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Most companies develop new
policies, procedures and products through a multi-disciplined
team approach, referred to as “the project.” Everyone
knows what you are talking about when you say, “the
project,” or do they? It is not at all unusual to discover
that different departments and even different team members
have completely different expectations regarding the schedule,
resources, processes and even the final goal of “the
project.” In our Project
Management Seminars we lead you through every aspect of
planning and communication necessary, so that you will have
the project management
skills that are vital to assure that everyone stays on
schedule and on point from beginning to end.
It’s
your way or the highway, right? So how do you get that manager
you just hired not to hit the next on-ramp?
They say
the third time’s a charm. That’s the way it worked
for Nicole Geller, founder and CEO of GCS Inc., a 5-year-old
temporary agency and government contracts consulting practice
in McLean, Virginia. It took Geller three tries to find the
right sales manager.
The first
manager was too indecisive. The second manager was too corporate-minded.
But Geller, 38, found the right fit the third time around.
That sales
manager is now the company’s president, helping
GCS and its 50 employees accomplish healthy sales of $4 million,
and Geller couldn’t be happier. The past still nags
at her, however. "I feel like I failed with two people,"
she says. "But I learned a lot about what kind of person
I really need."
Finding
the right manager can be an exercise in trial and error. It’s
estimated that 40 percent of all new managers leave the job
within 18 months, according to Manchester Inc., a business
consulting
group based in the Philadelphia area. Why? Often, it can
be traced back to what is not discussed before the new manager
or executive starts the job. In fact, the seeds of failure
are usually planted within the first 100 days of a new entrepreneur-manager
relationship, says Larry Stybel, co-founder of Boston-based
consulting firm Stybel Peabody & Associates Inc., which
runs a program called First One Hundred Days to coach entrepreneurs
and their managers through the first three months of their
working alliance.
Although
entrepreneurs are good at setting goals and hiring for knowledge,
they often forget to mention which aspects of the company
should stay the same before their new
managers start to put new ideas into action. "It’s
an incomplete package," Stybel says. "The entrepreneur
hasn’t brought up those ‘third rail’ or
socially taboo issues relating to the company."
When a
new manager crosses the line and tampers with a procedure
or project the entrepreneur wants left alone, things can turn
ugly very fast. Says Stybel, "I’ve seen situations
where at the end of three months, both sides are no longer
speaking to each other."
Lay Some
Ground Rules
Prepare
your potential manager
by discussing his or her role as early as possible. During
the interview, go beyond your goals, says Stybel. Think about
the aspects of your company that are strictly off-limits to
change. If this person will be managing your brother-in-law,
for example, you need to work out how to navigate the situation
upfront rather than leaving it until after he or she is hired.
If you really like the way your customer service representatives
greet customers over the phone, you’d better say so
before your new customer service manager changes it. Discussing
such details ahead of time will create a mutual understanding
and help the manager avoid making major tactical errors.
Like a
lot of other entrepreneurs, Geller assumed her new managers
would intuitively understand her vision of how the company
should run. So when her second manager came aboard and suddenly
wanted to take a hands-off approach with customer service,
Geller balked. This manager had hit on one of Geller’s
core issues, offering each client personalized customer service.
"I really put the kibosh on [her idea]," she says.
"Ultimately, it led to her not doing well and probably
feeling not as empowered." The relationship was doomed
from that point on, and it ended within the year.
Having
learned from her experiences, Geller offers this advice: Talk
about your business values, ask a lot of hard questions and
listen closely. "That’s where you’re going
to pick up on their skills and whether they can even converse
with you in a way that feels professional and comfortable,"
she says. "Get to know them as people." By the time
she hired her third sales manager, she was asking the hard
questions and was more in touch with her own third-rail issues.
"I really didn’t get into some of the tough issues
[with the first two managers]," she says. "I wish
I would have because it would have given me the answers right
upfront."
On-the-Job
Training
Your work
doesn’t stop once a manager is on the job. You have
to build a relationship that goes the distance.
To do
that, you should start off small. Make a short list of projects
and ideas you will both avoid during the first few months.
Stybel suggests using the first 100 days to tackle easier
problems, instead of the decisions that are most likely to
cause a meltdown between an entrepreneur and a manager. "Do
the doable things for immediate success,"
he says. "Achieve some wins." You should be talking
with the manager every day, especially during the first three
months.
Finally,
after a few months, ask new managers what they wish they’d
known about the company before they started working for you.
It could be eye-opening, not to mention useful for making
future management hires.
By Chris
Penttila
Boston

Project
Management - Find the Right Manager For Your Company
Project
Management Seminar Quote
"You can do anything if you have enthusiasm."
Henry Ford
Suggested
Reading:
Effective
Project
Management: Traditional, Adaptive, Extreme, Third Edition
by Robert K. Wysocki (Author), Rudd McGary
A
Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK Guide)
-- 2000 Edition
by Project Management Institute
Project
Management for Dummies
by Stanley E. Portny
Agile
Project Management : Creating Innovative Products (Agile Software
Development Series)
by Jim Highsmith
The
Project Management Memory Jogger: A Pocket Guide for Project
Teams (Growth Opportunity Alliance of Lawrence)
by Paula Martin
The
Portable MBA in Project
Management
by Eric Verzuh
Project
Management: The Managerial Process w/ Student CD-ROM
by Clifford F. Gray, Erik W. Larson
Project
Management in the Fast Lane: Applying the Theory of Constraints
by Robert C. Newbold
Project
Management JumpStart
by Kim Heldman
Earned
Value Project Management, Second Edition
by Quentin W. Fleming, Joel M. Koppelman
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