“The best way to ensure that something is done correctly is to do it myself.” OK, raise your hand if you have heard someone say this. Great, now keep your hand up if you have used this line before, and be honest. As someone who has worked with teams, been a team member and a manager, I will admit to raising my hand for both of those questions. There were many times earlier in my career where grabbing the task and putting together the action items were a choice. I had yet to learn that by doing this I was minimizing the person I was grabbing from, putting myself in a position where I now was responsible, and most importantly, removed a learning opportunity to help better someone in terms of educating them and improving their skill sets.
If I am a one-man shop, it is natural to take on all of the responsibilities, action all items and provide all of the feedback. The “buck” has nowhere else to stop at. When we are young, we learn that it is our responsibility to achieve, get those good grades and excel in our endeavors. When we succeeded or failed, we became labeled by our outcome. Realize that for many people, those labels had an impact on their mindset and followed them as they grew into adulthood. If we fail, we do not want to fail again, while if we succeed, it has to be only our doing. Coupled with a mindset of “It is up to me if it was meant to be,” we fall into doing things by ourselves. For a company to grow, this mindset makes it difficult to move beyond a one-man operation or grow from a “Mom and Pop” shop.
I have been working with teams for most of my working career. The good thing about a team is that by working together, each having our own responsibilities, we can achieve more together than we would be able to do on our own. This is a different mindset than laid out in the previous paragraph. Have I ever worked with a team where there is someone with the “I can do this by myself” mindset? Of course, and this can cause the team to not work together, demoralize the group and fall short of the goals. In this example, the members of the team need to realize that roles have been delegated to the resource that the manager feels can best accomplish each of the tasks.
Related question – have I ever worked for someone who did not understand delegation? Of course. In this example, the manager hogs all of the tasks and needs to remember that the roles delegated need to be done by the resource assigned. This also has a huge impact on the development of the team members; By delegating and supporting each person, you empower them to think for themselves, allow for internal creativity to occur and build confidence in your teams.
Like so many of the things that we do, yes, this is a lot of work and something emerging managers need to remember and strive to get better at. Delegating responsibilities to others is not an easy thing to do and is something that one has to learn to be comfortable doing.
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