We Don’t Work for Companies; We Work for Managers

By Michelle Malay Carter on October 11, 2007 

Please Work on Our People Systems?Managers trump companies,? states First, Break All the Rules. Company reputation aside, as far as employees are concerned, one bad manager spoils the job.

Despite perks and generous benefits, an employee?s relationship with her immediate manager will determine how long she stays and how productive she is.

What do we want from managers? (A recap from yesterday)

Assuming all managers were screened to ensure they had problem-solving capability at one level beyond that of their direct reports, I believe most managers would be more than willing and able to provide this IF the organization provided them what they needed as managers.

What do managers need in order to provide this? (Information I promised in yesterday?s post.)

An institutionalized, total-system approach to managerial leadership which includes:

I say bravo to managers who strive to do the right thing and get the job done despite being systematically disabled.

Systems are the accountability of executive leadership, and although no company would dream of running without a multi-million dollar IT system, people systems remain snippets of sophomoric reactions to legislation and coping mechanisms for the inadequacy of this approach.

I have met very few executives who have the vision and the intestinal fortitude to invest in people systems to the extent that is needed. I say to the rest, have another hot dog at your employee appreciation picnic, and as Dr. Phil says, let me know how that’s working for you.

Filed Under Corporate Values, Employee Engagement, Executive Leadership, Managerial Leadership, Organization Design, Requisite Organization, Talent Management

Comments

2 Responses to “We Don’t Work for Companies; We Work for Managers”

  1. David Zinger on October 14th, 2007 10:46 am

    Michelle,
    You have a wonderful blog. I appreciate your style and content. I plan to write a little summary of this post later in the week on my website and I also plan to return to your blog as I co-write Slacker Manager with about 8800 subscribers and they need to know what you are doing.
    Keep up the very fine work.
    David

  2. Michelle Malay Carter on October 14th, 2007 1:35 pm

    David,

    Thank you for the encouragement as I am new to the world of blogging, although I’ve been opinionated since birth. :)

    Small world, I read your post on Slacker this morning and subscribed to davidzinger.com as I am attracted to the concept of strength based management. I look forward to reading through your work and to ongoing dialog with you and your community.

    Regards,

    Michelle