I doubt that Jeffrey Pfeffer has inside information about
why Jill Abramson was fired by the New York Times, but if the stories about
Abramson’s abrasiveness are half-true, she probably failed to cultivate the
right relationships.
Leadership and management do not involve telling people what
to do. They do not involve self-assertion or leaning-in. They do require that
you develop and sustain good relationships with those above you and those below
you.
Good managers set policy. They also create the best conditions
for the implementation of that policy. It cannot occur if the leader does not
have good relationships with others.
To be clear, the basis for such relationships is respect and
courtesy. It has nothing to do with sharing personal or intimate information.
Pfeffer emphasizes the most difficult aspect of management, getting
other people to do their best work:
You
have to make them work, not only to get things done in the web of interdependencies
that characterize most jobs, but also to keep your position. Leaders need
support—from their subordinates, customers, and most importantly, their bosses.
When that support vanishes, so do their careers. This lesson holds true
regardless of your job performance and track record.
Most managers know that they must manage their staff. They
should also take special care to manage their superiors. Abramson’s problem was
not merely the complaints of her staff, but her failure to develop a good relationship
with her boss, Arthur Sulzberger.
Pfeffer writes:
And
everyone, even chief executives and executive editors, has a boss. Insufficient
attention to managing relationships with bosses, such as boards of directors,
has cost many otherwise talented and successful people their jobs—witness, as
one example, last
summer’s ousting of Men’s Wearhouse (MW) founder
and emblematic spokesperson, George Zimmer, from his role as chairman of the
board.
First, Pfeffer explains how not to do it. What should you
not do when you are hired to manage people who want to have your job, or who
think that they ought to have your job:
There
are many natural human responses to such circumstances. One is to ignore your
rivals and enemies. Another is to try to show everyone around you how smart you
are and how much you deserve the job, in the hope that outstanding job
performance will win them over. A third is to try to hire your own team and
replace your enemies, a strategy that often can’t be implemented and has its
own risks as you bring in other, inexperienced (albeit loyal) people to help
you run a complex operation.
Evidently, such an approach foments contention and conflict.
Some respond by complaining or even politicizing the problem, but it is better
to learn how to manage a situation.
Pfeffer offers some suggestions:
… identify
the most critical relationships, those individuals crucial to both your success
and the success of the business, and nurture those relationships. This entails
asking people’s opinions, even if you don’t think their views are likely to be
helpful. It means telling people what you are doing and why—sharing information
with them so they never feel left out. Serving relationships means going to
visit people in their offices, not yours, and in countless other ways showing
others that you value them, their experience, and their expertise.
Note well the importance of being open and transparent.
People who feel that they are part of an enterprise work more effectively than
do those who believe that they are working in a vacuum.
And note the importance of generosity and humility. You
should not merely be keeping everyone informed, but you do well to drop into
your subordinate’s office. It is surely better than summoning him to yours.
It is worth emphasizing, with Pfeffer, that relationships do
not just happen. They require a considerable amount of work, made more
difficult when you do not much like the people you are working with:
Working
on relationships with people you may not like or even respect is difficult
work, which is precisely why executive tenure is often so short. After a while,
people forget how tenuous everyone’s hold on power is and get tired of the
important but often mundane tasks of serving critical relationships.
4 comments:
There was an article, Shipmates, in the NEW YORKER, Apr 21 issue. On page 61d, IIRC, there was a promotion ceremony in which the promotee said something like this--if the guys working for me don't look good, I don't look good, so I want to make sure they look good.
Related post I put up yesterday: Thoughts on Leadership and Command, from Two Writers and a General
http://chicagoboyz.net/archives/43184.html
Thank you... excellent post!
Concur with Stuart, DF.
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