by beaky » Tue Feb 08, 2005 11:46 pm
I'm not exactly management, but I've supervised crews for years. Think of me as a foreman who also sometimes sits in on production meetings and schmoozes clients, representing my bosses in the field. In my business, a small error can blow the whole profit margin on a project, so it's real grown-up pressure, often with big egos and short tempers.
If it's your job to spell out the plan, as it were, and you think Tom should do this and Harry should do that, that's perfectly reasonable.
Those under you shouldn't have a problem with that. Imagine a flight crew where no one is really being PIC... a lot of accidents happen when the chain of command erodes. If your "subordinates" resent being told what to do, they can quit, or be fired. They've got a job to do, and so do you, so screw 'em if they can't handle that. ESPECIALLY if they're playing games with you because you're younger than they are! I often have to deal with something similar... I'm a non-union worker who often has to oversee union crews. It gets weird sometimes, because I'm not an authoritarian or confrontational person by nature, and I must walk the line between labor and management without letting either one kick my ass.
On the other hand, micromanaging everybody just doesn't work. It creates a big headache for all concerned. I let people know what the job requires, then give them a chance to prove they can do it right. I look for leaders among the led and bond with them, to help me do my job without them even realizing it (if I'm lucky). As far as long breaks or whatever goes... I find I get less backtalk and passive-aggressive work slowups if I present my case like a messenger ("my company is screaming about the deadline, guys, give me a break, etc."). It helps if these requests are accompanied by donuts ;D.
Anyway, my situation is not an office-type thing; maybe it doesn't apply. But if your bosses are worth working for, they ought to respect you if you tactfully explain that you've got more important things to do than babysit: things that they assigned for you to do. Tell them or show them how you can maintain productivity without throwing your weight around. Remind them that you can't control these people like puppets. But gently, of course...
Challenge them, within the limits of the situation, and they might reward you for it (I've gotten a little that way), or at least stop bugging you to be more of a hardass (pretty much got them to do that).
Or, they might fire you... I hate politics! That's why I'll probably never be in management- unless it's my own company.
;D
