Home | Business Articles | Strategy
“No job is more vital to our society than that of the manager. It is the manager who determines whether our social institutions serve us well or whether they squander our talents and resources.” – Henry Mintzberg Nobody aspires to being a good manager these days. So much attention and resources are devoted leadership development, and everyone wants to be a great leader. Yet leaders all have to manage people. The separation of management from leadership is dangerous. Leading without good management results in a failure to execute. Let’s get back to good, strong managing. But what does that mean? According to traditional management theory, managers are supposed to plan, organize, coordinate and control. The truth is, pressures of reacting to urgent matters supplant most reflection and planning. Managers respond to the urgencies of each day, take on too much work, operate with continual interruptions, and make instant decisions. There is no time to step back and consider bigger issues. This leads to acting with superficial and fragmented information. Effective management requires reflective systematic planning. Research shows that managers work at an unrelenting pace and their activities are short, varied and discontinuous. They are biased towards action, and spend little time reflecting. In one study, half the activities engaged in by executives lasted less than nine minutes. A study of 56 foremen in the U.S. found they averaged 583 activities per eight-hour shift, an average of 1 every 48 seconds. Executives meet a steady stream of callers and mail all day long. Many managers leave their doors open to encourage the free flow of information, but also thereby encourage interruptions. There is little time for reflection or planning. The full version of this article discusses the following concepts: What Does a Manager Actually Do? Ten Roles of a Manager Measuring the Activities of Managers Why Managers Don’t Delegate More The Five Managerial Mind Sets Nurturing Success From Empowerment to Self-managing Teams Here are the order links for this article with full reprint rights. You can use this article as your own in your newsletters, ezines and marketing materials. (If you are an annual subscriber, you do not need to order this article; simply email Patsi to indicate your selection.) a. Text, 2000-word Article with full reprint rights, $79: click here b. Text, 1000 word article with full reprint rights, $57: click here n. Text, 500 word nugget, full reprint rights $42: click here All word lengths are approximate.
Article Source: http://www.customizednewsletterarticles.com
If you’re not sure what you need, please call me 888-800-NEWS(6397), or email me.
If you want to have a custom-designed PDF or HTML newsletter with your company name, logo, photo, marketing message, and quality content, please email Patsi Krakoff, Psy.D. - and visit our newsletter formats page to see samples. Learn how we can take care of your newsletter tasks for you, saving time, money and your energy. For those people who wish, we can also distribute and manage your electronic newsletter for you with our All-in-One Ezine System (Annual subscriptions only, ranging from $127-$150 per issue).
If you haven't signed up for the new Newsletter Nuggets on the home page, do so now. You will get weekly tips for writing and publishing a better newsletter. And, for every two new subscribers, a dollar and a book is donated to a child through the I AM Foundation . Free teleseminar series, Wednesdays at 8:30 p.m. ET, Conversations with Experts, How to Build your Business off and online...
Questions? Call us at 858-523-9833 Patsi Krakoff, Psy. D.
Please Rate this Article
5 out of 54 out of 53 out of 52 out of 51 out of 5
Not yet Rated
Newsletter Nuggets: Bi-monthly ezine with tips to make your ezine tasks easy - click on this link.
Ezine Notifications Article RSS Feeds New Stuff About Us Link to Us Contact Us Privacy Policy Terms of Service
Installed & Customized by That Article Guy