Delegation: How To Stop Those Annoying Employee Phone Calls and Have a More Productive Company
by Ron Roberts and Ranger Kidwell-Ross
posted September 2008
There are many business advantages to delegating like a goose instead of a buffalo.
You should. That's what is meant by "Managing by the numbers."
Ron's brief video introducing the 10 Biggest Mistakes
Contractors Make is now on YouTube. Click on the link
below or copy and paste it into your browser.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rGK-NSas2ZA
Contractors often ask: "How
do I free myself from the constant phone calls from my
employees? Can't anyone out there step up and make a
decision?" You've heard the answer for years. It is the magic elixir: Delegation
All you have to do is delegate and you will find yourself
with hours and hours of uninterrupted time to work ON
your business. Just go out and delegate. That's easy enough, right?
Wait a sec. What did you say? You've tried to delegate
but no one stepped up? Those that did made stupid
decisions that cost you money and clients?
Delegating isn't so easy is it? That's okay. I'm here
to help.
Lessons From the Animal Kingdom
The following lesson is taken from the book 'Flight of
the Buffalo' by James A. Belasco and Ralph C. Stayer.
Belasco and Stayer compare the leadership styles of
buffalo and geese. Yes, they actually have leadership
styles.
When you micro manage, force most decisions through you,
you are being a HEAD BUFFALO. When you share decision
making authority, you are being a goose.
Buffalo herds ALWAYS follow their leader. They don't
move unless the leader directs them to. Geese, by contrast, trade off the leading position. They are the
ultimate in shared leadership.
Which is better?
Back in the wild west days, hunters discovered that
if you killed the HEAD BUFFALO, you could kill them
all. Without direction from the HEAD BUFFALO, who
was now dead, the others would stand around waiting
for direction to run that never came. So, they just
stood around watching each other fall.
Geese operate quite differently. They share leadership
responsibilities, to the greater good of all. In case you haven't noticed, Geese fly in a V. V's
are very aerodynamic. Less effort and energy are spent
by the group than would be spent individually.
The lead bird, the one at the tip of the V, faces the
greatest wind resistance. As it tires, it peels off
to the back so it can coast and regain its strength.
Another bird moves up to the tip and takes over.
A flock of geese can fly much faster and further than
can an individual goose can. True teamwork and shared
leadership.
Both lessons apply to business - your business.
If you don't learn to delegate, you're a head buffalo
and you're never going to grow it past a couple of
crews. Head buffalo's leave their family's financial
security at great risk.
If you can delegate and empower, create an environment
where workers take on as much responsibility as
possible, your business will reach heights almost
unimaginable.
Let's move on to the HOW of delegation. The hard part
will be getting people to make sound decisions. The
decisions you'd make if you were in their shoes.
The Delegation Process
Step 1: Undo the damage you've done.
Step 2: Start small.
Step 3: Force them to bring two solutions to the table.
Step 4: When something goes wrong, have them walk you
through their thought process.
Step 5: Celebrate successes.
Step 6: Keep giving them rope until they hang themselves.
Step 7: Teach your team how to delegate.
Step 1: Undo the damage you've done
If you've been making the decisions and solving the
problems, you've trained your team to rely on you.
You've trained your team to NOT THINK. They've become
comfortable with using you as their crutch.
The more you micro managed, the harder it will be to
retrain your people.
There's an old saying that goes like this. "The people
who got you in the current mess are unlikely to have
what it takes to get you out." Hopefully, YOUR team is
capable of changing its stripes.
Step 2: Start small
Do not, I repeat, DO NOT go cold turkey with your
delegation. You have to prepare your workers to step
up. Always take small steps when passing on authority.
Check on them frequently to see how things are going.
As they prove them can handle riskier decisions,
increase their authority. Ramp it up individually for
each worker. You may well have three crew leaders who
all have vastly differing levels of independence. Some
will pick up the new duties and decision making rapidly,
others may never pick it up.
Step 3: Force them to bring two solutions to the table.
You have to teach your people how to make sound
decisions. The easiest and quickest way to do that is
to FORCE them to think by demanding they bring you two
possible solutions for every problem. Require them to
recommend one of the solutions.
At first, recognize that you will struggle not signaling the solution
until after they have finished explaining their decision.
Your objective is to teach them how you want them to
think things through. When you signal your preference
prematurely, you interfere with their learning process.
This one small change in your approach will have
profound effect on your team's decision making skills.
Instead of picking up the phone to hear your direction,
they will start to own the problem and solution.
Step 4: When something goes wrong, have them walk you
through their thought process.
As soon as possible, ask your worker tell you what they
thought about, what pros and cons they thought of, what
risk to reward trade-offs they considered. Look for the issue they overlooked.
Verify their priorities were correct; their assumptions
were correct; they paid adequate attention to quality,
safety, and productivity. Ask them what they would do differently next time.
After you have heard their thoughts, tell them how you
would have thought through the decision. Point out
issues they overlooked. Clarify their priorities if
they don't match with yours.
Step 5: Celebrate successes (i.e., sound decisions)
Nothing promotes repeat behavior better than positive
reinforcement. Pat them on the back. Tell they how
proud you are of their initiative, creative problem
solving, or whatever they did that was right.
Celebrate the parts of the decision they did right,
even if they messed up on other parts and ended up
making a poor decision.
Step 6: Keep giving them rope until they hang themselves.
Once your worker has mastered the super simple tasks,
step it up a bit. Give him a little more authority.
Keep doing that as he demonstrates the ability to
think like you want him to think. Eventually one of
two things will happen. Either he will hit his
limitation of decision making ability or he will become
your decision making twin.
Step 7: Teach your team how to delegate.
Once you've got your immediate subordinates handling
their own business, teach them how to delegate.
It's common for project managers, foremen, and
superintendents to be border-line control freaks.
That's plays into your hands when you're trying to
delegate. It plays against you when you're wanting
them to take on broader duties and handle more
responsibility by delegating down mundane planning
and organizing tasks.
Teach your leaders with the same process you used to
delegate away your detailed tasks. The more they
delegate, the greater your team's ability to excel, be
productive, and wow your customers.
Goose or Buffalo?
Call it what you will - delegation, empowerment,
getting people to take the initiative - it all produces
the same outcome. You end up with a team that makes
good, timely decisions without your involvement.
The truth is: you must learn how to delegate and
empower if you wish to have any freedom in your life.
Otherwise, you will be tied to your phone 24/7
answering stupid little questions that drive you nuts.
Not only that, they will be burning clock waiting for
you to tell them their next step.
Editor's note: Should you need help implementing the above, call Ron at (913)-961-1790.
Until next time, best of luck with your business!
Ron Roberts,
The Contractor's Business Coach
More information about Ron Roberts' and his company may be found on his website FilthyRichContractor.com. Ron may be reached via email sent to ron@filthyrichcontractor.com.
If you have new information to provide on this topic, let us know and we can add it in as an addendum to this article.
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