Women at Work - How to Manage: Getting Out of the Weeds
Episode Date: June 3, 2024What’s the happy middle between micromanaging and being too hands off? Amy B and three other experienced mid-level managers describe how they think about when to intervene and when not to so that th...ey are empowering their teams and freeing up their own minds to do more of their most strategic work.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Over 40,000 businesses have future-proofed their business with NetSuite by Oracle, the
number one cloud ERP, bringing accounting, financial management, inventory, and HR into
one platform.
Download the CFO's Guide to AI and Machine Learning for free at netsuite.com slash womenatwork.
You're listening to Women at Work from Harvard Business Review. I'm Amy Bernstein.
Welcome to season two of our How to Manage series. This season is for mid-level managers,
and for those of you who hope to become mid-level managers, and for those of you who manage mid-level managers and for those of you who hope to become mid-level managers and for those
of you who manage mid-level managers and who want to be in tune with their concerns and frustrations
and their aspirations. Being a mid-level manager myself and having been one for years at different companies, I understand the
stress of people on all sides expecting you to coach individual employee performance, make teams
successful, and lead in fluid environments. It's a lot of pressure. I understand feeling some days
as if you have all the responsibility and none of the authority. And I also understand
how great it can be when your team is just clicking. Over the next four episodes, I'll speak
with women about executing strategy, about selling ideas, about rising up. We're starting with a
skill that you'll need to master before any of that, letting go of work that's holding you back.
It took me many years to appreciate
the importance of this skill, of relinquishing my grip on the details and engaging at the right
level. It wasn't until about 13 years ago when I joined HBR as editor, and I came in determined to
approach editing the way I had for 20 years before that, which was to analyze and polish
each article sentence by sentence, paragraph by paragraph. I tried that when I got here,
and it became apparent immediately that it was unsustainable. It was too time-consuming,
and it was exhausting. But more to the point, what I realized
was that the editors at HBR were terrific. They did that work, and they did it really, really well.
They didn't need me to do it on top of them, behind them. They didn't need that. So that's when I
pulled myself away from that level of work and kind of freed myself up to think a little bit
more long-term
about where we were going to take the magazine.
Before you became a manager, you were probably an individual contributor who was great at her job.
In fact, you were probably promoted to manager because you were great at your job.
And now you manage a team that designs or produces or sells the stuff you used to create.
Now you're responsible for setting a vision for that team and guiding them toward it.
Do you ever have this feeling like if you're not doing the work and you're holding the vision,
so this may be it's just me, but what value am I adding? I wake up every morning and like, am I adding enough value in my role if I'm not doing anything, if I'm not doing the work?
That's my colleague, Jennifer Long, articulating an anxiety I felt, and maybe you have too.
I'm going to talk to her and another mid-level manager at HBP, Gabriela Spadolizano, about how over the years they've learned to let
go. But first, I'm going to talk to Leah Garvin. She founded the organizational strategy firm
The Workplace Reframe, and she wrote the book The Unstoppable Team. She's here with ideas that'll
position you and the people you manage to do more of the highest level of work you're each capable of.
To start, this is how she understands the problem of holding on.
So I think it's twofold. I think one, it's common. And second, there's a big fear of being a micromanager, being too far in the weeds. And so you get these two issues where either too many
people are micromanaging or folks are fearing it. So they're kind of avoiding
managing altogether. And that's what I'm seeing is like these two different extremes showing up
in the workplace. So what does the happy medium look like? Yeah. Well, I think the happy medium
is building a relationship with your team. So you really understand their strengths and weaknesses
and superpowers, their interest for their careers so that you can line up opportunities for them to take on stretch projects. You really understand
delegating. In the absence of this, I think we do either, like I said, holding on too tight
because we're worried our team members aren't going to be able to cut it, or we enjoyed doing
that task before we were good at it, and so we just kind of keep doing it. Or we're worried about
being too much in the weeds, too overbearing, So we tell our team members, hey, go ahead,
run with it. You got this. And they're actually not set up for success. And they kind of feel like
we just threw them into the deep end unprepared. You know, so much of that is not just trusting
your team members. It's trusting yourself, right? Exactly. It requires trusting ourselves to be
able to explain to
someone else how to do something, to trust that our own managers are going to support us.
I think that's another piece of the trust is I found one of the biggest challenges for myself
when I was delegating as a middle manager was that I was getting pressure from my own manager
to be fully looped in. And so I was really wanting to set this person up and let them run with it.
But when I'm getting emailed from my manager every day, what's going on with this?
Then I start holding on a little bit tighter and it kind of snowballs from there.
So can you tell us about a specific time when you realized,
I'm in this too deep, I've got to let go?
Yeah. Years ago when I was working in big tech, I was managing a program manager that was
responsible for running a big event for our team. So first of all, running events gives me the worst
anxiety. Like, are people going to show up? Is it going to go well? Is it going to be a mess?
And I think because of that, it had me holding on really tight to what my team member was working
on. Now, my team member, mind you, she loved planning events and was really good at it.
But still, it was my own anxiety.
And so I would check in like, hey, did you think about this?
Did you do this?
Did you try this?
And after checking in a bunch of times, she said to me, hey, listen, I know that this
stresses you out, but I actually really like doing this.
And here's how I wanted to approach it.
And so I said, OK, this is a wake up call.
So I asked her, OK, show me your project plan instead of just using my checklist and things.
And her plan was so much better than what I had thought of.
And it showed me right away, like, okay, when you have someone that's really in their zone of genius running with something, you don't need to be too far in the weeds and you don't need to be checking on every detail.
Now, what made it even more complicated, though, was this was a very high stakes event for our team.
And so then I had my manager, like I was just
saying, checking with me constantly and saying, Hey, did she figure this out? Did she do this?
Have we informed our leadership about this? And so then I had to do the managing both directions,
right? Letting go a little bit on the managing down from the managing upside saying, Hey,
I realize this is really high stakes. I've met with my team member. Here's her plan.
Here's what I'm going to check in with her. Here's where I'm going to let her really run with stuff. And are you good with that plan? And
here's when the three of us can come together to talk about updates. And so I noticed in that
moment that delegating not only requires letting go from your managing your own team member,
but some managing up is really important to do as well. So let me just take a step back for a second and ask you, you know, part of the reason that you need to get out of the weeds as a mid-level manager is because being in the weeds is unsustainable. There's a mixed metaphor there somewhere, but there are and foremost, well, you just called it, you can't do everything. And so I think one of the things just to recognize is either we can intentionally define the
cut line or that cut line will happen when we run out of time.
And I think one of the challenges that folks that, again, that I work with through consulting
and workshops is this refusing to let go of things only to find actually didn't finish
anything anyway.
And so what happens when we're holding on too tight, though I've had managers in the past that
they were in every single meeting and their to-do list for a week was like six months long. And every
week I would watch them and they would be in every meeting and in every conversation. And I was
thinking, Hey, like I've got this, they don't have to be here. And I saw them get more stressed.
And I had to say, you know, is it a trust thing?
Do you think I can't do this? Or what level of information can I loop you in on so that you feel okay about it?
And in this situation, my manager said to me, oh, wait a second.
You're right.
I'm too far in the weeds.
Almost like she needed a little bit of a wake-up call that, you know, yeah, someone's noticing.
When you're double-checking, you know, like copy editing an email that's going to internal team
members, that's a little bit too much. Really the challenge is figuring out what altitude to come in
at, right? How do you know when you're flying too low to the ground, when you're too close to the
details? Yeah. One tell is, am I in a lot of meetings that my team members are also in?
Then you can set up a conversation with your team member around, hey, here's the way I need you to
cascade information out of the meeting. If you're showing up because there are different levels of
detail being asked about maybe something that's more in your purview versus your team members,
then it's a real opportunity to have your team members step up and say, hey, I'd like for you to represent our whole team in this larger capacity.
So I think going through your calendar, do an audit on a quarterly basis, you know, go through
and see who's attending these meetings. Are there ones I can step away from? And I suggest in the
situation that folks look across work in three different buckets. So it could be meetings,
it could be tasks you're working on, it could be emails you're sending, really whatever you're
spending your time on. And the first bucket is stuff that you absolutely have to be doing.
And spoiler, it's not a lot. This is probably two or three things that you're doing the whole week.
Actually, you can narrow it down to that. Then the second bucket is what are things that you're doing the whole week. Actually, you can narrow it down to that. Then the second bucket is what are things that you're doing that could immediately be offloaded
or delegated? Whatever it looks like, that's like very, very low hanging fruit to offload.
And then the middle piece is what are things that you're doing because there's a bit of a skill gap
on your team or there's a role gap. So maybe you have a team member that you'd love to hand this
thing off to, but they're not quite ready for that. Or maybe you you have a team member that you'd love to hand this thing off to, but they're
not quite ready for that. Or maybe you've lost a team member and so you're covering for some
responsibilities. And so that's why you're in the details. But the second bucket becomes either a
plan of how you can develop and train some team members, or it's the job description for a role
that you can hire for. So when you do this time audit, you not only figure out, well, what is your real highest and best use, but how do you get your team members
to the place they need to be? Or what is exactly the gap there that you could fill with a new team
member if you can have the headcount or you're able to budget to hire somebody?
For meetings, I think the redundancy question is so smart. I have another thing I do, which is I
ask myself, did I add any
value here? Because I can always look at the meeting transcript. I can look at the deck,
not that I do that as frequently as I should. But if I was really not adding anything, if I wasn't,
you know, nudging the team in one direction or another, or helping to make an important decision, then why was I there?
But what about when you're not in meetings, the sort of the heads down work or the management
of people? How do you know you're just too deep in the weeds?
Yeah. I think another tell is when everyone's coming to you for every decision or checking in with you constantly.
And that I think means one of two things. Either folks don't feel comfortable to make decisions on their own because you've already set the tone that you are involved in that capacity, or people
think you want to be involved in that capacity. And they both result in the same thing that
your team members aren't operating independently. And so I think when we find ourselves saying
things like, gosh, I've explained this 10 times already, or I'm always involved in these
conversations, or why don't people just get it, right? Like this is a real signal that we could
set some clear expectations, talk about where's their confusion, where am I maybe too involved,
and then start to let go a little bit. You know, it may feel like our team members are wanting us to be involved, but sometimes
I think it's because of the situation we've set up.
What does the future hold for business?
Can someone please invent a crystal ball?
Until then, over 40,000 businesses have future-proofed their business with NetSuite by Oracle, the number one cloud ERP, bringing accounting, financial management, inventory, and HR into one platform.
With real-time insights and forecasting, you're able to peer into the future and seize new opportunities.
Download the CFO's Guide to AI and Machine Learning for free at netsuite.com slash womenatwork.
That's netsuite.com slash womenatwork.
Hey, listeners, if you want to hear from more leaders to help you answer questions like,
should I talk about my anxiety at work? Or how do I claim my leadership power?
Then you should listen to TED Business, hosted by Columbia Business School professor
Madhupe Akinnola. The show features TED Talks about everything from setting smart goals to
the latest on DEI in business, followed up with a mini lesson from Mudupe
on how to apply these lessons in your own life.
Listen to TED Business wherever you get your podcasts.
I want to talk about the emotional trauma
for some of us of letting go.
I mean, you know, when you decide it hits you that, you know,
you just can't operate at the same level of detail that you're used to, that that's not
going to get you where you need to go. It's not going to get your team where you need to go.
How do you make peace with giving up control? Yeah. I remember back at Google in one of my
roles, I built our diversity inclusion program for the team I was on. I remember back at Google in one of my roles, I built our
diversity inclusion program for the team I was on. I built it from the ground up and it was really,
really successful. I had gotten a lot of notary around the company for having done this and
I got promoted and I was able to hire a team member to backfill this role and I was able to
do something a little bit bigger and more cross-company. And it was so
terrifying because I loved what I was doing. I built it from the ground up. I knew exactly how
to run it. I knew exactly what worked and what didn't. And I had to do a number of things to
let go. I think first was really be extremely thoughtful with the interviewing and hiring
process, which we should be in any situation always. But to really make sure that I was not hiring someone on the pretense that they had to
run with the plan that I established already. And then as I built trust with this person and
started to see the way they worked, I would check myself whenever I had feedback. So when they would
send me a document to read a proposal and I noticed a little tinge of like, I don't know, I would say, okay, what are the objectives of the project that this person's
sharing? Is this feedback more about me and my way or is it actually something that's going to
help the project accomplish that goal in a better way? But like you say, it was an emotional
rollercoaster for sure. And I think a lot of us struggle with not wanting this thing that we built or really good at to go off the rails or to not go well. And of course, that's the case because
we really care. And the problem is if we, like you said, we can never scale ourselves and really our
team if we think we're going to just hold on to control forever. We have to let folks run with it,
but it doesn't mean it doesn't cause a lot of stress internally.
Yeah, that's for sure.
But I just have to reassure our listeners who are kind of new to this or who are dealing with it that you kind of get used to it.
And it's also kind of a relief, right?
Exactly.
Well, that's what's so funny is, so I gave that example with the event.
Events keep me awake at night.
I'm all stressed.
And when I said, hey, I don't have to worry about this.
I could sleep better.
I was happier.
I was able to take on more projects.
And so the moment we do let that click in of like, hey, my role here is to help this
person be successful, but I don't have to do everything.
I don't have to check every corner because we've already talked about the parameters
in which we'll raise risks and
talk about those things. It became the biggest relief. And that's actually when my career
started to accelerate when I let go of that. But now I'm wondering, so when you're setting
these expectations and you're delegating to someone, how does a middle manager set clear enough expectations without being,
I'll just use your phrase, micromanaging, a great word.
Exactly. So I think the biggest is to make it into a conversation. And so to talk about,
well, here's the goals of this project, and then inviting your team member in. So how would you
solve this? Or what ideas do you have? And using some of these open-ended questions to enlist them into the plan. Because when we have
a team member and they've been hired because they're great and have awesome experience,
and then we give them a recipe for how to do their job, well, that's where it feels micromanaging,
right? And so I think enlisting them in the conversation and asking how they'd approach it,
and folks listening
that are scared they're going to get it wrong. Well, we can give feedback that, right? We can
say, well, yeah, I really like the kickoff part. I think in the middle, let's try this. In the end,
that's really strong. But by enlisting them in the conversation, now you're getting them bought
in and feeling accountable to the plan. So when you have delegated a project, a task, management of a team, how do you keep tabs without being, again, micromanaging?
So I think there's a couple ways.
First is we always want to have in some sort of shared view that
we can see at any time without asking people is what is the status of this project and
what is the capacity this person has for more work?
With many teams that I consult with, I suggest doing a weekly recap where team members send
you an email at the end of the week saying, hey, here are my goals.
Here's what I accomplished.
Here's any bumps in the road I ran into where I need help.
And sometimes you respond, sometimes you don't. Sometimes you just look at it. Sometimes it's something to talk about. But to get in a rhythm where you have folks regularly reporting
is something I strongly encourage folks have. Now, with delegating specifically, I think it's
really important as part of the expectation setting to have a conversation on what do
check-ins and reviews look like? So if it's a high stakes thing with stakeholders that are wanting to understand the
status, we might say, we're going to check in end of day, Wednesday and Friday every week for the
first month, really to get in this rhythm. But you don't check in Tuesday and Thursday, like,
I just want a second and a third look at this thing. Unless you could say, hey, our VP
sent me a note. That's why I'm checking in. I know we have our regular meeting set up Wednesday.
So I like to acknowledge the preset times, even if sometimes we have to go outside that.
And by acknowledging, hey, I know we've decided this expectation. And then you don't break that
trust where it looks like you kind of threw the plan
out the window. Then I like to talk about, well, which decisions am I making versus you making?
And, you know, we want to always be pushing decisions down as far as we can in an organization
so folks feel like they have autonomy to do their jobs. And as a manager, there's likely things that
you really still should be the decider on. And so really differentiating those with your team and saying, hey, here's the moments when
I need to make the call, make the approval.
I need to see it before it goes out the door.
Right.
So you've talked about reviews and check-ins.
You've talked about when to make decisions.
And then last, talking about, well, what does done look like and how do we know that we've
done a good job?
Any metrics or KPIs, key performance indicators, any outcomes we want to be hitting so that
we know, okay, this thing is done to completion.
It's done a good job.
It hit the goals that we had, and we can move on to the next thing.
I think it's really important as a mid-level manager where you are responsible for the
work of a team, a project, but you're also responsible to someone who's got a broader purview
to figure out what you really do need to know and check in on.
And it's probably something along the lines of making sure that the project, the task, the team is on strategy.
And we often lose sight of that, but the bigger picture and just
always helping the team connect their work to the organization's bigger goals, I think becomes,
as your purview grows, something you really have to own.
Absolutely. I love that you call that out because, you know, connecting to the bigger goals
organization, that does a number of things. It helps people make decisions better because they understand, Hey, if I'm stuck here,
I don't know how to move forward. Well, what are the goals of the organization, right? We should
never have no idea what to work on next. We should have, we should have some clarity or some North
star that we're operating against. Right. I think that's, that's absolutely right. And we,
we figured that out together as a team. Let's talk about, you know, in this process of empowering your team, you yourself have to become comfortable and you have to get into the practice of giving up the kind of, you have to help your team to take responsibility and accountability.
What are your best ideas for helping your team members become more autonomous?
Yeah, I think it all comes down to fueling this ownership mindset across your team.
And so how do we create that?
Well, I think a number of things.
Like I mentioned, we ask our team members for how they would solve things, right? We ask them for their inputs. We, we show them that your ideas
matter here. We also want to have really clear roles, responsibilities, want to talk about how
to collaborate, but make sure folks really see, you know, gear is what I'm really an expert for
and accountable for so that people feel committed to that work. And then we talk about, well, how does escalations work? How, how do we talk about learnings?
Because I think one way we sort of pass the buck or start pointing fingers is when,
when we're afraid, if we fail, you know, it's all coming down to us, we start to not take more on.
Right. And so making it safe to fail, which is part of psychological safety,
where we have a culture where we talk about mistakes openly, we talk to what we learn, we share examples of wins
and losses as a team.
I think that helps people step up as well.
And then another big one is having a culture of recognition.
And it's not about giving participation awards.
It's about genuinely appreciating work your team members are doing so that they see,
okay, you know, it's not all bad. I'm not just hearing feedback when something goes poorly,
but I know in general, I'm moving in the right direction. This is going well. I feel empowered
to take more on, to keep moving forward and we feel more resilient. Yeah. And I love all those.
Another one that I use is that if I want people to take ownership, I give them ownership publicly. I want them to present the report so they can also be the owners in other people's eyes as well. It is so important, I think, to put your ego aside, get out of the way and let your team shine when they have taken ownership
and that the accountability is theirs.
Yes, I love that point.
And I think that is something that happened to me in the past of when I was delegating
pieces before I hired that team member to take on my DI program.
I had a team of volunteers I was managing and I had handed off a couple of projects. And
there was one in particular that right after I handed off, I was like, oh man, that was such a
good one. Why did I do that? Like that was the best one. And I was beating myself up over it.
And then I thought to myself that I am operating in this scarcity mindset that like, I wouldn't
be able to think of another great project. I mean, I had a list of 10 things and I handed off eight because I could do two or however many. And when we believe there's
not enough good work to go around, I think that's one of the things that starts breaking up all this
trust, right? And there it's an infinite. Yeah. I mean, when you realize you're operating from
a place of insecurity, you're probably not being your best self, right? Exactly. Exactly.
Hey, Leah, I'd love to get your thoughts on an email we got from a listener.
Let me share it with you.
So she feels that she's in a double bind because she's expected to hold people accountable,
but is often seen as being, and this is in quotes, bossy and controlling.
This speaks to how it can be such a delicate balance, what we've been talking about,
you know, between accountability and micromanaging and letting go, right?
So how can we know if we're micromanagers or we're just being perceived that way, how do we separate as
middle-level managers perception from reality? It's such a good question. And I think,
you know, when we've done a lot of the exercises and kind of asked ourselves the questions that
we've talked about in this conversation today, I think the next thing to do is to look at, well,
what is the language that we're using when we're asking for things from our team?
And I have an example in my first book, Unstuck, when I talk about reframing accountability,
which is a trap I fell into when I was managing projects. And I would ask a team member,
hey, I need this by two o'clock, or I need you to finish this. And I was
like, wait a second, I'm using, I need this. Like this is, I don't need it. This is this person's
job. And I was falling into a trap of using language that was making it about that person
and me when it should be about that person and their job. And so I started to reframe and I said,
okay, this is due to the stakeholder by two o'clock
or, you know, the engineering review is at two o'clock.
Please share, you know, your work with them by then.
And I started to really become very, very tuned into the language I was using.
And that made a huge shift where it wasn't like I'm acting like this person's job is
a favor to me.
And I think the same plays out when we're managing our teams, right? As we say, I need you to get this done. And it's like, aye, aye, aye.
It's not about you. The accountability ball stays in your team members' courts. And I think that
actually has so much more power than we realize. And then we can get to the next level, which is,
you know, like you said, there's a bias around when a woman is more direct, it being
called bossy, right?
As opposed to a leader.
One of the tools that I use both myself as a manager and also share with teams that I
work with is as a manager, talk about your management and communication style with your
teams.
Like have a conversation, say, hey, here's how I love to get feedback, or I'm really
direct in these situations, or here's a way that when you need to come to me and share some feedback, please, in these
situations. And you have this level-setting conversation with your teams, and you're
honoring that so that you don't show up differently one way when something happens versus another.
And you can say, hey, I am very busy at the end of the day. I'm wrapping up. I need to leave.
So if I write you a one-letter email, K, it doesn't mean I hate you. It means I'm just acknowledging the receipt.
Then you ask them, what is your communication style?
So that you're creating, again, a conversation around it instead of people making assumptions
and then peppering and bias.
And so getting it out there and, and being, I think being somewhat unapologetic
about it. I think so many times we're direct and then we're apologizing and then we're this and
then we're that. And so that also creates some thrash. Right. And it's confusing. It's confusing.
It's a mixed message. Exactly. And then finally, I think it's helpful to remind yourself that you've been put in this role because people trusted you to do it well.
And people also trusted you to find your way into it, right?
And ultimately, you have to trust yourself to show up the way you think you ought to show up, which isn't going to make everyone happy. So don't confuse
other people's response to you with your own self-respect. People aren't always going to
like everything you do, but you want them to respect what you do, right?
Absolutely. How people receive us is not always going to align for everyone. There's going to be
differences based on culture and language and where you're from in the
world, right?
That always will be a part of the conversation.
So the more you've invested in building up that currency with your team member and then
having the clear expectations.
And I would say, you know, I think of everything we've talked about, if you're listening,
thinking, gosh, it seems like I got to do a lot of stuff, right? Like, oh my God, how do I even kind of wrestle with all this?
I want to remind you, I think micromanaging is less about what, it's more about when. So when
we're correcting later and we're fixing all the little things and we're kind of in the details
as things progress, that's when it really feels more like that. And so I wouldn't avoid the setting expectations or bringing clarity around
success. When we do that upfront, now we're building the trust. We're making sure everyone
feels like they can be successful. And so I think we started our conversation talking about
these two extremes of sometimes people are too in the weeds. Sometimes people are so avoidant. But if we don't give any expectations, our team members are just as unhappy as if we're way too
far in the weeds. Right. We all want to know the expectations. We want to know. We want to
know the guardrails. We want to know this so that we can operate better. Leah, this has been so good.
Thank you so much for this great conversation.
Really appreciate all your insights.
Thank you so much.
I really enjoyed it as well.
What does the future hold for business?
Can someone please invent a crystal ball?
Until then, over 40,000 businesses have future-proofed their business with NetSuite by Oracle, the number one cloud ERP,
bringing accounting, financial management, inventory, and HR into one platform. With real-time
insights and forecasting, you're able to peer into the future and seize new opportunities. Download the CFO's Guide to AI and Machine Learning for free at netsuite.com slash womenatwork.
That's netsuite.com slash womenatwork.
I'm here with Gabriela Spadolizano and Jennifer Long, two mid-level leaders here at Harvard
Business Publishing.
Gabriella is our Director of Quality Assurance and Release Manager, and Jen is our Director
of Learning Design.
They've learned a lot about how to let go over the years, but they both still grapple with it day to day.
I know Jen well and Gabriela less well, but I know they're both really thoughtful and effective managers.
So I was curious to get their takes on what Leah and I discussed and to learn how they manage making space for higher level work.
Gabriela, Jen, thanks so much for being here.
Thanks, Amy.
Thank you. I'm happy to be here.
So, Jen, describe a moment recently when you had to, you know,
restrain yourself from getting into the weeds
because you knew it wasn't your job anymore.
Just one moment.
There are quite a few.
So I am working on a matrixed team,
and we are designing a learning program. And there's lots of stages of design and development, sort of designing the experience and then adding the content and then editing the content words, and I realized I'm out of my lane here, and I'm spending time on this, and we've got other really brilliant people who are actually better at this than I am, who could be doing it, and I should be doing other things.
It happens I sort of fall into it, and then I realize I'm doing it and have to pull myself out.
Yeah.
What about you, Gabriella?
Actually, I don't have the problem of fear to lose the control or want it to do in my way.
I'm a technical manager. I've done testing a long time.
And when I look at, sometimes I check the code of what my people are doing, I'm tending to do it in my own way.
But then you realize that they know now all
the new tools. The fear that I have is wanting the best and I'm tending to think that the best
is my best. Right. That's the problem. And because we are wired differently, I think what I find in the experience over the years is try to understand
the train of thought
of this person.
One important lesson
that one person
reported to me
a few years ago
gave me
is that she did
a completely different,
completely different.
And I was
so stressed out
because I was sure that at the end it would be wrong.
And what I did at that point, I just say, forget it.
It's going to be wrong.
It's going to be wrong.
I'm going to tell it.
I have other things to do.
So I actually stepped back thinking that he was hopeless. And then when I see that actually he worked,
and I asked her to explain what was her strategy. And then I realized, yeah, it works. Fine. We are
done. So that's what the moment that you think maybe you had to give us some space.
Yeah. But there's something that happens. There's a kind of an emotional tug to get involved, right?
Jen, you're nodding your head.
You know what I mean.
Well, what you were saying was resonating with me because I've had to come to terms with this realization that maybe my ideas aren't always the best.
And there's this...
No, Jen, they're always the best.
They're always the best. And there's this... No, Jen, they're always the best. They're always the best. But there's this interesting dynamic I find where in my role,
I'm a keeper of the vision. Like I have the vision. And Gabriella, you were saying of like
the very best it can be. I have the vision of what I think it should be at a high level.
And I know how I would do it. But the challenge is not telling people
how to do it, but getting them locked in on the vision. And the emotional piece is just,
you know, is when you're not sure they're going to get there, you know, or we feel like, I feel
like the vision is here and we're kind of going over to the left or, you know, we're kind of not
hitting it. And that's hard. It's hard to
hold this sort of abstract vision and turn it into something concrete that people can execute
in their own way. Yeah, but you touch a very good point. Always concentrate on the what and not the
how. What needs to be the final outcome? What are the requirements? What are the criteria of success? The how doesn't
matter at that point. That sort of takes us into another question, which is how you keep
tabs on your team's progress. Gabriela, how do you do it without kind of getting too deep in?
Well, I use a lot of demoing. I found that this is very effective. So we have an intermediate milestone
where we want to check where we are at towards the final outcome. And instead of making intimidated
or making me checking on you, let me know what you've done so far. I do, okay, why don't you
demo to the group what you've done so far? And you have the peer making comment or giving feedback.
And this is not only less intimidating, less controlling on my part,
but it's also very effective because we get the more idea
and we learn all together.
And I try to step back.
I leave the floor to the other to ask a question. I do too.
But demoing, I think, is a very, very, at least for a technical worker, you can do this in
intermediate milestone and you ask for feedback. Right. And Jen, your work is a little less
technical. So how do you keep tabs? That's almost automated, but it doesn't get underneath what's really happening on the team.
So we have two ways of doing it.
One is we have weekly team meetings where, much like Gabriela, folks talk about where they are and what's going on and also what challenges they may be running into where they can help each other.
And then I meet with each person individually one-on-one every week to just check in.
Are there barriers?
Are they behind?
What's
going on? And you use that language. I absolutely use that language. So people come in knowing that
they do have to kind of report to you. Yes. Right. On their progress. And I have a sense
of where we need to be. So have you ever gotten feedback, Jen, that you were micromanaging?
I'm not sure anyone said it to my face.
I have gotten feedback from peers that I might be stepping on toes
in other functions like my editor friends.
And so I've learned if I put a comment,
I'm like, this is what I think,
defer to editor, you know?
So I have gotten that feedback.
You should always defer to the editor.
Always.
What about you, Gabrielle?
Yeah, Jennifer is right.
People don't tend to tell you explicitly what they are doing.
So you need to read behind the line.
And one of the signs that tells me that I may be stepping too much is when people started to be disengaged and they want me to spoon feed them.
When I know, I know that the people are capable to do it, but just look at me and they want,
and it's, for me, it's a sign that they expect because they see me stepping in.
They say, okay, Gabriella's stepping, so I let them step in.
And it's a kind of a passive. And I see, when I see this, I realize, no, I shouldn't,
because I know that these people are capable.
Right.
Your point about disengaging, too, I hadn't thought about this until you said that.
But there was a point in our most recent project where my peers and I
were trying to help our developers get a jump on these activities. And so what we did
is we kind of did the legwork and we outlined the topics and we researched all the sources for them.
And we even gave them draft learning objectives. And in our minds, in my mind, we were giving them
a head start, but to them, they didn't feel ownership. And so that was a learning that
probably was micromanagement. And the way it a learning. That probably was micromanagement.
And the way it came back wasn't you're micromanaging.
It was we don't feel like we have creative ownership.
Right?
And so that's perhaps another word for micromanaging.
We thought we were helping, but we were spoon feeding.
That does cause people to disengage.
Yeah. So Leah had this interesting tip about
doing a kind of an audit of your calendar to make sure you're not in too many overlapping meetings.
This is a check on getting too deep in to the details. Has either of you ever done that,
that calendar audit, Jen? I have tried. I have tried. And when I heard that, when I listened to that, it gave me sort of
this moment of angst about, ooh, once again, am I adding value? And then I think, Amy, you made
the comment of, did I add value in that meeting? And now I'm asking myself that question. But I
have to confess to a little fear of FOMO. Like if I'm not there, right? If I'm not there, I'm not going to know
everything. And if I don't know everything, I mean, this gets to also, I think Leah told a story
about letting go a little bit, but also having pressure from her boss to be on top of the
details. Hello, mid-level management. Yeah. And so there's that like, well, okay, I probably don't
have to go to this meeting and I'm probably going to be multitasking when I'm there.
But if I'm not there, and my boss asks me about something, and I don't know it.
Well, you can always say, I'll find out and get back to you.
This is true.
Oh, I found it very interesting, this whole day auditing.
And I realized that subconsciously, I did do this. And now I'm at the point that sometimes my people ask me,
can you be pleased in this meeting because I need your help?
Otherwise, I say, okay, if you don't invite me, I don't come.
Don't worry.
You do it.
When you are in the meeting, obviously the team tend to pull back
and wait for you to talk.
And I say, if you want me to solve some disagreement, I come.
Otherwise, by default, I don't come.
I think your point about understanding how your presence affects the candor of a meeting
is so important because we all think, you know.
It's just us.
It's just us.
There's nothing to be afraid of.
Well, you know what? You do have an effect on a us. There's nothing to be afraid of. Well, you know
what? You do have an effect on a meeting and you got to recognize it and own it just the way you
said, Gabriella, right? So the other thing that Leah said that I found so interesting was auditing
your team skills to make sure that they are, that the individuals on your team are equipped to take on the work that you are
asking them to do independently. Have you ever done that? Absolutely, all the time, because when you
let go the control, it's not always all or nothing or all the same. It depends on the skill and the
maturity of the person, and some people need more guidance than others.
So absolutely, you have to know who you can trust up to a certain point
and what kind of guidance this person needs.
Not tell them how to do it, but guidance when they're stuck.
And on my team, I have people with really different skill sets.
So there's this opportunity to also pair people. I have somebody who's very technically gifted, very interested in AI, very interested in sort of pushing the envelope in that area. So pairing that person with someone who may be more gifted in traditional design really helps them learn from each other. And actually, I learned from them too. I mean, there are people on my team that have better skills than I in certain areas, more experience
in certain areas. And so knowing that as well, where I can lean on them.
So have you started feeling that sense of relief that Leah mentioned?
Sometimes, some days. And then sometimes I feel guilty because I'm not in the details.
Oh my gosh.
Mid-level management.
And mid-level management.
You actually are not doing anything.
I know, I know, I know.
Do you feel any relief?
Oh, absolutely.
When my team take ownership, it helps also the relationship, my relationship with them.
And it's more rewarding for me
than be just the controller.
It's humbling in the best possible way,
I think, don't you think?
It teaches humility, absolutely.
The humility or understanding
that you don't know everything.
See, that to me is where
the sense of relief comes from.
Yes.
Yes. It's a relief not to have to know everything. See, that to me is where the sense of relief comes from. Yes.
Yes.
It's a relief not to have to know everything, isn't it?
It sure is.
Amen.
Thank you both.
You've been great.
And I really learned.
And I'm so happy to get to know you better, Gabriela.
Thank you.
And I love being in a room with you, Jen.
So this has been fun.
For more advice on getting your most important work done,
check out HBR's 10 must-reads
for mid-level managers.
The book's a collection
of the best articles we've published
on winning buy-in,
forming partnerships,
and developing talent.
Women at Work's editorial
and production team
is Amanda Kersey, Maureen Hoke, Tina Tobey-Mack,
Rob Eckhart, Ian Fox, and Hannah Bates,
who's producing this season.
Robin Moore composed our theme music.
Next week, Andrea Belk Olson explains
how, as a mid-level manager,
executing strategy is an opportunity to stretch and shine.
And that's not just focusing on execution solely and the tactics and initiatives thereof, but taking more of a business decision mindset and thinking strategically yourself on how to drive key choices.
Andrea and I will talk about what questions to ask before
taking any action. We'll also talk about how to move forward when you or your team are skeptical
about the new master plan. I'm Amy Bernstein. Get in touch with me and the rest of the show
team by emailing womenatworkathbr.org.