A new VP rides into town for the holidays!
This past week in New York, as in other cities, there were Christmas parties all over town.
In this case, the department got together with drinks, food and holiday festivities. It was a festive occasion with everyone engaged and having a heck of a time. The new VP walks into the room and works it masterfully. He had conversation for everyone; not just fake small talk, but actual conversation with each person about their work and who they were.
A Gen Y person that I know is not satisfied with her job and works for this company. Her complaints were that the job is not challenging and she has nothing to do but basically sit and do make work. She was actively looking for something else, spending lots of time trying to get out.
However, internally she had already been identified as a superstar by all. Although she has been there only a short time, she is known as the go-to person to get it done. She has grasped the business, speaks in meetings, and asks relevant questions that managers have told her that they wished they would have asked.
Ask the right questions
The problem is that she wants more work to do and really wants to get involved in more challenging assignments. The harder and more challenging, the better.
The VP came along and the two of them have a great discussion. He later asks some of the managers about this Gen Y person because he was impressed. The comments come back which sums it up: “star in the making,” “extremely capable,” and that “she has grasped this business.”
The morning after the party, she walks in oblivious to any of this until one of the managers pulls her aside and gave her the backtalk.
The impact of leadership
The VP was impressed with the conversation, and more importantly, with the feedback from the managers. His reply to his team was, “What do you think we should do about her?” He wanted the team to put their heads together to figure out a way to get this promising Gen Y employee more involved in the business. He assumed that if they didn’t, this young talent would leave for greener pastures.
And THAT is what manager engagement is all about.
There is so much talk about employee engagement that I think we should all pull back and realize that the manager is the most important part of the equation. That single individual could wipe out the large disparity that we see in every stat as it pertains to employee engagement.
That’s because when managers are disengaged, it breeds a toxic work environment. This environment festers into a workforce that is, for the most part, motionless and robotic.
Managers control engagement
Being an engaged boss means taking an active role in ensuring that your employees have what they need to be successful, and more importantly, in connecting with their team.
“If an employee ever walks into your office and resigns, and you as their manager are surprised and shocked, you are not engaged with your team.” This has always been my mantra.
Managers/leaders control engagement within the enterprise. Being an engaged boss means taking an active role in ensuring that your employees have what they need to be successful.
10 questions if you want to drive engagement
Here are 10 questions that are important for managers/executives to ask if they are focused on driving engagement:
- Does your team feel inspired and motivated by your leadership?
- Are you aware of your team members’ career goals?
- Do you know your team members’ significant others, kids names, family situation, etc?
- Is your team seen as a fun team and collaborative?
- Are other employees looking at your team longingly, wanting to be a member of it?
- Do people that you have managed over the years still keep in touch with you?
- Would your team look forward to a meeting, lunch or dinner with you?
- Do you communicate frequent feedback, both good and bad?
- Are you seen as a coach, or do you constantly micromanage?
- Do your employees feel that you are their maestro?
While you could probably think of many ways to identify an engaged leader, the onus is on the manager.
Manager as conductor/leaders as maestro
“Any asino can conduct,” Italian maestro Arturo Toscanini once said, “but to make music, eh? Is difficile!”
This quote from one of the early composers says as much about music as it does about managing people. There are managers and then there are those that everyone knows are great leaders who make music with their departments.
A maestro is considered a master conductor as opposed to a regular conductor. Based on that, the great manager would be called the maestro.
Like a conductor, an executive is at once both a leader and an artist – directing the actions of others towards a goal. This goal is enabling your team to reach levels that satisfy the need of personal accomplishments, department and organization goals.
This is music. This is leadership. Leaders out there should strive to be the maestro and not simply the conductor.