Typically, no one is trained to be a supervisor. We all have to learn how to manage people on the fly after we are promoted into a management position. When learning to be a leader that others are happy to follow, it is helpful to keep in mind the things that past supervisors have done that you liked and those that you have not liked so you can use those experiences to guide your decisions as a supervisor. Here are six steps to follow to make sure that you become a good supervisor:
(1) Tame yourself – You have to begin by understanding your personality and taming it. If you are too quiet, you will need to work on becoming more outgoing and decisive. If you are too decisive, to the point where you scare people, you will need to work on toning yourself down. You want to become a thoughtful, considerate leader who knows where you are going and is able to communicate that properly to the team.
(2) Have a goal – If you don’t know where you are going, you will never arrive, and no one will be able to follow you. Your goal can be as simple as “providing every customer with the best service” or “no injuries, no deaths on the job” or “make a profit.”
(3) Have a “clear, simple message” – You must be able to convey your goal in a sound bite. People can understand and retain clear, simple messages. You have to be able to repeat the message at meetings, in newsletters and in general conversations. If your people know the message, they will be able to follow.
(4) Look and act like a leader – People have a much easier time following someone who looks as they should. Your clothes should be clean and pressed. Your shoes should be polished. You should walk with confidence.
(5) Be trustworthy – People won’t follow you if they don’t trust you. You must be ethical and honest at all times. People trust people who are clear about what they are doing. People don’t trust people who say one thing at a meeting, and then say or do something different outside of the meeting.
(6) Care about your people – You can’t supervise people if you don’t like them.You shouldn’t become best friends with your staff, but you should know them and know what their problems are.Because you care, you should attend their weddings, and the funerals of their close family members.Because you are their leader, you should not attend more personal functions, such as their birthday parties.You need to keep yourself concerned with your staff, but not intimately involved with them. If you are really not a “people person,” consider another, non-managerial position in your organization.
Ruth Haag (www.ManageLiving.com) is the President and CEO of Haag Environmental Company, a hazardous waste consulting firm. Ruth is also a business management consultant. She trains supervisors to identify their shortcomings and tame them, while creating management systems that focus on their employees rather than themselves. She is also the author of several books, including a four-book series on supervisory management which includes Taming Your Inner Supervisor, Day to Day Supervising, Hiring and Firing and Why Projects Fail. She and her partner, Bob Haag, host the weekly radio show Manage Living, which can be heard on-demand on her site.
Contributed by Ruth Haag of Haag Ennvironmental Company
Women Hurt Worse by Economic Downturn?
NewsIn this bad economy, people are getting used to certain truths. Among them, gas prices are up, economic growth is down, and unemployment is on the rise. According to the newest statistics released by the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) for June 2008, the unemployment rate, which had been declining in recent months, held steady at 5.5% nationwide, while the economy as a whole lost 62,000 non-farm jobs, particularly in construction, manufacturing, and employment services. The financial sector, in light of continued multi-billion dollar write-downs of bad debt, has been increasingly vulnerable to another round of layoffs.
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Become a Good Supervisor in Six Steps
Expert Answers(1) Tame yourself – You have to begin by understanding your personality and taming it. If you are too quiet, you will need to work on becoming more outgoing and decisive. If you are too decisive, to the point where you scare people, you will need to work on toning yourself down. You want to become a thoughtful, considerate leader who knows where you are going and is able to communicate that properly to the team.
(2) Have a goal – If you don’t know where you are going, you will never arrive, and no one will be able to follow you. Your goal can be as simple as “providing every customer with the best service” or “no injuries, no deaths on the job” or “make a profit.”
(3) Have a “clear, simple message” – You must be able to convey your goal in a sound bite. People can understand and retain clear, simple messages. You have to be able to repeat the message at meetings, in newsletters and in general conversations. If your people know the message, they will be able to follow.
(4) Look and act like a leader – People have a much easier time following someone who looks as they should. Your clothes should be clean and pressed. Your shoes should be polished. You should walk with confidence.
(5) Be trustworthy – People won’t follow you if they don’t trust you. You must be ethical and honest at all times. People trust people who are clear about what they are doing. People don’t trust people who say one thing at a meeting, and then say or do something different outside of the meeting.
(6) Care about your people – You can’t supervise people if you don’t like them.You shouldn’t become best friends with your staff, but you should know them and know what their problems are.Because you care, you should attend their weddings, and the funerals of their close family members.Because you are their leader, you should not attend more personal functions, such as their birthday parties.You need to keep yourself concerned with your staff, but not intimately involved with them. If you are really not a “people person,” consider another, non-managerial position in your organization.
Ruth Haag (www.ManageLiving.com) is the President and CEO of Haag Environmental Company, a hazardous waste consulting firm. Ruth is also a business management consultant. She trains supervisors to identify their shortcomings and tame them, while creating management systems that focus on their employees rather than themselves. She is also the author of several books, including a four-book series on supervisory management which includes Taming Your Inner Supervisor, Day to Day Supervising, Hiring and Firing and Why Projects Fail. She and her partner, Bob Haag, host the weekly radio show Manage Living, which can be heard on-demand on her site.
Contributed by Ruth Haag of Haag Ennvironmental Company
Ask-A-Recruiter: Work Backwards To Get Your Goal
Ask A RecruiterContributed by Caroline Ceniza-Levine of SixFigureStart
I have an idea of the job I want. How do I figure out where to start?
Work backward from your goal to outline the necessary steps. You say you have identified your ideal job – this should mean a specific industry, company and department. Who do you know in that department? Who do you know in the company – they may be able to refer you to someone in the department? Who do you know in that industry – to get to the company to get to the department? Jobseekers should realize that 15% or less of jobs are filled by advertising. Word-of-mouth or networking is the most effective method. To figure out where to start networking, work backward from your target job. Get to the decision makers who will know what spots are open and will have the power to hire you for one of them.
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Life, Work, and … Study: Tips for Making the Most of Distance Learning
Work-Lifeby Elizabeth Harrin
After a day at the office, the last thing you want to do is come home, switch on your personal computer and start all over again. But if you need additional qualifications to get ahead and don’t want to or can’t afford to quit and go to school full-time, fitting in a few hours of study at night is one way to do it – trust me, I’ve been doing it on and off (mostly on) for the last eight years. Three of those years involved eating every dinner at home on a tray, as the dining room table was covered with insurance textbooks, draft essays and sample exam papers. When guests came around I swept the whole lot into a huge pile on the sideboard. Clearly, I was never a great hostess.
I was, however, a great student. I don’t mean that I always got top grades. But I did approach studying like any other work-related task: I scheduled time for it, and I always got my papers in by the deadline. And I worked full-time. I’m no super-woman, by any stretch of the imagination. Anyone can fit studying around a full-time job, if they so desire.
Here are seven tips to make the process easier:
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The Glass Ceiling, The Labyrinth of Leadership, and Work/Life Balance
Work-Lifeby Sima Matthes
Is there a glass ceiling or isn’t there? This is the subject of much debate, even here at The Glass Hammer. The term “glass ceiling” is an overused expression, found in research around the world, as far afield as Bahrain and even Australia. I’ve been delighted to find decrees of the death of this idea, even as I’m unsure whether there’s anything to celebrate or mourn.
Talking about the glass ceiling with other women, the responses fall into two categories. It’s either like the Supreme Court’s definition of pornography—we know it when we see it—or like God—you don’t have to see it to know it’s there.
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Movers and Shakers in Energy
Movers and ShakersIt’s the first bud of the spring that gets noticed. It pokes its head out of the dirt, and blooms regardless of whether others around it are doing the same thing. This is true of women at the top of corporations as well. Often, they’re the only women at the table, and even as their numbers increase, they do so slowly, causing us to take notice of big appointments when they occur.
This week, Lynn Laverty Elsenhans was elected Chief Executive Officer and President of Sunoco Inc. Ms. Elsenhans is Sunoco’s first female CEO and President, following her tenure at Royal Dutch Shell, and replaces John Drosdick upon his retirement in August. Ms. Elsenhans holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Mathematics from Rice University, and an MBA from Harvard. Ms. Elsenhans will receive an initial salary of $1.24 million and a onetime grant of restricted share units equal in value to $5 million, the company said. According to the Wall Street Journal, this appointment increases the number of women at the head of Fortune 500 companies to 13.
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Happy 30th Anniversary – Time to Change the Pregnancy Discrimination Act?
Newsby Sima Matthes
Although 2007 showed an increase in reported pregnancy discrimination complaints to the EEOC (up 14 percent from the previous year and up 40 percent from 10 years ago), it is only certain recent case in the UK and a pending case before the US Supreme Court that have brought the issue front and center for public debate.
According to the Sunday Times in the UK, Sarah Vince-Caine won £120,000 in compensation for unfair dismissal and sex discrimination from her former employer, the Giorgio Armani group. She sued the company after she was pushed into a lower-level role and eventually fired after her second maternity leave.
Although this represents a victory for Ms. Vince-Caine, Nicola Brewer, chief executive of the Equalities and Human Rights Commission, in a separate statement, remarked “If the world of work is premised on the assumption that a woman will take a year off, that loads the dice against her.”
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Golf Outing with 85 Broads and the Women’s Bond Club
NewsSign up for the Golfing and Golf Workshop at the beautiful Harbor Links Golf Course – either play 18 holes of golf or take a day of lessons to learn to play golf. A half-day of lessons and play is also available.
The workshop consists of 6 students for each instructor. Learn the basic swing techniques, chipping and putting as well as the rules, etiquette and language of golf. Practice your lessons with unlimited balls on the driving range.
Golf clubs may be rented at Harbor Links, if needed, for an additional cost. The day also includes lunch and cocktails and networking opportunities with members of 85 Broads and the Women’s Bond Club.
The day gets started at 11:00 am with check-in and lunch starts at 11:30. Play begins at 12:45 p.m. for those playing 18 holes. Instruction begins at 1:00 pm followed by 9-hole play at 2:45 pm. The day ends with a cocktail reception from 5:30 – 6:30 pm.
To Register
(Please bring photo I.D)
The Executive’s Guide to Throwing the Perfect Dinner Party
Intrepid Women Seriesby Jacqueline Church
You run a department, head a practice, handle the crankiest clients and supervise staff. But throw a dinner party? Who has the time? Where to start? If hosting a dinner party has never been your strong suit, and you don’t want to go the “hired help” route, fear not: you already have all the skills you need by virtue of your success at work. Here then, the simple rules of successful hosting:
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Girls Bond Over Banking
Women and Philanthropyby Caroline Shannon
While many expect young girls to be fascinated with Disney Princesses or to memorize all the songs from High School Musical, some business experts are working to push a more practical interest – an interest in finance.
Yep, we’re talking about clubs and camps that teach gals about saving, investing and other personal finance concepts – all life necessities that experts feel, if started early, can make a girl’s professional adult life more successful.
Marsha Firestone, Ph.D, CEO and founder of the Women’s Presidents’ Organization, says programs like these are a necessity, seeing as how “people are programmed to teach young girls one way and boys another way and not necessarily with forethought.”
“We have research that indicating that at about age 11 girls start to lose self confidence,” said Firestone. “It is a programmed response to treat them differently. People do not ask young women to make financial decisions or take financial responsibility.”
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