Ways to Avoid Micromanaging

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WAYS TO AVOID

MICROMANAGING BY HAMILTON LINDLEY


Have you ever wondered why you have to do the work for everyone else on your team? If you are the only person who knows how to do the job, you are a micromanager. Many employees have horror stories of their management team micromanaging and hovering over their every decision. Micromanaging is one of the top reasons that employees leave their jobs. While you may believe that you are helping your company by being involved in your subordinates’ work details, you are doing the opposite. Management must trust the competence of its workers. Micromanaging insults the skill and abilities of workers, but it also displays doubt in an employer’s own ability to choose qualified employees. Micromanaging may be done unknowingly by an employer. To avoid micromanaging, management should practice the following:


Pick the Right People Having qualifications doesn’t just include having work experience and certifications. Being qualified also includes have the interpersonal skills and ability to be a productive contributor. Management can avoid micromanaging by looking at the character of each person and pick the right people. For example, one person may be competent in completing a job successfully. However, they may also have a habit of procrastinating on tasks. When hiring, employees should have specific characteristics like timemanagement, humility, and communication skills.


Delegate Accordingly Remain focused on your worker’s output instead of their input. Make the expectations clear at the outset of a project, so each person understands the objective. Your team needs to know the destination for the work. It is up to them to get there. Provide resources, examples, and tools for the employee to find success in the role. Communicate a timeline for the task based on your employee’s suggestion. Your employees will likely have more expertise or experience at a particular task. Match your employees with the appropriate job and workload. Delegating assignments accordingly also cuts down on confusion and employee burnout.


Provide Training Instead of expecting or waiting for an employee to slip up, management should provide adequate training. Everyone can benefit from selfimprovement, whether it be leadership development or training in their specific field. By providing resources to improve, managers can rest assured knowing their employees are qualified. Create mentorship within your team so that workers are continually looking to improve themselves.


Trust Your Employees An employee may have enough training, experience, expertise, and education to complete their assigned work. However, a manager can still find themselves micromanaging. In such cases, this issue should be resolved with the manager. Managers need to give their employees space to do their jobs with the understanding that mistakes can happen. And that is okay. If you are always focused on how employees are completing their tasks, need to be copied on every email, and you are always down “in the weeds,” then you are a micromanager sucking your team’s morale.


Communicate Expectations Clearly A lot of workplace mishaps happen as a result of poor communication. Employees may be confused or performing poorly as a result of ineffective communication. Managers should make sure that expectations are expressed concisely and clearly. Employees should also feel comfortable enough to ask questions for further clarification.


Micromanaging Hurts Your Business

New leaders are tempted into micromanagement because it avoids surprises. But micromanaging undermines company productivity. Autonomy provides workers with a lot of motivation. When you are continually hovering to ensure that your employees follow proper procedures, your employees will leave and let you do the work yourself. Micromanaging stifles morale, creativity, and employee growth. It creates turnover, delays, and distrust.


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