Tuesday, 26 February 2013

Only One Extraordinary Manager - Part 2 - How to Communicate


My one extraordinary manager – Patrick Walsh – was (and is) a great communicator.  In his role as National Sales Manager, he managed a sales team of around 13 strong individuals who were scattered across Australia and New Zealand.


With such a geographic spread, there was no way he could check up on us and know what we were doing from day to day.  He could not micro-manage us even if he had been inclined that way.  Pat firstly had to select his sales people very carefully; he needed to be able to first, trust us and second, control us yet with a light touch.  After all he was located in Melbourne thousands of kilometres from most of his 13 direct reports.

Pat’s preferred method of communication with each member of his team was the telephone.  He reserved emails for purely administrative matters.  If he wanted to know how we were doing, Pat knew he had to make a personal connection.  On the telephone, he could easily tell if we were happy and working well, or if we were discouraged and lacking motivation.  It was all there in the tone of our voice and in the words we used as we responded to Pat’s perceptive questions. 


Managers can earn respect, trust and admiration from their team members.
 
Mostly we held nothing back from Pat.  We complained; we blamed; we vented our frustrations.  Pat listened and asked more questions, and listened.  Where he could fix something for us, he took it on to his own task list to do so.  He took notes during the conversation and followed up on every issue.  In the following week, he would ask about the progress of an issue or how was a particular prospect working out.  After we had spoken to Pat each week, we felt relieved and less worried as he had somehow taken the load off us simply by listening and understanding. 
 

Like every senior manager, Pat had a massive workload in addition to his management of a team of 13 sales reps.  Yet the area on which focussed most of his time and energies was his people.  I think there were two main reasons why he focussed so much on managing his people:  first, he was acutely aware that our individual success would ensure the success of the whole team and second, his No. 1 responsibility was the achievement of the national sales budget.  He knew that getting to and above budget kept his masters at the executive level happy and effectively out of his hair.  They would forgive other irritants so long as Pat consistently brought the numbers home year after year. 

It has to be said that in his people management skills, Pat was blessed with a natural aptitude for getting to know people quickly and accurately.  He knew each individual’s personality and what made us tick.  He related to each person in his team differently because he was conscious that the words and actions that would be effective to manage one individual would not necessarily work with another.  He was able to suit his message to each individual and yet remain true to himself.  In this way, he was able to gain the best performance from each member of his team.

Pat practised a very practical style of leadership.  He was a servant leader.  Certainly no one in his team would have thought of Pat as a “servant” to our needs and wants.  Yet subtly Pat managed us in a supportive and encouraging way, listening and responding to our problems and concerns and being there to help.  One question that Pat often asked each of his team members was, “How can I help you to do your job better/easier?  He did not demand, he did not blame; he asked what he could do to help.  And in so doing, he built the amazing respect and trust that each of us developed for him.

In the ways this extraordinary manager/leader communicated, there are three lessons: 

1.   Communicate with your team members in personal ways and regularly.  An email is not personal, a text message is not personal; a face-to-face conversation or on the telephone is personal.  Don’t leave it too long in between conversations.  To make it a habit, book it in to your diary for once or twice a week. 

2.    If you know you are poor at relating to people, recognise this deficit in your skills-bank.  Do something about it because it is vitally important to your success as a manager.  As a manager, you can no longer produce all the results yourself.  You must work through your people by understanding them, responding to their different needs and encouraging their efforts.  Actions that will be effective include doing more reading on the topic of managing people, attending professional development courses and asking your manager if you can have some coaching.

3.  To borrow a famous quotation, “Ask not what your people can do for you; ask what you can do for your people.”*  Does the servant-leader model of leadership hold some insights for you?  By listening, responding and offering to help the different people in your team in real, practical ways, you can build their respect and trust over time.  From being trusted, it is only a short step to being the kind of leader that engenders admiration and devotion from their followers.

 * John F. Kennedy, 35th President of the USA

Our next article in this 3-part series – Only One Extraordinary Manager - will look at consistency as an attribute of great manager/leaders.
 
Please note: People Results provides tailored Executive Coaching and Mentoring programs for managers and executives. For more information, please click here. 
 
To your Out-Standing Success,
 
Lynne
 
Lynne Lloyd
Managing Director
People Results
Executive Coaching and Talent Development Workshops
Level 24, 10 Eagle Street, Brisbane, 4000.
PO Box 10073, Adelaide Street, Brisbane, Qld.4000
T  1300 167 981
 
 

 

 

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