His brow furrowed. Lawrence had to concentrate to understand. No one had ever really explained his new role as a Manager. “But I thought a Manager was supposed to manage. I thought I was supposed to manage everything on the floor.”
“You’re not a supervisor anymore,” I said. “Your new focus is on the system. Your role is to create the system and make the system better. When you became the Manager, you promoted Nicole to be the supervisor. Whenever you do Nicole’s job, you are not paying attention to the system.”
“I thought I was just trying to help,” defended Lawrence.
“And if you continue to help by doing Nicole’s job, you will continue to ignore the system, and you will fail as a Manager.”
“Give me an example,” challenged Lawrence.
“Nicole is busy scheduling her team around vacations, people calling in sick, having doctor’s appointments and such. That’s her job.
“As the Manager, you just received a revised a production forecast from sales. Three weeks from now, you historically ramp up into your busy season. I looked at your headcount from last year. You are down three people and Charlie just gave notice, his last day is Friday. Everything looks fine, now, but four weeks from now, your production is going to get slammed and Nicole won’t have enough people to schedule from. As the Manager, you have to look ahead and build your labor pool. Now.
“If you are too busy scheduling this week’s production, you will be so far in the weeds, you won’t see what’s coming down the road in four weeks.” -TF
But how do you get out of the weeds? So much stuff hits my desk it takes me hours to sift through it all to determine waht really needs to be done. By then, the day is over and I have not done anything. The next day, it starts all over.
David,
In hingsight, I look back at your question and realize this description is huge for most managers. I plan to write about this for the next few days.