Tag Archives: long game

Object in Motion

“You make it seem like I got promoted to manager was just happenchance,” Roberta said.

“In many ways, your appointment was just because you were standing in the right place at the right time, call it luck,” I replied. “But, luck alone will not sustain you as a manager. You now have the authority to make decisions and solve problems the way you would have them solved, but that does not mean you have the team behind you.”

Roberta turned pensive. “You mean, I might tell the team to do something in a certain way, or at a certain time, and the team might push back?”

“Most assuredly,” I smiled. “The bane of every manager is that the team almost always pushes back. It’s not necessarily out of malice. Or that the team thinks you are a dolt. Most pushback occurs because the team has its own way, its own methods, it own habits that are difficult to break.”

“So, just because I am the manager does not mean it’s my turn and I get my way?” Roberta asked, not as a question, but a statement of reality.

I answered anyway, nodding. “I think you get the picture. Your way may be the best way, but you are fighting momentum, object in motion stays in motion. It is your role to interrogate current methods, gather new methods and solicit input, so you can guide the team to the best decision. It is cumbersome in the short run, but the only way in the long run. If you force the short game, your term as a manager is already on the rocks.”

The Line at Your Door

“But, if I have the right solution to the problem, isn’t it more efficient to just get the team to do it my way?” Muriel protested.

“In the short run,” I replied. “Are you playing the short game or a long game? Are you training your team to solve problems or are you training your team to follow directions?”

“But, my manager, you know I have a manager, too?” Muriel hinted a bit of sarcasm. “My manager expects me to solve this problem, get on with the work, so we can get to the next project. My manager doesn’t care, as long as we keep moving.”

“Are you sure?” I asked. “If all the problems faced by the team have to go through you, eventually what happens to the speed of problem solving? And the more you solve the team’s problems, the more they depend on you to solve their problems. Every team problem you take away, disables the team, to the point where they are helpless to solve a problem without you. Even if the problem is within their capability to solve, you create a habit, a routine grooved behavior that leads right to the line at your door, behind all the other problems that begin to stack up.”