Saturday, May 23, 2020

5 Signs Youre Annoying Your Employees Without Noticing

5 Signs Youre Annoying Your Employees Without Noticing The problem with people who have no vices is that generally you can be pretty sure  theyre going to have some pretty annoying virtues. â€"Elizabeth Taylor Your swagger, peremptory mannerisms might surely sway your shareholders or business  allies, making them give in to your demands. However, if you’re thrusting it upon your  employees too often, it might soon sound the death knell of your relationship with them. Sure, you can talk yourself into thinking it’s going well under your leadership, a case of  mind over matter; but it only makes you a saboteur in the long run.Here are a few hints that’ll confirm that your relationship with your workers needs  cementing: 1) You’re getting away with what they can’t! If you are any bit successful, your employees would look up to you. Your whiling away  time, vacationing on impulse, late comings, early exits; but not an ounce of leniency  with your employees can be upsetting to them. It’ll just unveil the blatant power play at  work, getting your employees piqued faster than you know. The moment they feel they’re  being taken for granted, will mark the beginning of the end. Your top talent will begin  disappearing, and the sycophantic, self serving lot will start taking over.  Generally, people have a feel for whos genuine, a sense that goes beyond logic. Being fair in all measures can only promote a feeling of oneness. Besides studies have  shown that fair managers can augment the  bottom line. 2) You are the smarty pants, knowâ€"itâ€"all kinds! This isn’t possible, not humanly. Even in the corporate warfare , the ground realities are  best known to the foot soldiers. That’s the reason, people are divided into teams, handed  over different projects so they can specialize in solving problems for a specific set of  clients. That’s just the way it works. A one man army can work for extremely small  firms, but not for long. It is your prerogative instead to utilize the potential of your best  talent optimally. Ask them what they know, rather than showing off what you do. Sure,  there can be instances where you might know more. In such cases guide them properly,  but leave it open ended and up to them to take it ahead. A know-it-all behavior smacks  of both insecurity and snobbery. And both can be cataclysmic for your own growth as a  manager or employer, let alone your organization’s. 3) Having ridiculously high expectations from your poor  performers? You should be helping instead! Don’t crucify your poor performers. They have a right to live and learn too. If you’re  burdening them with more tasks just because their work isn’t up to the mark, to justify  their remuneration, remember two wrongs don’t make a right. These are the best  opportunities to hone your leadership skills, set a fine example, instill confidence in  others and help someone genuinely (if a bit of philanthropy is up your alley). Everybody  works for themselves. If you succeed in improving someone’s performance, it would be  good for them, but it’ll be in your best interest. Like, if you’re managing a food chain or a retail outlet, try keeping your poor performers  by your side or have them positioned at less demanding spots. You could use an employee scheduling software to schedule their duties beforehand, so you could plan the needful accordingly. 4) You’re getting envious and it shows! Managers aren’t immune to envy. They too can feel threatened by good performers. Some clear signs of hindering their growth can be: making it hard for the employees to access a specific piece of information (so your own incompetencies aren’t exposed) throwing your weight around not asking employees to show up in organizational events offering them little importance ignoring their advice, etc A jealous boss would do all things a tad extra that terrible bosses are  known for, unless the intimidating employee falls in line to be a follower. Remember, no amount of dominance can help you. In fact, the more stronger you oppose  someone in particular, more would be the collective sentiment against you. This can slay  your employees’ morales, needless to mention the widening gap between them and your  organization’s goals. 5) Are you being a problem creator instead of a problem-solver? Increasing red-tapism, getting them involved in needless reporting, killing their time is  the worst kind of harm. Don’t just count the problems, talk in terms of solutions. Not  helping is only tantamount to creating obstacles.  Similarly, don’t burden your best performers any further if they’re already tied up with  existing workload, rise to the occasion yourself. It’s not just for your employees to see  that goals are being met.  All the liability, be it the accolades, the disrepute or the embarrassing blunders must be  shared. If you can help them in getting something straightened out, do it proactively. Learn from the worst examples around you. See that of all the people, you don’t get in  the way. Walmart has been especially infamous for creating mayhem in employees lives.  Its employees have even shared some stories that’ll give a peak into their plight. Final thoughts: According to a survey by Gallup in 2010, job stress came out as the biggest pet  peeve of workers in America, but the truth is most of this stress is created. This can  result in a double whammy of mounting workload and behavioral clashes. Don’t expect your employees to be able to leap buildings and have super powers. A good leader must walk the talk and set the right precedents. Whatever you do, don’t let  these problems linger on for long. They’ll only turn into festering wounds. Author:  Bimal  Parmar  is VP of Marketing for  Celayix  a leading provider of  Employee  scheduling software. With over  20 years industry experience,  he’s responsible for making sure the world learns about the benefits of Celayix’s solutions.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.