Managers: Get Some Training!

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Enjoy two “fast and fun” QBQ! interviews, as well as a 12 minute podcast with Dave Ramsey, all here: http://outstandingorganization.com/podcasts/

Note: This QuickNote is longer than most, but covers a critical subject matter. So grab a cup of coffee or a Diet Coke and enjoy—and then forward to every manager you know!

I sometimes coach a pastor whose church is thriving. This man has many skills and gifts. He is an outstanding teacher with boundless energy. His passion is evident and there is joy in his heart. He genuinely loves people. His church meets in a terrific facility in an outstanding location. The word has gotten out and his “flock” is growing.

Over coffee he expressed frustration in one area, though. Staff. More specifically, managing staff. After he shared a few specifics, I asked this question: What have you done, in a formal way, to develop your skills and abilities in the area of people management? He looked at me with a face that said, I’ve never thought about that. Then he answered: “Nothing.”

This pastor is not alone. By founding a church in his living room in 2006 and growing it to over 700 people—with God’s grace—he has been placed in a manager-leader role. But, he has yet to purposefully equip himself with the fundamental “how to’s” of managing people. This is no criticism of him. In organizations across the land people who are good at doing stuff get promoted to manager-leader all the time … and receive exactly no training. Back in the day, when I was promoted to branch manager and sent from Montana to Missouri, the entire training program consisted of, “Go east, young man!”

I find almost thirty years later that little has changed in the organizational world.

We at QBQ, Inc. don’t focus on management training, but sometimes we’ll ask clients, “What good, solid people management training have you offered to help managers become managers?”

The common answer: “Nothing.”

Curious, if you were having brain surgery tomorrow would you hope the surgeon has some training?! If you were visiting the dentist because your tooth hurt, would you want her to know what she’s doing? If you invited a contractor to your house to help renovate, wouldn’t you hope that he’s done this before and has the skills and knowledge to do an outstanding job?

Of course.

So then who wants to be managed by an untrained manager? Do you? I don’t. But actually—most people are.

What happens so often is the top salesperson becomes the sales manager, the sharpest technician becomes the manager of technicians, and the best burger flipper becomes the shift supervisor. But very rarely is training provided to help the salesperson, the technician, and the burger flipper make this critical transition. Yet, everybody knows that the most important person in a staff member’s professional life is … their manager.

Furthermore, anyone reading this QBQ! QuickNote understands this:

Nine times out of ten, people do not quit the organization. They quit their manager.

In the Outstanding! book we write:

Managing others is a whole different skill set from developing software or paying invoices or answering questions on an employee hotline or keeping systems running or selling products and services. When managers aren’t trained, and thus don’t understand the management job, there are many consequences—one being that good people go right out the door.

For a decade I sold management training. The firm I represented provided content that helped managers understand their five core obligations to those they managed:

- Define tasks clearly so they know what to do
- Train/coach them to do what is expected
- Confront them when they’re off-track
- Set clear objectives and goals
- Encourage and praise

Though all critical, let’s camp on that last one. In Parenting the QBQ Way Karen and I talk about how words delivered from the lips of Mom or Dad can mean the world to children—or destroy their world. Though the manager-employee relationship should not be parent-child and too often is, the analogy works. A manager’s words can lift up and encourage or cut down and demoralize. When a manager says something mean, sarcastic, arrogant, or shaming, it does nothing to cause the staff member to want to succeed, or to help them succeed.

I am often amazed at the dumb things managers say to people. And because the manager is in a “power position” over the employee, those words can hurt, frustrate, or scare a staff member so much he or she may struggle to sleep that night. But the manager is not awake. Why? Usually because the manager has no idea how those words impacted one of their very own team members.

Managers, some quick tips:

Watch your words. Talk less. Ask more questions. Treat team members as individuals. Discover what drives each person. Don’t argue with employees in an attempt to “be right.” Freely employ the powerful words, “I’m sorry, I was wrong.” And when it’s time for a frank conversation, please do not do it over email or text. Truth be told, in this high tech world nothing beats a low tech, old fashioned, totally retro face-to-face, one-on-one conversation—or phone call. Effective manager-leaders know this. You won’t find them confronting over the Internet.

Sometimes, we hear the phrase “raising up leaders.” I believe there is no leadership without good people management. In Outstanding! we suggest:

What most aspiring leaders don’t know is that when people describe their boss as a good leader and then are asked to articulate specifically what that person does to lead, this is what we hear:

– My boss communicates what I should do.
– He talks to me … and listens.
– When I get it right, she praises me.
– He tells me when I am off track.
– I am trained and coached.
– She spends time with me.
– He shows me respect.

Every item listed above is a people management skill. These are the things effective managers do, day in and day out, with and for their people. I have yet to find a boss anywhere who was described as a “great leader” who wasn’t first a terrific manager of his or her staff.

So, a final thought for managers everywhere:

Practice personal accountability by choosing to immerse yourself in quality management training even if you have to pay for it yourself. A manager-leader’s role, scope, influence, and impact on people—and the organization—are WAY TOO BIG for anyone called “boss” to go untrained.

John G. Miller
John@QBQ.com
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Be an Owner, Not an Occupier

Enjoy two new “fast and fun” QBQ! interviews and a 12 minute podcast with Dave Ramsey: http://outstandingorganization.com/podcasts/

One definition of the trendy word “occupy” is to “dwell in a space.” Too often, we humans do this—we just take up space.

Sometimes, we just take up … time.

Time, as we all know, can be measured in years, months, weeks, days, hours, minutes, or seconds. But I like the word—the unit of time—called a “moment.”

It’s certainly a common description of time. We say, “Just a moment!” “I’ll be with you in a moment!” or “Please wait one moment.” Or, if we demonstrate quickness of mind or humor, or we act fast, decisively, and perform deftly, we are said to be “in the moment.” We are encouraged to “seize the moment.”

Moments are the essence of the adage, “Don’t blink or you’ll miss it.”

But it is easy to miss a moment. And what we’re really missing is the opportunity to own the moment. The truth is, opportunities come in moments and in moments there can be opportunity. When we fail to own the opportunities that come along, we diminish ourselves because—in that moment—we likely served less, contributed little, added no value, and eschewed practicing personal accountability.

On the flip side, when we simply OCCUPY a moment, we miss our chance to give, to help someone, to solve a problem. Occupiers of moments are often bystanders, watchers, observers. Quite honestly, sometimes they are complainers, whiners, blamers. Not always … I said sometimes.

Bottom line, I just think it’s better to own moments than to occupy them.

In Chapter One of the QBQ! book, there is story about Jacob, the Rock Bottom Restaurant server, who, as he was heading to the kitchen weighed down by a loaded tray of dirty dishes, spotted me, stopped, and met my needs. He didn’t think the thoughts of an Occupier such as, Not my department. Not my job. Not my problem.
   

He thought the thoughts of an Owner: I care. I want to serve others. I will be my best today.

Maybe a tad pedestrian, but because in the pedestrian we find the practical, here are the kinds of things people do when they own a moment:

  • A manager stops debating with a staff member, trying to win a point, and pauses, saying, “You know, I think there’s more to this than I’m aware of. Can you share with me what’s really on your mind?”
  • A parent, after instructing a child to stop engaging in a specific behavior, actually follows through, preventing disobedience and earning the child’s respect. (We call this “strong parenting” in Parenting the QBQ Way)
  • A salesperson on a sales call stops blathering on about the product and asks the customer, “What problems are you experiencing?” and “How can I best help you?”
  • A driver on the road responds to another driver—who just committed a mental error—with a rare-in-today’s-society friendly wave and a smile.
  • A spouse arriving home from a long, tough slog at work rises above, saying to the other, “Tell me about your day.”
  • A sibling, friend, or co-worker, when told by another that their words or actions hurt, stops and asks, “I am so sorry, what was it that I said or did?” instead of lashing out with defensiveness, justification, and blame.
  • A twentysomething with a cell phone, good car, and some money in his pocket stops to help a stranger on a Colorado highway at midnight as all the other cars drive on by.

Now, I am not recommending anyone engage in that last one and there’s no need to email me about the risk. I understand. But when Michael, the only Miller son, informed us the next morning that he’d stopped to help a woman stranded in a decade old vehicle with only $10 in her purse, secured a tow truck for her by phone with his debit card, and waited for help to arrive—I don’t think I’ve ever been more proud of him.

Choosing to own a moment—not just occupy one—is really an outstanding way to live. At its core, it’s what personal accountability is all about, asking The Question Behind the Question (the QBQs): “What can I do to own this moment?” and “How can I right now make a difference?”

Don’t be an Occupier. Be an Owner. Only then can we be outstanding!

Flipping the Switch with QBQ!

Enjoy the new 12 minute podcast with Dave Ramsey and John G. Miller: http://outstandingorganization.com/ramsey/

If someone asked me, “John, why do you and your team teach ‘Personal Accountability and the QBQ!’ wherever you go?” I would say, “Well, let’s have Steve with AutoTrader.com answer that!”

Steve’s story:

John, in February 2011 you spoke at the AutoTrader.com annual meeting in Atlanta. I was fortunate enough to receive a copy of Flipping the Switch. My first read through was completed on my fight home. There were many more reads to come.

Let’s fast forward 10 months to Friday, December 9th:

On that day I learned from my Regional Director that I’d been named “Regional Salesperson of the Year.” As I reflected on the achievement—feeling incredibly thankful—I pondered the reasons it had come about. I believe this recognition was partly a result of trying to do the right things in support of my co-workers and clients—and because of my strong belief in AutoTrader, our culture, mission, and leadership.

But, I truly believe the underlying reason for this achievement was the change that occurred in my thought process and behavior when I learned how to use “the question behind question”—the QBQ—to “flip the switch”!

Thanks to the QBQ! principles, I know that my results are mine to own and if they’re not what I wanted, I can’t blame my boss, my colleagues, my clients, or my family. Ownership and personal accountability are all about the choices that I make in my career and life. Over the past year, QBQ! became my approach in consulting, selling, coaching, relating, and interacting. QBQ! has led to deeper conversations and relationships, both at work and at home.

And a wonderfully satisfying end-of-year result!

Thank you!

Steve

—————————

And that’s why we teach “Personal Accountability and the QBQ!” But I need to say this to Steve:

A tool is of no value unless it’s used. You, Steve, heard the QBQ! message and ran with it, putting it into action. Now that’s outstanding!

Meanwhile, lots of good stuff happening with QBQ! If you believe in PERSONAL ACCOUNTABILITY, read on …

  • Parenting the QBQ! Way, an e-book by John G. Miller with Karen G. Miller, written to answer the question moms and dads have asked, “How can I best utilize the QBQ at home?” is coming. For your convenience, it can be ordered here now:

Amazon Kindle:

http://www.amazon.com/Parenting-QBQ-Way-Accountability-ebook/dp/B005UT19CE/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1326459133&sr=1-1

B&N Nook:

http://www.barnesandnoble.com/s/parenting-the-qbq-way?keyword=parenting+the+qbq+way&store=allproducts

iTunes:

http://itunes.apple.com/us/book/parenting-the-qbq-way/id472468498?mt=11

  • Believe middle and high schoolers can be more accountable? Take more ownership? If so, check out our new I Own It! Building Character Through Personal Accountability program for schools: http://qbq.com/schools/

Thanks for believing in QBQ!

John G. Miller

John@QBQ.com

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