

    .
  • 9 SEPTEMBER 2010
    Ryan Winger
    Strategist
    Pact
    Washington DC, USA

    ...It’s not really about “taking charge” as much as engineering the environment and holding steady when the heat comes.

    .
    Ryan Winger
    Strategist
    Pact
    Washington DC, USA

    I think that talking about “bosses” isn’t the right framework. There’s leadership and then there’s management.

    This article hints at how to be a manager, but it doesn’t adequately address what it takes to be a leader. I agree with Denise Chachere. The tricks for taking charge sound a bit old-fashioned (i.e. “Mad Men”) to me and doesn’t jibe with the idea of being “in tune” with others. Is it really necessary to talk a lot, cross your arms, get angry, and interrupt in order to be in charge? I’ve seen leaders deplete their soft power and goodwill that way.

    Key aspects of leadership include self-awareness and listening empathetically. Leaders self-manage their emotions, are tuned-in to the different dynamics at play in the room, identify the points of conflict, and orchestrate the conflict in a productive way which enables others to find the best solutions. It’s not really about “taking charge” as much as engineering the environment and holding steady when the heat comes.

    .
  • 9 SEPTEMBER 2010
    Sandip Nayak
    AGM Planning and Development
    Smile Foundation
    New Delhi, India

    Trouble starts when a boss forgets that she or he must actually be a leader. Or when a leader remembers only about being a boss. Wonderful article.

    .
    Sandip Nayak
    AGM Planning and Development
    Smile Foundation
    New Delhi, India

    Trouble starts when a boss forgets that she or he must actually be a leader. Or when a leader remembers only about being a boss. Wonderful article.

    .
  • 8 SEPTEMBER 2010
    Bhanu Singh
    AVP, Engineering
    BMC Software Inc
    SanJose, CA USA

    ...Leaders need to be formal with work but informal with people....

    .
    Bhanu Singh
    AVP, Engineering
    BMC Software Inc
    SanJose, CA USA

    Self and Social Awareness is key for a leader today and she should focus on the strengths of her employees and not on their weakness to improve productivity and support. Leaders need to be formal with work but informal with people.

    Protecting people to drive innovation and creativity is a must quality of a leader today in the ever changing and highly competitive flat world.

    .
  • 8 SEPTEMBER 2010
    Shabeer Ahmad
    CEO
    Centria Consulting
    London, UK

    ...Subordinates who are not flexible, do not want to change or unwilling to learn can be disruptive, so team makeup may have to be changed.

    .
    Shabeer Ahmad
    CEO
    Centria Consulting
    London, UK

    The quality of the people being managed is also important for the success of the company. Subordinates who are not flexible, do not want to change or unwilling to learn can be disruptive, so team makeup may have to be changed.

    .
  • 8 SEPTEMBER 2010
    Darcy Eikenberg
    President, Chief Creative Officer
    Coach Darcy LLC
    Atlanta, GA USA

    ...it’s the relationship with yourself that matters above all else....

    .
    Darcy Eikenberg
    President, Chief Creative Officer
    Coach Darcy LLC
    Atlanta, GA USA

    The true thesis of this article is NOT, as teased in the McKinsey newsletter link, that the most important business relationship is with your boss. Instead, it’s the relationship with yourself that matters above all else. The good bosses described above invest time, money, and energy in making sure they remain self-aware and open to continual growth. It’s a rare and highly valued trait indeed—one we need to be teaching our aspiring leaders more and more.

    .
  • 8 SEPTEMBER 2010
    Derek Irvine
    SVP, Strategy
    Globoforce
    Dublin, Ireland

    “The ripple effects of the CEO’s style...” is a critical concept for management to understand if they desire to ever improve the culture of the company and truly inspire people...

    .
    Derek Irvine
    SVP, Strategy
    Globoforce
    Dublin, Ireland

    “The ripple effects of the CEO’s style...” is a critical concept for management to understand if they desire to ever improve the culture of the company and truly inspire people to want to give their best every day. The CEO sets the tone. If s/he is not fully visible, not demonstrably recognizing the actions and achievements of those in the lower ranks, how are those people to know that recognition, appreciation, and “giving followers more credit than they deserve” is a something valued and desired in the organization?

    .
  • 8 SEPTEMBER 2010
    Sunil Geness
    Corporate Affairs Executive
    SAP
    South Africa

    ...As employees, we do not always understand nor want to understand the immense pressures and stress that our bosses carry on our behalf. Likewise, as a boss myself the same must apply to my direct reports....

    .
    Sunil Geness
    Corporate Affairs Executive
    SAP
    South Africa

    A brilliantly crafted article which all employees and “bosses’ should read. As employees, we do not always understand nor want to understand the immense pressures and stress that our bosses carry on our behalf. Likewise, as a boss myself the same must apply to my direct reports. The article is punchy and also offers valuable advice and tips on bridging the employee-Boss gap.

    .
  • 2 SEPTEMBER 2010
    Keehong LU
    Performance Consultant
    Integreated Performance Associates (iPA)
    Singapore

    ...The many tactics described by Prof. Sutton are useful. At the same time, if you use them without humility and sincerity, it is just manipulation.

    .
    Keehong LU
    Performance Consultant
    Integreated Performance Associates (iPA)
    Singapore

    If we accept that an effective and true leader is someone who produces results through envisioned, enabled, and empowered people, then just producing results without taking care of the wellbeing of the people is just not good enough.

    I want to go to the root of how a leader can be as described by Prof. Sutton: humility.

    You must be humble in order to appreciate that you need others to help you accomplish great feats. Feats that are increasingly complex and cutting across different functions, geographic locations, cultures, etcetera.

    With humility will come respect for others. It also means you are unlikely to develop narcissism. It means you are more likely than not to recognize your blindspots when truthful feedback were given to you by your people.

    The many tactics described by Prof. Sutton are useful. At the same time, if you use them without humility and sincerity, it is just manipulation.

    .
  • 2 SEPTEMBER 2010
    Pankaj Prakash
    Senior manager- Marketing
    ICICI Prudential Life Insurance
    Mumbai, India

    Major work place related problems start with personality clashes. A leader should try to avoid these clashes. One good way of doing this is to have the right balance of people in the team....

    .
    Pankaj Prakash
    Senior manager- Marketing
    ICICI Prudential Life Insurance
    Mumbai, India

    Major work place related problems start with personality clashes. A leader should try to avoid these clashes. One good way of doing this is to have the right balance of people in the team. A thinking boss (thinker/philosopher) must have a set of people, who would be willing to execute things on his behalf. But, one thinker reporting into another thinker will lead to intellectual debate, with the attempt by one man to sabotage the new idea of the other in the beginning. While a boss, who is execution oriented, must have a fair mix of people from the thinker domain. A thinker proposes and an executioner finds the resources to get it executed. Thus leading to a amiable work place. We need to remember, “people don’t change their jobs, they change their bosses”.

    .
  • 29 AUGUST 2010
    Naval Sabharwal
    Head Supply Chain and Logistics Services
    Unipart Services India Limited
    India

    Wouldn’t it be great if a leader could see what people are like when he is not looking?...

    .
    Naval Sabharwal
    Head Supply Chain and Logistics Services
    Unipart Services India Limited
    India

    Wouldn’t it be great if a leader could see what people are like when he is not looking? Since this is not practically possible, he needs to develop virtual umbical cords which help him sense moods and trends of each team member so that his actions increase autonomy, improve mastery of his team, and give them a sense of direction aligned with that of the organization.

    .
  • 26 AUGUST 2010
    Anand Narang
    Global Head, Marketing Activation
    Nokia
    UK

    ...great bosses know how to transition their team members for new opportunities and when to let them go to new roles. So, not just good in the art of retention, but also managing attrition for the good of the individual....

    .
    Anand Narang
    Global Head, Marketing Activation
    Nokia
    UK

    Great insightful article. Couple of additional thoughts about the “art of boss management,” if I may call it that:

    - Power of we: Great bosses make time to listen not just to their direct line reports, but also to their indirect reports and wider team. Involving their wider team both physically and virtually helps build momentum for a cohesive team effort across time zones.
    - CQ-savvy: we have heard IQ and EQ, but in these globalized economies and organizations, great bosses need to have high CQ’s, i.e., cultural-quotient. Recruiting a diverse, cultural team and understanding how each manager from different culture works helps to get the best out of the team.
    - Evolution theory: Great bosses allow people to develop new skills by creating a vision of the future that involves new projects, businesses, ways of doing things, etcetera, and in the process motivating and deploying people to achieve and experience new areas and skills.
    - Knowing when to let go: As company direction and business needs evolve, great bosses know how to transition their team members for new opportunities and when to let them go to new roles. So, not just good in the art of retention, but also managing attrition for the good of the individual.

    .
  • 25 AUGUST 2010
    Renni Abraham
    Editor (western India)
    Sahara India Mass Media
    Mumbai India

    Building friendship circles around your sphere of leadership is important, too....

    .
    Renni Abraham
    Editor (western India)
    Sahara India Mass Media
    Mumbai India

    Building friendship circles around your sphere of leadership is important, too. A music afficianados group that met at the end of the day helped cut the pressure of bringing out a daily news paper at a past organisation. It also helped build, an age no bar, a friendship group at the workplace.

    .
  • 25 AUGUST 2010
    Andrei Naidoo
    Team Leader
    Salmat
    Auckland, New Zealand

    The article would have a more profound meaning for me if the word “boss” was substituted by “leader”....

    .
    Andrei Naidoo
    Team Leader
    Salmat
    Auckland, New Zealand

    The article would have a more profound meaning for me if the word “boss” was substituted by “leader”. Boss by virtue of it’s title is synonomous with heirarchy and a reliance on authority to lead change. Leadership, though, is about vision, empathy, integrity, and participation that the article alludes to in building trust. Leadership doesn’t require title or authority and should exist at all levels of an organization.

    .
  • 25 AUGUST 2010
    Ruth Eliel
    Executive Director
    Colburn Foundation
    Los Angeles, CA USA

    ...this approach is far more difficult in a situation where one inherits a mediocre staff...

    .
    Ruth Eliel
    Executive Director
    Colburn Foundation
    Los Angeles, CA USA

    I very much appreciate the views expressed here, but find that this approach is far more difficult in a situation where one inherits a mediocre staff than in one where the staff is strong and competent and team-minded to begin with. I would love to get some input on this.

    .
  • 24 AUGUST 2010
    Denise Chachere
    HR-OD Director
    Jost Chemical Co.
    St Louis, MO USA

    ...The part that left me scratching my head was the last page of tips to demonstrate when one is taking charge. The material seemed to me based on male modes of communication and ignored how women may be perceived...

    .
    Denise Chachere
    HR-OD Director
    Jost Chemical Co.
    St Louis, MO USA

    The advice in the article is along the lines of McGregor Theory X and Y assumptions about people. If you want employees to exhibit positive work behaviors, then you need to treat them positively. In doing so, the leader creates a performance-enhancing flywheel effect (Collins, Good to Great).

    The part that left me scratching my head was the last page of tips to demonstrate when one is taking charge. The material seemed to me based on male modes of communication and ignored how women may be perceived employing the same “tricks.”

    .
  • 24 AUGUST 2010
    Mark Guay
    Lawyer
    Newburyport, MA USA

    The world is in the trouble it is today because people violate the “end does not justify the means’ rule all too often....

    .
    Mark Guay
    Lawyer
    Newburyport, MA USA

    The world is in the trouble it is today because people violate the “end does not justify the means’ rule all too often. From human rights issues to pollution issues to irascible bosses, the “end” is simply no excuse for poor “means”. Peter Drucker once wrote: “Management by objectives and self control ... [is] the philosophy of management. It rests on a concept of human action, human behavior, and human motivation. And this is genuine freedom, freedom under the law.” He got it right.

    .
  • 24 AUGUST 2010
    Annika Albuquerque
    student
    SDM-IMD
    Mysore, India

    In these times we cannot undermine the impact of followership on the tactics used by leaders as followers are well informed, desire control, and are willing to give the leader only how much he deserves.

    .
    Annika Albuquerque
    student
    SDM-IMD
    Mysore, India

    In these times we cannot undermine the impact of followership on the tactics used by leaders as followers are well informed, desire control, and are willing to give the leader only how much he deserves.

    .
  • 24 AUGUST 2010
    Nick Lethbridge
    problem solver
    Agamedes Consulting
    Western Australia

    ...Question: Are threats more effective than psychological safety in bolstering employee performance? I know that I would prefer to work with psychological safety. Would I work harder under threats?...

    .
    Nick Lethbridge
    problem solver
    Agamedes Consulting
    Western Australia

    The section on “Taking control” makes several suggestions on acting beyond the strict bounds of truth. It reminds me of the old political maxim: “The secret of success is sincerity. Once you can fake that you’ve got it made.” Which sounds rather negative!/p>

    On the other hand, if you doubt your own ability then other people will also doubt your ability. This will lead to second-guessing, contradictory actions and general unrest. The result will be a team going in all different directions.

    You are boss—it’s your responsibility—make the difficult decisions and lead the team. But keep eyes and ears open for new ideas and changing circumstances. It’s an excellent point that there are three possible answers: Yes, No, and I don’t know. The answer may change—improve—over time.

    The second section, “Bolstering performance”, is excellent. All good points. But they must be done with actual sincerity.

    Richard Branson (Virgin) writes regular articles on good management, published in my local paper. In one article he pointed out that Virgin are tolerant of mistakes. In another article he wrote that each employee shares responsibility for company decisions.

    Branson wrote: “When someone on our team tells me, ‘Sorry, Mr Branson, but they don’t let us do that any more,” my standard response is, ‘"They”? Oh, I’m sorry, I mistook you for someone who works here.’“

    If my boss said that, I would take it as a direct threat to my continued employment. The obvious implication is, that Virgin is tolerant of mistakes—except for the mistake of disagreeing with a Branson directive.

    Which raises an interesting question. Virgin is a successful company. The Virgin boss writes that he uses threats to ensure that employees follow the company line. Question: Are threats more effective than psychological safety in bolstering employee performance?

    I know that I would prefer to work with psychological safety. Would I work harder under threats?

    .
  • 24 AUGUST 2010
    Jim Smith
    CEO
    Enterprise Management Group
    Seattle, WA USA

    ...The challenge to CEO’s reaching out to their people is the huge number of critics, naysayers, or just lousy managers in the middle....

    .
    Jim Smith
    CEO
    Enterprise Management Group
    Seattle, WA USA

    I’m a great fan of Dr. Sutton, have recommended his books to several associates. I was introduced to him here at the Quarterly, always great insights.

    The challenge to CEO’s reaching out to their people is the huge number of critics, naysayers, or just lousy managers in the middle. Even at the first level of “boss”, the supervisor or team lead, people judge their leaders’ responses to their recommendations in personal terms, not enterprise terms. “What happens if the boss hates the idea?” “What happens to me if I persist?”

    As you proceed up the organization, this perception has an exponentially negative or blocking impact on the bosses’ ability to hear what the people are saying, because they’re not saying anything where there’s a perceived risk.

    The challenge is to come up with a process that overcomes the filters in the middle.

    It is completely reasonable that a mid-level manager could receive input from a subordinate that makes an outstanding case for eliminating that manager’s entire organization. A completely justified and reasoned recommendation. It gets rejected with no explanation, how much career capital would we expect that employee to expend going over the managers head, his conviction notwithstanding?

    Good bosses can and should turn to their people, but in the absence of a proven process, several layers of human nature are going to ensure that much of the really valuable information will be filtered.

    I, as if that mattered, support Dr. Sutton’s position presented here, but the boss has to do something, provide some vehicle or some method for that important information to flow risk free to the top, and that means he/she has to want the information badly enough to do whatever is necessary to nullify the normal human filters.

    One way to do that is to reverse the justification roles and take the information from the bottom directly to the top and then send it down with this question to the responsible manager, “why is it a good idea to NOT do this.”

    Do a few of these and take action and the employees will wake up one day and say to themselves, “something different just happened, man have I got one for them.”

    The CEO of a $13 billion company I’m familiar with did exactly this and after the first seemingly invincible road block bit the dust, 800 inputs turned into 7400 in one week, 3900 were acted upon delivering $300 million in sustainable SG&A reductions. All this from just nullifying the human filters.

    Most ignorance is vincible ignorance. We don’t know because we don’t want to know.

    —Aldous Huxley

    .
  • 24 AUGUST 2010
    Fakhrdding Ahmed Abdulaziz
    Senior Treasury Officer
    Islamic Development Bank
    Jeddah, Saudi Arabia

    Quite an insightful article. I however don’t understand why some of the aspects of a boss have been left from this article. Like fair play and transparency in dealings with subordinates...

    .
    Fakhrdding Ahmed Abdulaziz
    Senior Treasury Officer
    Islamic Development Bank
    Jeddah, Saudi Arabia

    Quite an insightful article. I however don’t understand why some of the aspects of a boss have been left from this article. Like fair play and transparency in dealings with subordinates in rewarding and in penalizing are important aspects of being a boss. Another aspect is sensitivity to staff personal problems, which plays important role in bolstering staff morale and loyalty. For example if a staff member who is otherwise a very good performer starts taking frequent leaves then instead of issuing a terse warning it would be appropriate to find out actual reason and if it is due to his personal or domestic problem then it is better to be compassionate and allow him reasonable time to resolve the issue on his own or offer him assistance if it is not considered intrusive by the staff concerned.

    .
  • 24 AUGUST 2010
    Kenneth Armitage
    Lt Commander
    Suffolk, East Anglia, England

    There is no such thing as good or bad bosses, there is only leadership and management, and there is a difference between the two....

    .
    Kenneth Armitage
    Lt Commander
    Suffolk, East Anglia, England

    There is no such thing as good or bad bosses, there is only leadership and management, and there is a difference between the two. Throughout history there are numerous examples of people who could be described as a leader or displayed leadership qualities. They could include, for example, Alexander the Great, Julius Caesar, Hannibal, Oliver Cromwell, Abraham Lincoln, Admiral Lord Nelson, The Duke of Wellington, Napoleon, General George Washington, Winston Churchill, Franklin D Roosevelt, Field Marshall Montgomery, and John F Kennedy, all naval and military men or politicians with a military background. And, then there are great religious leaders like Moses, Confucius, Jesus, Buddha, and Mohammed? They all had a vision and a story to tell and they all had the enthusiasm and ability to persuade other people to believe in their cause and course of action.

    Leadership is about people or followers. Without followers it is not possible to be a leader; and, without input, advice, and support from other people, be they military staff officers, company directors and senior managers, or family and friends, a leader is unable to function because no man or woman can run an organization by themselves. Leadership means listening to advice from others, communicating and sharing information, delegating responsibility and accountability to others and supporting those lower down the management tree.

    Leadership cannot be taught in the classroom, from courses or reading books. Leadership is not about taking centre-stage at the AGM, that is acting; leadership is not about being at the podium at the occasional event to address employees, again that is acting; leadership is not about producing a monthly message to the troops, that is management; leadership is not about appearing on an occasional basis so that people know you are still around, it is about regular appearances around your organization and making sure you know what employees are doing, what their problems are and taking an interest.

    Despite the loss of Admiral Lord Nelson at Trafalgar, the English fleet was still victorious. Why? Because Nelson had thought through what had to be achieved, had clear objectives, articulated his plans, inspired people to give off their best and planned strategy with his senior officers, communicated with his Captains and they translated the broad outline of the plan to be followed to the officers and men in their individual units so everyone knew what was required.

    To become a leader one has to spend time, at different levels, developing the qualities, attitude, bearing, manner, and appearance of a leader; being recognized and accepted as a leader is another part of the equation and is based on ability, knowledge and practical experience. Therefore, leadership demands not just presence and ability but candour, communication, conduct, control, composure, comprehension, contact, compassion, commitment, and being conclusive in order to be successful.

    .
  • 24 AUGUST 2010
    Grant Seedhouse
    Project Manager
    Business Link NW
    Preston, England, UK

    ...I find many of the necessary behaviours war with my natural inclinations. I will have to work harder.

    .
    Grant Seedhouse
    Project Manager
    Business Link NW
    Preston, England, UK

    There are many truths in this article and it is unusual to read anything which homes in on personal skills. I receive this as a personal criticism and guide. Practice is harder because I find many of the necessary behaviours war with my natural inclinations. I will have to work harder.

    .
  • 24 AUGUST 2010
    Lavanya Ajesh
    Account Manager
    Caterpillar India Pvt Ltd
    India

    I especially appreciate the example of Maple Leaf company. It brings to mind the 1982 Tylenol poisoning and the handling of the incident by Johnson and Johnson....

    .
    Lavanya Ajesh
    Account Manager
    Caterpillar India Pvt Ltd
    India

    I especially appreciate the example of Maple Leaf company. It brings to mind the 1982 Tylenol poisoning and the handling of the incident by Johnson and Johnson. Tylenol was the leader in the painkiller field accounting for a 37 percent market share in 1982, but the same year, someone replaced Tylenol capsules with cyanide-laced capsules, resealed the packages, and deposited them on the shelves of at least a half-dozen or so pharmacies in Chicago.

    The poison capsules resulted in the deaths of several people. Though the company was somewhat a victim itself, The J&J chairman, James Burke, was quick to take ownership and accept company and personal responsibility much like Maple Leaf, and over the next few weeks, used the media to its full capacity to demonstrate J&J’s strategy for communicating the company’s response to the public. Tylenol became the first product in the industry to use the new tamper resistant packaging in less than 6 months after the crisis occurred.

    Though I recognize the above is a better corporate communications example, it also demonstrates how the ownership of the top management can re-instate a brand back to life and being a market leader. It’s also a clear example of culture and good clean crisp management.

    .
  • 24 AUGUST 2010
    Narayan Joshi
    AVP
    UltraTech Cement Limited
    Kolkata, India

    I beleive being a boss is more about realising your self and learning from mistakes. Body language does play a part but being genuine (not vulnerable) is most important....

    .
    Narayan Joshi
    AVP
    UltraTech Cement Limited
    Kolkata, India

    I beleive being a boss is more about realising your self and learning from mistakes. Body language does play a part but being genuine (not vulnerable) is most important. Continuously upgrading your skills is another most important aspect. Having a toolkit ready to solve problems of your bosses, colleagues, peers, and of course subordinates, makes you great. It helps you overcome a negative transition or celebrate a visible success.

    .
  • 24 AUGUST 2010
    Joseph Joseph
    Chief People Officer
    CGH Earth
    Cochin, India

    The article is too personality based and really not the best form for any boss to focus, or even to be too aware of....

    .
    Joseph Joseph
    Chief People Officer
    CGH Earth
    Cochin, India

    The article is too personality based and really not the best form for any boss to focus, or even to be too aware of. While the author observes some characteristics of successful bosses, he omits that these bosses themselves never became successful because they chose to follow/adopt such characteristics. The best route to failure in my experience has been to chase the personality traits rather than the character traits. Good bosses are fundamentally people of good character—and these gain authority regardless of where they sit/stand at the table—Good character attracts other people of character and surely this is the fundamental of great organisations.

    .
  • 23 AUGUST 2010
    Didier Toussaint
    DIT
    Paris, France

    There is a very sensible point in the beginning of this article which weakens its contents...

    .
    Didier Toussaint
    DIT
    Paris, France

    There is a very sensible point in the beginning of this article which weakens its contents:

    “This bias toward glorifying and vilifying individual leaders (and downplaying the role of systems, collective action, and external factors outside management’s influence)is especially strong in the United States and many European nations.”


    Follow a number of prescriptions regarding the behavior of a good boss; if I understand correctly, they are meant to perpetuate this bias. Unfortunately, they also bar the possibility to exploit the collective and institutionnal ressources of the firm. In particular, its history is a major key to the determination of action.

    More than fifty years after Philip Selznick’s “Leadership in administration”, this faith in “prescribed behavior” and “individual psychology” is surprising.

    .
  • 23 AUGUST 2010
    Zaheer Zaidi
    Senior Manager - Commercials
    Genpact
    Wilkes Barre, PA USA

    ...I vouch for the advice on ‘shielding’ your people. I have tried and tested this method, and it has far reaching effects in establishing your power and supremacy, while consolidating your repsect within the team.

    .
    Zaheer Zaidi
    Senior Manager - Commercials
    Genpact
    Wilkes Barre, PA USA

    Very insightful. I vouch for the advice on ‘shielding’ your people. I have tried and tested this method, and it has far reaching effects in establishing your power and supremacy, while consolidating your repsect within the team.

    .
  • 23 AUGUST 2010
    Hugh McLellan
    Director
    businesshealthchecker.com
    Norwich, Norfolk, England

    ...Respect and support for subordinates comes at little cost other than time. Being interested often goes a long way to demonstrate a commitment which will be reciprocated in terms of motivated employees....

    .
    Hugh McLellan
    Director
    businesshealthchecker.com
    Norwich, Norfolk, England

    It is important to realise, that listening to peers and subordinates about one’s management effectiveness is a key benefit to a leader. In my management lifetime we have also entered a zone where face-to-face contact is often not considered to be a necessary form of communication—the preferred options being e-mail or Internet.

    In a selling environment, the adage that people buy from people is very true. The same does apply in business management. Respect and support for subordinates comes at little cost other than time. Being interested often goes a long way to demonstrate a commitment which will be reciprocated in terms of motivated employees.

    The facts are that, however sophisticated your products or services, business is really quite simple. One has customers, cash, employees and business systems to manage. The hardest parts are the people parts. In my management lifetime we have gone through cycles of organisational and management theory, but in terms of effective people management, nothing succeeds better than total involvement.

    As indicated in the article, the good managers do this naturally, and the bright ones can be trained to improve. The bad ones should go and do something else, as I have recommended to several managers because they were in the wrong job. My old HR director once said to me in a difficult business,” you need to lead this team by joining them at the coalface.” I did we succeeded and it was the best piece of advice I ever received.

    .
  • 23 AUGUST 2010
    Eric Riess
    CEO
    Eric Riess Coaching and Consulting
    Kensington CA USA

    Could not agree more, but your last paragraph on self-awareness should be at the top....

    .
    Eric Riess
    CEO
    Eric Riess Coaching and Consulting
    Kensington CA USA

    Could not agree more, but your last paragraph on self-awareness should be at the top. In my experience, the execs who need the help most are those who have no idea they have a problem. All they need do, is look at one 360 evaluation but they rarely do. They think ‘soft skills’ described as emotional intelligence are just psycho-babble and not necessary for success.

    Their attitude is often reflected in the bottom line. Just ask Mark Hurd, formerly of HP, whether a bit more emotional awareness would have helped him keep his job.

    .
  • 23 AUGUST 2010
    Jane Stallman
    Senior Partner
    Center for Strategic Facilitation
    Oakland, CA USA

    ...Levinson, years ago, had sessions for failed CEO’s. They all said, “nobody told me” but when he went back to their companies and investigated their claims, they all had been told about their problematic behaviors many times....

    .
    Jane Stallman
    Senior Partner
    Center for Strategic Facilitation
    Oakland, CA USA

    I love the description of the team-building activity and the obliviousness of the boss to his impact. Levinson, years ago, had sessions for failed CEO’s. They all said, “nobody told me” but when he went back to their companies and investigated their claims, they all had been told about their problematic behaviors many times. Self-awareness is indeed a most important key.

    .
  • 23 AUGUST 2010
    Sarba BIjoy Ghosh
    Vice President
    AECOM
    Atlanta, GA USA

    ...A boss is a supervisor whose tenure in this world of change is temporary, at best. The notion that, although I report to someone, I am my own boss and I can chose to do my work well is permanent!...

    .
    Sarba BIjoy Ghosh
    Vice President
    AECOM
    Atlanta, GA USA

    Good article and an interesting read. However, after reading about Susan Fiske’s observation that primates including ourselves “pay attention to those who control their outcomes”, I submit that the notion, “one can control an outcome” is truly delusional. One can work selflessly and tirelessly towards an outcome but to think that someone controls the outcome is truly delusional and, as a result, we create our demi-gods.

    A boss is a supervisor whose tenure in this world of change is temporary, at best. The notion that, although I report to someone, I am my own boss and I can chose to do my work well is permanent!

    .
  • 23 AUGUST 2010
    Cathy Carmody
    Executive Coach
    Declaire Associates
    Chicago, IL USA

    AND, a reason the best bosses are so self aware is that somewhere along the way, I bet a good friend, coach, or colleague has held up a mirror to their behaviors....

    .
    Cathy Carmody
    Executive Coach
    Declaire Associates
    Chicago, IL USA

    AND, a reason the best bosses are so self aware is that somewhere along the way, I bet a good friend, coach, or colleague has held up a mirror to their behaviors. I would add to your good lists: a leader needs to find a trustworthy person with whom s/he can talk about how to lead better and who can give an objective opinion when asked.

    .
  • 23 AUGUST 2010
    David Molden
    Quadrant 1 International
    Oxford, UK

    ...The new manager’s initial attempts at listening, coaching, and questioning had little effect. To cut to the chase, he ceremoniously burnt his predecessor’s walnut desk in the car park....

    .
    David Molden
    Quadrant 1 International
    Oxford, UK

    This article reminds me of one of our students, a new senior manager taken on to energise a demotivated team. The encumbent was a ‘management by exception’ expert and only engaged when something went wrong. The new manager’s initial attempts at listening, coaching, and questioning had little effect. To cut to the chase, he ceremoniously burnt his predecessor’s walnut desk in the car park. As the team stood around watching it burn he simply said ‘Go home and have a good weekend. Monday will be a very different day - see you all then’. And it was, amazingly different. The first time I told this story a CEO of an international retail chain in the audience gave away the boardroom table to charity as a symbol of change. This real story has been shortened for brevity.

    .
  • 23 AUGUST 2010
    Alan Arnett
    Learning and Development Consultant
    XL
    London, UK

    Some research I found a while ago had a similar message in terms of the climate leaders set. Based on the work of a Swedish academic, Goran Ekvall...

    .
    Alan Arnett
    Learning and Development Consultant
    XL
    London, UK

    Some research I found a while ago had a similar message in terms of the climate leaders set. Based on the work of a Swedish academic, Goran Ekvall, it essentially said that a leaders’ behaviour, tone, etcetera, is the biggest influence on the climate at work (e.g. how people feel and what they see as possible) and in fact leaders have no direct influence on performance - it all happens through climate.

    Put another way, employees at every level interpret and filter before they act.

    Whatever great decisions leaders take, whatever speeches they make, someone else has to interpret and put them into action.

    If leaders don’t pay attention to what it feels like to work for them, the rest of their endeavours may be wasted.

    .
  • 23 AUGUST 2010
    John Oliver
    Head of Operations - Science
    BTplc
    Derbyshire, UK

    ...many of the successful CEO’s do appear to display the more agressive and disruptive behaviour mistaking this for positive leadership. So does the end justify the means?

    .
    John Oliver
    Head of Operations - Science
    BTplc
    Derbyshire, UK

    A very perceptive article, and one which I personally agree entirely with. However many of the successful CEO’s do appear to display the more agressive and disruptive behaviour mistaking this for positive leadership. So does the end justify the means?

    .
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