They are spending too much time managing and not enough time leading. Management is about the day to day grind, dealing with issues, reacting to situations.
It’s a tough job, one that can grind you down leaving you feeling burnt out, frustrated and de-motivated, and it doesn’t feel much better for our teams either.
Management is stressful.
Leadership is forward thinking, it’s about being proactive, rather than reactive. It’s about ensuring that our teams are set up to be successful, simplifying things, making sure that the road ahead is clear. Leadership focuses on tomorrow so that today will run more smoothly.
Managing, Coaching, Clienting and Leading
When new clients take this assessment, practically every one of them is spending at least 70-80 percent of their time managing,
The average split of time is usually:
Managing – 80 percent
Coaching – 5 percent
Clinging – 5 percent
Leading – 10 percent
When this happens, you and your teams end up in a situation which Bill Gates describes as being over-managed and under-led.
To get out of this situation leaders need to take a moment, stand back, and look to free up some time to start leading. The more time you can spend leading the less time you will need to devote to managing.
Now I understand this is not easy to do. It’s like trying to worry about fire prevention at the same time as you need to stop your house from burning down.
It doesn’t feel like a top priority.
But if you never get into fire prevention you will be forever putting fires out.
I believe that the best ratio for a leader is
Managing – 30 percent
Coaching – 15 percent
Clienting – 15 percent
Leading – 40 percent
When you can put yourself into the position, you will have a much more productive and less stressed environment.
To this, you first need to start by doing an honest assessment of where you spend your time now. If you’re feeling stressed and overworked, then for sure you are spending too much time in management.
You need to look to see what you can do to reduce this and free up some of your time to start leading more. That might require you to delegate some of the work to your staff, or take on an extra resource for a short period, or work some additional hours to start to lead more.
The latter option is not one that sounds appealing, but you need to do something to find the time to lead.
The more you lead, the less time you will have to manage.
Review your meetings, see which ones you could cancel, look at all your tasks, and re-prioritize. Try to find some time to lead, as this will really help you get the situation under control and allow you to start to turn it around.
It isn’t easy I know, I have been there too. Management creeps up on you, and you can find yourself working crazy hours, but if you can do it you will appreciate the benefits and so will your teams.
So if you’re feeling overwhelmed, overworked or stressed, take the MCCL assessment, it’s easy to do. Then look to put in place the steps needed to increase the time you spend leading, which will reduce the required management effort.