『How to Get Managers to Be Managers』のカバーアート

How to Get Managers to Be Managers

How to Get Managers to Be Managers

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Most companies promote their strongest individual contributor into management, then act surprised when that person manages like one. Jackye Clayton and John Baldino unpack why managing is a separate job that demands its own training, authority, and support, and what leaders owe a new manager before holding them accountable. The conversation runs from documenting performance issues honestly to managing across regional and cultural communication styles on remote teams, with a recurring reminder that gratitude and preparation, not entitlement, build real leadership. Key Takeaways: Promoting a top performer without training or real authority is not a promotion; it just adds meetings to someone who was great at a different job. Before blaming a manager, ask what support, coaching, and training the organization has actually provided. Document performance problems in writing as they happen so decisions rest on a record rather than a bad mood. Managing someone out of an organization is still managing; letting a disengaged employee ride out untethered causes more damage. Co-responsibility matters. Leaders should ask what they could have done differently at their own level before faulting a manager. Define a manager's role on the first day: the specific goal, how it fits the company, and why this person was chosen. Ask new managers what they need to succeed, then fund it. Saying no to coaching, an LMS, and conferences sets them up to fail. New managers inherit the team they are given; the work is making that team function, not replacing it. Earn respect by meeting people individually, learning why they stay, and giving them real ownership even without new titles. Remote and global teams require naming communication-style differences directly instead of dismissing them as just how someone is. Keywords: new manager training, leadership development, promoting individual contributors, performance documentation, managing remote teams, cross-cultural communication, employee engagement, manager support, accountability, people management
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