Is a lack of psychological safety preventing you from delegating?
From the Easy in theory, difficult in practice Blog
by Kiron Bondale
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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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Harvard Business Review published an article by Sabina Nawaz this week on some challenges managers face when they delegate work to their staff. The gaps identified with team members being able to perform the tasks successfully included a lack of critical thinking, a lack of initiative, a lack of quality and a lack of speed.
While these are valid concerns, some times the issue is that we avoid delegating activities to team members. This might be a valid response if the outcomes from past delegations were bad but past poor performance could be addressed by the guidance provided in the HBR article. But some times we might not have even tried to delegate work which could have been successfully performed by our team members.
What might cause this reluctance?
While there might be many causes, one of the more compelling ones is the fear of the negative impacts on us when delegated work is not completed successfully. We could play it safe and choose to only delegate rote tasks, thus guaranteeing that there will never be a failure. Unfortunately that eliminates one of the key benefits to a delegee of taking on work which is their personal growth.
When we choose to delegate work to our team members which they have not performed in the past, we are testing a hypothesis that they should be capable of doing so. We hope that with our support and that of their peers they will be able to successfully complete the work within acceptable time or quality constraints but there are no guarantees of this.
If our manager has cultivated a culture of psychological safety within their teams, we probably won't worry too much about the personal impacts of delegated task failure, so long as there was a reasonable likelihood of success in our team members performing the work and the stakes are not so high that we needed the buy-in of our manager to delegate the work.
But if our manager doesn't take bad news well, prefers to play it safe, or encourages unhealthy competition and ridicule within their teams, we will think twice about delegating challenging work. We will prioritize our short term safety over the long term benefits of developing our team members. And this in turn will reduce their intrinsic motivation which increases the risk that we will lose some of our best staff.
We are responsible for creating psychological safety within our own teams but if our manager doesn't act the same way the impacts of that will cascade down. And if safety isn't prioritized at the top of the company, the resulting snowball effect might hurt the entire organization.
Posted on: November 15, 2020 07:00 AM |
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Comments (11)
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Luis Branco
CEO| Business Insight, Consultores de Gestão, Ldª
Carcavelos, Lisboa, Portugal
Dear Kiron
Very interesting this your theme
Thanks for sharing
Everyone is able to do all things as long as they are taught to do it and want to learn
If the delegation process is well done, all team members are in a position to carry out the work that has been delegated.
In my opinion, most people do not delegate for fear of becoming irrelevant
Thanks Luis! Fear of irrelevance is another sign of a lack of psychological safety within a team. If we felt safe with each other and our manager, we would share those concerns with them and likely find out those fears are overblown.
Luis Branco
CEO| Business Insight, Consultores de Gestão, Ldª
Carcavelos, Lisboa, Portugal
Dear Kiron
When a person becomes irrelevant, two things can happen:
- Or reconverts to continue to be indispensable
- Or is fired
But are they truly irrelevant, or just worrying that they are irrelevant?
Luis Branco
CEO| Business Insight, Consultores de Gestão, Ldª
Carcavelos, Lisboa, Portugal
Dear Kiron
If they delegate to the teams ...
But delegate "what" exactly? And does delegation free them up to focus on more strategic work?
Luis Branco
CEO| Business Insight, Consultores de Gestão, Ldª
Carcavelos, Lisboa, Portugal
Dear Kiron
I think we both think that delegating is allowing people to decide and do our job.
What exactly is this strategic work referring to?
I'd suggest that successful delegation happens when it removes activities from someone's plate which frees them up to do higher value work while simultaneously giving someone else a chance to grow their skills or increase their mastery.
Very interesting, thanks for sharing.
Peter Rapin
Subject Matter Expect; Project Delivery| Independent Consultant
Ontario, Canada
I fear that many weak managers or leaders see delegation as a no-win situation. Should the person that the task has been delegated to do a good or even an acceptable job of it then the delegator may see themselves as redundant/dispensable. If the person does a poor job than its the delegator's fault. A weak manager sees themselves as independent from the team and needs to look good to the bosses. They say "I did it" not "We did it"
DS has to extend beyond the team or project to work. If the project manager is insecure in his/her position (with his boss) it permeates throughout the team.
I would hazard a guess that there are more teams with a lack of psychological safety than have it even with a top notch leader. I would identify lack of PS as a risk in the early project stages and find ways to mitigate should it prove true.
Pefect. Thank you for sharing
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