The Third Element for Interacting as Managers — Managing Interactions, Maximizing Performance

February 27th, 2010


We’re continuing our journey through the three elements that are essential for managers who strive to interact the right way with their team. We’ve already covered the first two with my previous blog entries – communicate and enable. Communicating included the need for managers to share information regularly, honestly and in various formats such as group meetings, one on one and more. Enabling includes providing resources and delegating authority. Read the details and refresh your memory on both of these below this latest blog entry.

We’re now ready to bring the third element front and center for managing interactions the right way – support. What comes to mind when you’re providing management support to your subordinates? Is it resources, recognition, pay raises, promotion opportunities, information needed for them to get their jobs done or what? Yes and more! I think of support as part of what you, the manager does, to help get the work done and produce appreciation from your group. Side benefit is you get to feel good about it and build your personal integrity too!

The manager who supports their team is someone who executes managerial actions to consistently generate three P’s: Protect, Promote, and Progress. You should be exercising the three P’s as part of the total supportive experience an employee receives from a great manager, not something you squeeze or sandwich into your week as an afterthought. You may think you are a supportive manager, but non-supportive management style is something I hear professionals complain about all the time as lacking from the average manager. Don’t be “that” manager! food-tiersMake your supportive management actions part of a tasty meal for exuding positive management character. In a sense, being supportive is something a terrific manager provides for his or her team, in appropriate portions and at timely intervals, as part of keeping his group motivated but not overly indulged. Let’s get into each of the three P’s now.

Protect. The supportive manager is a cheer leader for his or her employees in many ways. While cheering your team on, you’re the manager who protects team interests across the entire organization. This means helping your group maneuver through the political mine fields that populate every organization. You also protect your group by being the manager who watches out for employees at a high level, keeps them focused and serves as a buffer between them and upper management needs. Take heed – protecting your team does not mean you are babying and shielding them from the realities of business challenges. Strive to hit the right balance between protecting your team, continuing to operate in reality and not being overly protective.

Promote. A close ally to the P for protect is the P for promote. While you’re being the manager who protects your team and supports their work you’re promoting them at the same time. A great manager promotes their team by using their management position to help clear the path for success whenever possible. At the same time, you are ensuring upper management knows about you and your group’s accomplishments. This helps place you and your team consistently front of mind when promotion opportunities are being evaluated and sharp individuals are needed to drive a major business initiative. The other aspect of promoting your team is avoiding the temptation to bad mouth your employees to upper executives whenever something goes wrong. Yes, there are times when obvious bad behavior by employees must be honestly addressed, but avoid employee put downs simply because a problem occurs. Your integrity as an accountable manager and true team player shines much brighter when you do.

Progress. The final P needed for supporting your group stands for progress. Always be the manager who is ready and willing to help your subordinates progress their skills, knowledge and careers. Don’t hold people back or make them exist in a vacuum because it makes your job easier or you are coveting visibility only for yourself. When team members are ready to move forward, give them visibility, opportunities to learn new skills, engage in training, stretch their knowledge and prime themselves for promotion down the road. You will be gaining more motivated employees overall. In addition, new skills can enable more efficient job execution and improved productivity across your group.

As the manager who regularly supports your team’s efforts, keep in mind these three P’s that help consistently generate supportive management actions: Protect, Promote and Progress.

Now we’ve covered all three elements needed for being the manager who interacts the right way with your team – communicate, enable and support. Did you already know some of this stuff? Great! Here’s the tough question …if you already knew this, are you actually practicing it in your daily management behavior? If not, you now have the tools to get back on track. The truth is, every manager has to remind themselves from time to time to apply beneficial management practices and that includes interacting the right way with their group by consistently communicating, enabling and supporting team success.

Tell me how you interact the right way with your team and produce great team spirit – write to me and share your comments. My next blog entry will launch another new topic series …. I look forward to talking with you then!

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