Sue Unerman
Jan 28, 2024

'Manage your manager': How to communicate what you need from your boss

In an ideal world, your boss should prioritise your welfare, and the start of a new year should not be the reason to pile on the pressure, opines the author.

'Manage your manager': How to communicate what you need from your boss
As the old year turns into the new one, there are often added pressures.
 
Where it is acceptable to move a meeting from June to July or from October to November, moving a meeting from one year to another seems much more epic, and rude, so maybe the last weeks of the year have been especially fraught with added pressure to squeeze in catch ups?
 
For organisations with calendar reporting, there is all the busyness of finalising year-end figures and crystalising business plans for the next 12 months.
 
Then there are awards, the new season is also starting with award deadlines.
 
Is your boss putting pressure on you to get stuff done at an even higher rate of agility than usual?
 
Bosses increasingly see the benefits of being in the office and want to see you there. So getting you physically in the office is an overriding agenda, too, which can be an added pressure to a difficult work-life balance for some.
 
Bosses shouldn’t be adding pressure, of course. That isn’t the role. A great leader will be working as hard as possible to alleviate pressure and find hacks to make your work simpler and less hassle.
 
Our popular culture doesn’t reflect this, does it? It’s locked into a 20th century—even Victorian— notion of the boss as tyrant, making unreasonable demands and not caring about anything more than the results. 
 
From the wonderful Sylvie in Emily in Paris and the iconic Katharine Parker played by Sigourney Weaver in Working Girl, to 9 to 5, The Office and Horrible Bosses and all stations in between, there are  myriad caricatures of rubbish managers.
 
And where are the good bosses on screen? Few and far between.
 
In our best-selling book (with Kathryn Jacob), The Glass Wall, Success Strategies for Women at Work and Businesses that Mean Musiness, one of our anonymous interviewees told us about the need to ask your boss for help and not to assume that they expect you to just do it.
 
She told us that she had taken a big promotion but felt really out of her depth. In fact, she confided that after her first few weeks, she was completely miserable, not sleeping properly and she felt like she was letting her new boss down badly. She had found out that she wasn’t superwoman. Well, neither are any of us. What she needed to do was ask her boss for help. Because her boss wanted her to succeed. Of course, he did, he’d promoted her and her failing was only going to cause him more problems. 
 
This is true of everyone. Always remember that your boss needs you.  But they might not know, unless they are mindreaders, what you need from them.
 
In an ideal world, your boss would prioritise your welfare. In agile ways of working (of which I am a huge believer) the notion of the Servant Leader is pre-eminent. The role of the team leader is simple, to control workflow to make sure it is realistically manageable and to remove barriers from your path. And the daily standup and transparent kanban ensure that the leader can do this.
 
Not everyone works in this way. Your barriers or difficulties might not be clear to your manager—and remember they have their own problems and pressure.
 
So, take time to communicate what you need from your boss.  Manage your manager and try to manage your team better than Sigourney did.

Sue Unerman is chief transformation officer at EssenceMediacomX and global head of relevance at EM Creative Futures. 

She is also the author of three books: Belonging, the Key to Transforming and Maintaining Diversity, Inclusion and Equality at Work; The Glass Wall, Success Strategies for Women at Work and Businesses that Mean Business; Tell the Truth, Honesty is your Most Powerful Marketing Tool. 
Source:
Campaign UK

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