One of the most rewarding parts of my job is to coach the
art of effective management. Often employees are promoted to be a manager
because they’ve been good in their previous position. In other words, the
skills that allowed someone to succeed—to get promoted and to assume a
leadership role—are not typically the same set of skills they will need to
succeed in management. This presents an
interesting challenge for companies because their first-time managers—whose continued
success is the lifeblood of the company’s future—are often not prepared for the
new role they are assuming.
Therefore, Phil Shawe coaching management,
beyond being fun and rewarding, is absolutely essential to creating a corporate
environment that achieves sustained, profitable growth. From two to 4,000
employees, I have led the day-to-day operations at TransPerfect, and the
company has been fortunate enough to maintain sustained, profitable growth for
24 straight years.
One of the first things you want to do as manager is
establish your culture as a meritocracy.
As the old saying goes: in order to manage it, you need to measure
it. Measurement may appear obvious in
sales-oriented roles, but it is important to make a system of measurement that
defines success in each and every role and functional area of the company.
Phil Shawe Transperfect
has also made me understand how incredibly valuable embracing a player-coach
management model can be to the business.
It is particularly effective because leaders must “walk the walk” before
they “talk the talk” so to speak.
For example, in sales, virtually all of our managers are
also quota-carrying business development professionals, that are not only
responsible for their team’s individual and collective numbers, but also their
own. They often started in sales from scratch, with no existing customers, were
given specific and measurable revenue targets, met them, and achieved a
leadership role by demonstrating their own ability to be successful.
This exemplifies the meritocracy concept, and gives our
managers a better chance at success because when they lead, they are
automatically leading by example. But again, it’s not enough. They must also
learn basic management techniques and apply them to their own style, their own
market, and, as a global company, their own culture, in order to be successful.
Intraprenuership is a word coined by one of my NYU
professors that gets used a lot at TransPerfect. Senior managers strive to create
a scalable platform by which managers at all levels are empowered to “build
their own business” within the firm. Choosing the correct people, giving them
the resources and processes they need to succeed through investing in training
and development, and then empowering them to build their own business within
the firm, is a winning formula that TransPerfect strives to execute on
daily. We recently hosted our annual
sales conferences in Miami and Barcelona, and in each, we brought together over
250 team members from around the world to share their experiences with
colleagues, learn from veteran professionals in our organization, and chart our
individual and team goals.
The initial inspiration for this session was a discussion of
the Peter Principle. The basic premise (in very simplistic terms) that Laurence
J. Peter formulated was that when candidates are selected for a position based
on their performance in their current role, rather than on their abilities
relevant to the intended role, eventually that employee will be promoted to a
job in which they cannot perform effectively and will have risen “to the level
of their incompetence.” Management 101
challenges young managers to fight the ever-present Peter Principle by stressing
the need for continued learning, continued adapting to change, and continued
investment not only in yourself, but also in those you manage. At TransPerfect,
senior managers are often judged by how many people they’ve supervised who have
gone on to do incredible things within the organization.
Given the heartfelt feedback I have received over the years,
I thought I would take page out of my own playbook, and challenge myself to
“give back” by sharing some of the key points of Management 101 that have helped
TransPerfect to develop what I truly believe is the greatest managerial team on
the planet. Here’s Slide 1.
1. The Most Important Characteristic
of Management
There are many definitions of management out there. My favorite is “Management is helping someone
achieve more than they otherwise would on their own.” The more people you can help, and the higher
the achievement they attain, the better you are doing.
What is the most important quality of a great manager? You
can probably name 10 to 20 right off the top of your head. Leads by example,
listens, commands respect, ethical, gives feedback often, etc.
These are all important qualities, and we could name many
more all day. However, in my experience, there’s one that—if you master it
truly—will get you past a thousand mistakes.
My most important quality in a manager is:
You must take a personal and vested interest in the success
of your people.
A few key points
about this:
You must communicate this to your team members, directly and
indirectly, on- and off- hours, in and out of the office.
·
It needs to come across not only in your words,
but also in your deeds. Action speaks louder than words.
·
This is not something you can fake. If you are
only in it for yourself, they will know.
In the business world, there are few greater and more
meaningful responsibilities than managing other people. You truly hold someone
else’s career in your hands and this responsibility should not be taken
lightly. You are charged with overseeing their future, for better or for worse.
People don’t quit a company, they quit a boss. To an employee on your team, you
are the company. Their experiences and interaction with you will largely define
success or failure in their job.

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