7 Skills Managers Will Need In 2025
As you plan your management career years from now, here are the skills you’ll
need to succeed.
We
all know that the work landscape is changing. The jobs that will be in demand are
shifting as
more are automated by artificial intelligence, machine learning, and robots.
Teams are becoming more disparate and globalization has added new collaboration
challenges. At the same time, more millennials are taking on management roles,
and even our work spaces will undergo changes between now and 2025.
“Change
will be happening so quickly that 50% of the occupations that exist
today will not exist 10 years from now. So we’re going to be living in an
environment that is extremely adaptable and changing all the time,” says Liz
Bentley, the founder of Liz Bentley Associates, a leadership
development consulting firm.
Amid
all of this flux, managers are going to need new skills, too. The staid,
hierarchical structures of the past aren’t going to work, she says. So as you
plan your future managerial career, be sure to keep these skills at the
forefront.
TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT SKILLS
Technology
is going to “grow alongside of us,” says Bentley, and there will be no job that
is immune from its effects. Of course, it won’t be a straight line from where
we are now to machine learning and robots taking over the workplace, but technology will become an
ever-present factor in the workplace. That will create new challenges,
conflicts, and opportunities related to skill building, workplace roles, data
management, privacy, and others. Managers will need to understand technology
enough to keep abreast of and anticipate emerging issues.
Some
technological developments will work, some won’t, and some will evolve, she
says. But the constant is that managers will need to not only be comfortable
with embracing new technology, but they’ll also have to be adept at managing
the changing relationship between people and emerging tech.
OUTCENTRIC LEADERSHIP SKILLS
Effective
managers and leaders are going to need to be less egocentric, Bentley says.
“I’m the leader and you will listen to me,” approaches aren’t going to work in
a tight labor market made up primarily of millennials. Bentley says managers
will need to be more “outcentric,” focusing on developing the people and teams
around them to be active and valued contributors. The best managers will look
at the overarching need, and then build and develop a team to meet that
need—with input from the team—instead of dictating what the team needs.
SOFT-SKILL ASSESSMENT
Effective
managers are going to have to be as good at evaluating candidates and employees
for soft skills as they are for technical skills, says Rita Santelli, CEO of
innovation consulting firm Savvy, and an adjunct
faculty member teaching strategic and innovative leadership at Georgetown
University.
The
best employees are going to have strong critical thinking and creative
problem-solving skills as the pace of the workplace continues to accelerate.
Managers are going to have to be both inherently able to spot those abilities
in others, and also stay abreast of emerging tools and assessments that more
accurately evaluate them in candidates and developing employees.
ROWE FOCUS
Companies
will adopt more elements of Results-Only Work Environments (ROWEs), says
Jennifer Currence, president of OnCore
Management Solutions, a performance solutions consulting company. This
HR management strategy, created by workplace consultants Cali Ressler and Jody
Thompson, focuses on autonomy and accountability.
In
other words, effective managers will create environments that focus less on
where and how people work, but which measure success based on results and
output, she says. The use of contractors will continue to rise, and managers
will need to think differently about how they assemble the skills necessary to
meet their objectives. Focus will need to shift away from process, except in
terms of how to optimize it for better results, she says.
“As
we shift to a workforce that is 100% autonomous and 100% accountable,
performance is based on the results they create, not the hours they work. As we
see more workplaces like this and more flexibility in the workplace, managers
are really going to have to focus more on the communication aspects and
relationship management,” she says.
TENSION-TOLERANT COLLABORATION
As
teams become more disparate with contractors, consultants, remote employees,
and office-based employees working together, managers are going to need to
learn how to build culture in nontraditional environments, Santelli says. In
addition, teams will increasingly become more diverse, Bentley adds. Generation
Z will be entering the workforce, while baby boomers work until well past
traditional retirement age. Globalization will create more cross-border teams.
Shifting demographics will make team diversity essential to capitalize on
changes in the market, she says. Leaders are going to need to be sensitive to
cultural differences.
Sometimes,
leaders confuse collaboration with consensus and harmony, which can slow teams’
progress and make them less effective, Santelli says. Especially as
change—technological, demographic, and other types of change—hit workplaces and
markets, being able to challenge the status quo will be the difference between
exceptional and mediocre managers, she says.
“Being
able to lead collaborative teams with the appropriate level of tension and
constructive debate that will lead to innovative ideas and timely results that
can get to market at the time when consumers are looking for solutions: That’s
a critical skill for future managers,” she says.
TRANSPARENCY
Being
effective at building cultures in nontraditional teams will require new levels
of transparency and communication, Currence adds. This has traditionally been
hard for managers to navigate. “They’re in this place where they feel like,
‘Okay, they have to protect the company, and we have to grow our employees and
serve them. Where’s the line, and which side of the line am I on?’ A lot of
times they’re straddling the line, and they don’t know what to be transparent
about because they’re giving away company secrets,” she says.
But
secrets and duplicity aren’t going to fly in a leaky world that increasingly reveals everything from salary to
work practices to private memos. For disparate teams to work, they need
managers they can trust—even when they can’t be face-to-face, she says.
Managers will need to be able to foster that trust to build cultures that
retain good team members.
EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE
Emotional intelligence has gotten a
fair amount of attention lately, but it will only become more
important as the workplace changes over the next eight to 10 years. “If IQ is a
measure of your intelligence quotient, EQ is a measure of your emotional
intelligence. A high EQ is synonymous with being self-aware, of knowing your
own strengths and weaknesses, or seeking the assistance of colleagues and mentors
to help you find them, which in turn allows you to identify areas to improve,”
says Craig Dalziel, senior manager with technology recruitment firm Pearson
Frank.
People
with high EQ tend to have greater empathy, allowing managers to gain greater
perspective and evaluate what isn’t working within their teams, because they
can see the situation from others’ point of view, he says. “As more and more
millennials and gen Z’ers enter the workplace, this is the sort of workplace
they are imagining, and adapting now to meet that demand in 10 years’ time will
not only create a better environment today, but it will also mean the
management culture is ahead of the curve,” he says.
BY GWEN MORAN https://www.fastcompany.com/40451582/7-skills-managers-will-need-in-2025?utm_source=postup&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Fast%20Company%20Daily&position=8&partner=newsletter&campaign_date=08242017
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