Four ways to manage the micromanager in you

command energy of micromamanger

Source: Adobe Stock

By Julia DiGangi

In my work with corporations, I commonly hear managers say they are stressed because they don’t have enough “self-starters” on their team. But when I analyse their interactions, I find that the same people are often micromanaging their employees by, for example, asking too many questions, checking in too frequently, or giving too much advice.

On multiple occasions, I’ve heard managers say to team members: “I want you to take total leadership on this project — just make sure you run everything by me first”. Those messages send conflicting signals and cancel each other out. Confused employees wonder: “Wait, am I supposed to be self-starting or permission seeking?” Leaders are communicating “Start! No, wait — stop! No, start!” and then don’t understand why the work never gains any momentum.

In theory, the command-and-control style has been on the decline for decades.

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