Moving Right Along: Tips for Maintaining Meeting Focus
When a participant hijacks a meeting, energy dissipates and attention drifts away from the focus of the meeting. (more…)
When a participant hijacks a meeting, energy dissipates and attention drifts away from the focus of the meeting. (more…)
When meeting leaders take time to thoughtfully prepare before meetings it increases the likelihood that meeting objectives will be achieved and participants will be engaged. (more…)
The #1 complaint about meetings is that nothing happens. When there is no action or forward movement, frustration mounts. And, we wonder why people don’t show up to meetings or develop blackberryitis during an endless meeting! (more…)
Before you delegate, consider …. (more…)
Once you have overcome “Delegation Excusititis” you then must answer the question, “When should I delegate?” (more…)
Here is what business strategy consultant, Paula Singer observes:
“In our work with clients on their organizational and staffing structures, we often remind them to push work down to the lowest possible level. This may sound like a no-brainer, but you’d be surprised to find out how many high-level managers are routinely doing tasks that two, three or even four levels of staff reporting to them could (and should) easily be doing. There are many reasons for this non-delegation, including micro-management tendencies ranging from ‘this is how we’ve always done it so why change now’ to more harmful control-freak traits.
According to the Harvard Business Review (9/21/10), another reason that new managers might not delegate is that they think they will be the “hero” if they do everything themselves. Not delegating, for any of these reasons, can not only make the manager a stressed-out mess, but can cause staff to check out, since they aren’t really being given any challenging work.”
Delegation is a leadership competency. Improve yours by overcoming your reluctance to delegate. Here are common excuses for trying to “do it all” yourself. Do any of these apply to you?
If any of the above reasons resonate for you, please see our Eight Step Process for Delegation [LZ will insert link ] to learn how to improve your leadership delegation skills.
For more on excusitits, Identifying and Curing Excusititus.