After decades of observing executives and entrepreneurs in action, I've come to the conclusion that good management is mostly a matter of common sense. That being said, common sense can sometimes be in short supply.
1. How to Think About Management
Business is an ecosystem, so cooperate rather than conquer.
Companies are communities, so treat people as individuals.
Management is service, so make others successful first.
Employees are your peers, so treat them like adults.
Motivate with vision, because fear only paralyzes.
Change is growth, so welcome rather than shun it.
Technology eliminates busywork and frees creativity.
Work should be fun, so don't make it a chore.
2. How to Be a Better Boss
Manage individuals, not numbers.
Adapt your style to each person.
Measure what's truly relevant.
Only one priority per person.
Stay even-tempered.
Take responsibility for your low performers.
Share your thoughts and ideas.
Ask questions rather than providing answers.
Treat everyone as equally as possible.
Don't expect more than you're willing to give.
Explain the reasoning behind your decisions.
Don't procrastinate, decide now!
3. How to Hire a Top Candidate
Know exactly whom you're looking for.
Constantly seek viable candidates.
Look for character, not experience.
Resilience is the mark of potential greatness.
Seek out the self-motivated.
Attitude is all-important.
Don't settle for canned references.
4. How to Hold a Productive Meeting
Have an agenda before you meet.
Provide background information.
Don't allow the meeting to meander.
Document what decisions were made.
5. How to Offer Criticism
Address undesirable behaviors when they happen.
Offer praise, then identify the behavior you want changed.
Ask questions to understand the "why" behind the behavior.
Agree upon a plan to change the behavior.
Monitor and reinforce the changed behavior.
6. How to Redirect a Complainer
Schedule a conversation rather than interrupt your own work.
Find out whether your advice and solutions are wanted.
Listen to the complaint without comment.
Ask what the complainer intends to do (if anything).
If asked, provide your best advice.
Ignore any "Yeah, but..." End the conversation.
7. How to Fire Somebody
Tell it like it is without the biz-blab.
Show empathy for the person being fired.
Explain why it's happening, as far as you're allowed.
Cut quickly, heal, and move on.
Written by Geoffrey James
Article Source: http://stage.inc.com/geoffrey-james/5-things-that-great-bosses-know.html