Recently I had a conversation with a young store manager. āI like people. Iām friendly to my team and want to have a good relationship with them. Iāve realized that sometimes when Iām trying to tell them not to do something, they donāt take me seriously. I donāt know how to get them to take me seriously.ā
My wifeās a middle school teacher ā yes, you can say, āBless herā it is a tough job. Over the past few years, the trend sheās experiencing is parents trying to be āfriendsā with their children, not parents. They donāt want to disciple their kids because theyāre afraid their children wonāt ālikeā them. As a result, the kids run the family.
This young manager explained how his team takes advantage of his desire to be their friend. He tries to accommodate their life schedules. He wants them to like coming to work and like him. The problem is he has an employee who refuses to work weekends and wants specific shifts.
The results look like this:
In his desire to ābe a friend,ā this manager is starting to experience a loss of control and the ability to lead and manage his team. He may be liked, but he isnāt respected.
I understand being a relational leader. I am one. I want to get to know my team, not just as work partners but also as people. I want to be someone they can talk to, someone they know will have their back.
I learned a long time ago that a blind spot in my leadership style is when I let my desire to be relational prevent me from exercising my responsibilities to hold team members accountable for their job and actions. Do I want to be ālikedā or ārespectedā?
My wife and I had decided on our parenting style before our first son entered the world. We agreed on our discipline approach, how to talk with our child(ren), and to hold each other accountable to be consistent.
As a relational leader, there are some of the same steps that need to be taken:
I would like to tell you that the young manager is doing great, but I canāt. Weāve just started working together. We are creating a plan to re-establish an atmosphere of trust and respect, creating a fair and equitable schedule where everyone shares the responsibility and identifies and develops future leaders.
He will introduce this along with his 2022 plan for the store in early November. He asked, āWhat if āso in soā pushes back?ā My reply, āFor the health of your business, your teamās respect, and the future of you as a leader, you might need to āloveā him somewhere else.ā
Weāll discuss preparing for that conversation very soon.
DREAM4 works with businesses to build a healthy organization from the top-down and the bottom up. Our model allows us and our partners to create a repeatable process that develops maturity in leaders and individuals and momentum in life.
For more on DREAM4 and their impact on organizational wellbeing and leadership development, please schedule a call today. And if youāre wondering what type of leader you are, take our leadership type quiz!
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