Are you just following up or are you micromanaging?
From the Easy in theory, difficult in practice Blog
by Kiron Bondale
My musings on project management, project portfolio management and change management.
I'm a firm believer that a pragmatic approach to organizational change that addresses process & technology, but primarily, people will maximize chances for success.
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This Dilbert comic strip provides us with a good reminder of the fine line which exists between reasonable oversight of activities and micromanagement. Dilbert has allowed sufficient time to pass before seeking an update on a colleague’s assigned task only to find that it has been neglected due to a lack of following up. When Dilbert attempts to get commitment on a revised completion date, he’s accused of micromanaging the activity.
What is deemed a reasonable amount of oversight by a manager may be perceived as micromanagement by team members.
While some teams might possess sufficient psychological safety to embolden team members to voice their concerns, the culture within other organizations or teams might actively discourage this sort of straight talk. In such environments, the frustration felt by the team members festers resulting in impacts to their productivity and slowly poisoning team morale.
And this can become a vicious cycle as team members become progressively more disinclined to share updates with their leaders which results in even greater degrees of oversight.
So how can we avoid this?
It has to start with the leaders and team members collaboratively developing work management practices. If these practices get imposed by leaders or solely developed by team members they will never satisfy the needs of both parties. Early in the life of a project if the objectives for both sets of stakeholders are put on the table and an honest, frank discussion is held about principles governing how those objectives can be met, a set of practices which both sides buy into can be developed.
It also helps to make the oversight process as seamless as possible. Use of visual work support tools such as physical or online Kanban boards can shift the model from assigning work to team members to team members signing up to complete specific work items while simultaneously providing transparency into what’s done and what’s left to be done.
Finally, reducing cross-initiative multitasking can enable staff to complete tasks quicker and with higher quality while eliminating the need for managers to have to constantly follow up with team members to ensure that priorities haven’t shifted.
Micromanagement is like Justice Potter Stewart’s famous description of the threshold test for obscenity : “I know it when I see it”. Given this subjectivity, it’s better to avoid getting being accused of it to begin with.
(Note: this article was published without micromanagement in March 2017 on kbondale.wordpress.com)
Posted on: October 17, 2018 08:47 AM |
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Comments (14)
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Very interesting, thanks for sharing
John A. Williams
Owner| JAW Consultancy | The Pragmaticioner
Nootdorp, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands
So true Kiron. Two basic tools come to mind here to implement at the start of the project. The RASCI Model (everyone's level of involvement) and the Bathtub Model (PM's level of engagement).
Thanks Eduin!
John - that's the first time I've heard of the Bathtub Model. Thanks for teaching me about a new tool!
Kiron
Pench Batta
Enterprise Lean Agile DevOps Coach /SAFe Program Consultant (SPC6)| Capgemini, Inc.
Bentonville, Ar, United States
Kiron, Thanks for sharing another awesome article!
Rami Kaibni
Community Champion
Senior Projects Manager | Field & Marten Associates
New Westminster, British Columbia, Canada
Good one Kiron ! I wrote an article early in the days about Micromanagement, check it out when you have time:
https://www.projectmanagement.com/articles/314910/Micromanagement--A-Trip-to-Failure
Tamer Zeyad Sadiq
Assistant Cost Manager| Turner & Townsend
Riyadh, Ar Riyad, Saudi Arabia
Drew Craig
Sr. Agile & Product Coach| Vanguard
Philadelphia, Pa, United States
Haha, yes, that is funny.
It is a fine line, but I see the goal to get the best out of everyone, providing freedom and flexibility to do so, but at the same time, I'm there to support them, whether by gentle reminders, asking if need assistance with removing hurdles or bring groups together, etc. Like the support team for a cyclist, or the sweepers for curling.
Thanks Tamer!
Thanks Andrew - definitely a balance!
Good article, Rami - some useful lessons there for micro-managers and those being micro-managed!
Rami Kaibni
Community Champion
Senior Projects Manager | Field & Marten Associates
New Westminster, British Columbia, Canada
Thanks Kiron - Appreciate it
RAJESH K L
Project Manager, PMP| Bharat Electronics, Bengaluru, India
Bengaluru, Karnataka, India
Jo Ann Noel
Project Manager| Ministry of Planning
El Dorado, Trinidad and Tobago
Thanks for sharing. Interesting article.
Jay Goldberg
Management Consultant| SPA Inc
Bethesda, Md, United States
I think one key element of avoiding micromanagement is the manager trusting his/her people, and treating them like professional adults. Maybe some of the team need more supervision than others, but managing should generally be more focused on the big picture -- the strategy, the progress, the quality, schedule and cost performance, etc. Team members who are performing successfully don't need managers tinkering with every step of their work.
As Kiron indicated, collaboratively developing work management practices is a great way to start. Good, positive communication practices among the team members is a great means for effective management, and should indicate who needs more help/oversight, and who doesn't.
Micromanagement is the only way some managers see things -- have no idea outside of KPI how to motivate or inspire.
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