Accelerate success with your clock work
Here are some ways
leaders can protect precious hours while empowering their teams
We all know that controlling what we pay attention to
is key to living an intentional life. As a manager, one of the biggest
impediments to attention management is other people’s problems. When leaders’
time is constantly in demand from staff, they report they have too little time
remaining to engage in reflective thinking. This is time that could be spent
looking ahead, considering different paths, playing out different scenarios.
But constant distraction can undermine their very
capacity for being reflective. How can leaders create the time and space to
think and get important work done, while still being mentors and enabling the
team to keep their work moving forward? Leaders should arm themselves with
these four strategies that can help them find this balance:
Mentor in hindsight
Mentoring is an important role of leadership and
helps to groom employees to advance within the organisation. However, they
learn much less when advice is given on the front end than they do when they
have the opportunity to experience their own successes and failures and discuss
them with their boss later.
Create boundaries for
decision-making
Sometimes it’s hard for employees to determine what
they should handle on their own and what is outside the scope of their
responsibilities. This problem is alleviated when all employees know exactly
what their ultimate role in the company is and when it’s acceptable for them to
make mistakes within that role.
Have regular meetings with your
reports
Your team will want time with you, and you should be
available to them, for mentoring and other reasons. Reliably dedicate time on
your calendar every week for each of your direct reports. If they feel
empowered to make decisions on their own, and they understand how far their
responsibilities extend and what they need your help for, they will then be more
likely to hold their questions and issues to discuss at your weekly meeting. If
you’re in senior leadership, you should also dedicate time to interact with
those who have one or more layers of managers in between you and them.
Be available less often
If the boss is unavailable more often, the team
figures things out on their own more often. This allows them to grow in their
positions, and it minimises the interruptions the leaders face.
When leaders are “too available” to the team, on the
contrary, the team becomes disempowered or lazy.
For leaders to effectively manage attention, they
need to be able to balance interruptions with availability. Employing these
strategies is a step on the path to the ultimate goal of attention management.
— The New York Times
ETP16AUG18
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