Business Without the Bullsh*t: 49 Secrets and Shortcuts You Need to Know (2 page)

BOOK: Business Without the Bullsh*t: 49 Secrets and Shortcuts You Need to Know
10.7Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads
PART
I
How to Manage Your Boss

It would be nice to imagine that the success of your career rests upon your competence at doing your job, but that’s less than half the picture. Raises, promotions, and other perks depend directly on how well you can manage your boss.

If he or she doesn’t warm to you—or worse, doesn’t remember that you exist—you’ll never land the plum assignments you need to get ahead. And if your boss dislikes you, you’re in for a difficult time until you find another position or get another boss.

The key to managing a boss is not to envision that boss as an overseer or as a commanding officer. That’s not appropriate because the relationship between boss and employee is symbiotic: to be successful, each of you needs the other.

Think of your boss as providing a service that helps you get your job done. Your boss secures the resources you need, makes decisions when there’s disagreement, works interdepartmental issues, and secures money to get you a raise.

This part of the book provides you with everything you really need to know about managing upward:

“The Twelve Types of Bosses” describes the generic varieties of boss, their typical management styles, and a general idea of how to manage them so they do what you’d prefer.

“How to Keep Any Boss Happy” explains what bosses—regardless of type—expect from you as an individual. There are eight rules here, but the eighth is by far the most important.

“How to Get the Best from Your Boss” contains a step-by-step plan to make certain the boss knows all the things you’re doing right, while you also build personal rapport so the boss keeps your best interests in mind.

“How to Use Your Performance Review” shows the best way to turn your regular performance review into an opportunity to create career momentum and lay the groundwork for a future raise or promotion.

“How to Ask for a Raise” builds on the concepts in the previous secret so you can approach the challenge of asking for money in such a way that it feels both natural and inevitable to the boss that you should be paid more than you’re currently being paid.

“How to Handle Unreasonable Requests” helps you negotiate those uncomfortable situations that arise when your boss demands more of you than you can possibly deliver, or asks you to do something that would damage your career.

“How to Cope with a Bully” provides a step-by-step approach for defusing bosses who act inappropriately and unprofessionally. Hopefully this won’t happen to you often, but knowing what to do is a good skill to have.

SECRET
1
The Twelve Types of Bosses

During your career you’ll need to work with and for a variety of different bosses. To do this effectively, you need to know approximately where each boss is “coming from” in terms of management style.

Over the years I’ve gotten to know and work with dozens of bosses (and heard complaints about thousands more), and it’s become clear to me that there are twelve types, each of which must be handled in a slightly different way.

This secret serves as a field guide to understanding the types of bosses that you’ll encounter and the overall strategy you’ll need to manage each one. Later in this section, I’ll provide you more detailed tactics to work within those strategies.

1. THE VISIONARY

Visionaries are more concerned with the future than with what’s going on here and now. They manage by creating (or trying to create) a reality-distortion field that makes people believe the visionary and his team can accomplish the impossible.

Many visionary bosses view the late Steve Jobs as a role model, and that’s the problem. Like Jobs, visionary bosses can be intolerant,
overly critical, and unfair, and sometimes throw tantrums when they don’t get their way.

Not surprisingly, visionaries are most commonly found inside high-tech and biotech firms. When they migrate into traditional industries, they usually end up returning to their original spawning ground.

If you’re working for a visionary, be willing to drink the Kool-Aid, work ridiculously long hours, and listen to endless variations of “this product is going to
change the WORLD
.” If that’s your cup of tea, this type of boss can be a lot of fun, tantrums and all.

2. THE CLIMBER

Climbers are all about getting themselves promoted. As a general rule they’re interested in you as an employee only insofar as you can help or hinder their ascent to the corner office.

Climbers are master politicians. They never have colleagues; only competitors. They spend endless time and effort figuring out how to win status, claim credit, and build alliances.

With climbers you must be clear in your own mind that loyalty is simply not part of the relationship, and that you’ll be discarded faster than a month-old mackerel the second you make the climber look bad.

With that proviso, if you’re working for a climber, do what you can to make him look good and (most important) be the person who has his back when his fellow climbers try to stab it.

3. THE BUREAUCRAT

Bureaucrats believe that their position and importance lies in an ability to make everything run by the book. They are resistant to change because they see the current situation (which is the one that put them in power) as the best of all possible worlds.

In the olden days, bureaucrats used to love endless pages of paperwork. Today they love endless screens of online forms. They also love meetings, especially those that review and discuss the activities of others.

Bureaucrats thrive inside what they like to call “large enterprises.” They falter in small firms because the lack of a crowd makes it too obvious that they aren’t really doing very much.

Bureaucrats are predictable and easy to please. Document everything in detail and limit all your activities to what’s been done in the past, even if it no longer works. Warning: a bureaucrat boss can grind your creativity into dust.

4. THE PROPELLERHEAD

When engineers get into the management chain, they bring a technology-oriented worldview with them. This is not necessarily a bad thing, but it does mean you’ll be judged almost entirely on your technical competence.

The propellerhead boss prefers employees who are experts in some technical field—the more obscure the better. They consider all nontechnical types (like MBA holders) equally stupid and useless.

Don’t take offense if a propellerhead boss communicates with you primarily through e-mail, even if that boss has an office two cubicles away. Propellerheads tend to avoid people issues.

The easiest way to get on the good side of a propellerhead is to become fluent in nerdy pop culture references. If possible, illustrate your business point by quoting lines from
Star Trek
or
Star Wars
.

5. THE FOGEY

These bosses have been around since the days when “secretaries” (whoever they were) used “typewriters” (whatever they were). Fogeys are simultaneously wise in the ways of the world and clueless about what’s actually going on.

Fogeys who are close to retirement are often quite jovial and easy-going; those who must continue to work because they can’t afford to retire can be meaner than dyspeptic weasels.

Working for a fogey requires the patience to listen to the same “war stories” multiple times. Don’t assume the duffer is a doofus, though. Fogeys can be surprisingly shrewd, especially when it comes to political infighting.

Fogeys are mostly looking for two things: respect from the young’uns, and reassurance that they’re still relevant. They make great mentors, because they tend to be generous with their advice and time.

6. THE WHIPPERSNAPPER

The flip side of the fogey is the barely-out-of-college go-getter who’s assigned to manage a group of seasoned employees. Whippersnappers are energetic, enthusiastic, and secretly afraid that nobody is taking them seriously.

Because that insecurity is so huge, follow two essential rules when working for whippersnappers: (1) respond positively to the energy they bring to their job; and (2) never, ever remind them of their relative inexperience.

Needless to say, you may end up wasting time repairing problems generated by the whippersnapper’s inexperience. That’s fine, but remember to be
enthusiastic
about it! However, depending on your level of tolerance for the whippersnapper’s learning curve, you may want to consider finding work elsewhere.

7. THE SOCIAL DIRECTOR

Social directors see management as a community-building process. They consider the personal interactions that happen in the workplace as important as (and sometimes more important than) the actual work itself.

Social directors always try to manage by consensus. They call a LOT of meetings and spend a LOT of time letting people air their opinions and ideas. They shy away from making decisions that might leave a team member “disappointed.”

Working for a social director requires you to constantly build alliances and garner supporters. If you want a decision to be made, you’ll need to get everybody on the team to back it publicly.

A word of warning: when it comes to handling their own emotions, social directors can be pressure cookers. They either let off steam through a series of hissy fits, or they suddenly explode. If it’s the latter, try to be elsewhere when it happens.

8. THE DICTATOR

This is the classic “It’s my way or the highway” boss. While most people find this management style grating, working for a dictator has some advantages. They make decisions quickly and efficiently, without over-analyzing everything.

Another advantage of working for a dictator is knowing exactly where you stand. Why should your boss bother to stab you in the back when it’s more convenient to stab you in the front?

Unfortunately, dictators tend to be impervious to outside opinion and brittle when it comes to change. When they fail (and they always fail eventually), it’s on a truly epic scale.

The tricks to working for a dictator are (1) follow orders, (2) follow orders, and (3) be ready to jump to another job when you see the dictator driving your company (or your division) over the cliff.

9. THE SALES STAR

Selling is part of every job, and every boss should be able to sell his or her ideas up and down the management chain. The problem with this type of boss is that selling is the only thing he or she does well.

These bosses are usually created when top sales professionals
are promoted into management. This happens with fair frequency, despite the fact that managing people requires a different skill set than selling to customers.

Sales star bosses tend to be self-motivated, aggressive, and good at building relationships, understanding needs, and generating workable solutions. That’s because they’re salespeople.

Therefore, the way to deal with sales stars is to encourage them to sell! Bring them into situations where a deal must be closed, or terms negotiated. They’d really rather be getting their hands dirty (as it were) than managing people anyway.

10. THE HATCHET MAN

Hatchet men (or women) are brought into an organization to fire people as quickly as possible, usually to make the company more attractive to investors or position it for an acquisition.

By the very nature of the job, such bosses aren’t likely to be filled with the proverbial milk of human kindness. Still, being human, they can’t resist euphemisms that cast their actions in a positive light (e.g.,
corporate triage
and
ventilating the firm
).

There are only two roles available for people who work for a hatchet man: henchman and victim. Ultimately the favored role, that of henchman, is temporary: they often get canned too.

The best way to deal with a hatchet man is to be long gone by the time he arrives. This requires attention to the writing on the wall. For example, the moment you see the words
private equity investment
on an internal memo, your new job is finding a new job. (See “Secret 39. What to Do If There’s a Layoff.”)

11. THE LOST LAMB

Sometimes people who have no management talent end up in a position of authority. This generally happens when a manager leaves suddenly
and top management needs somebody to hold the fort while it finds a replacement.

Lost lambs have no idea what to do other than continue whatever policies and strategies were previously in place. They know they’re placeholders and dread doing anything that will be held against them once they’re pushed back into the ranks.

What these bosses want is for you to move your projects forward without bringing ANY difficult decisions to them. They are, however, easily convinced to make minor decisions in your favor simply to keep you happy.

The biggest danger with a lost lamb is that if you end up making the lamb too successful, top management may conclude that the temporary assignment should be permanent, and you’ll be saddled with the dead weight of the lost lamb for the foreseeable future.

12. THE HERO

There are indeed men and women in this world whose personalities and characters make them well suited to manage other people. They’re the fabled “natural leaders,” and they’re as rare as diamonds in dunghills.

Heroes prefer to coach others than to do things themselves. They have a knack for figuring out exactly what their employees need in order to do a superlative job and then how to get that for them.

Heroes always give their teams credit for the wins but take personal responsibility for the losses. They believe that “the buck stops here” not that “sh*t rolls downhill.”

There are two problems with working for a hero. The first is that the hero will probably get promoted or be recruited to work elsewhere. The second is that once you’ve worked for a hero, it ruins your ability to work for a bozo.

SHORTCUT

THE TWELVE TYPES OF BOSSES

VISIONARIES
are inspiring assholes so drink the Kool-Aid.

CLIMBERS
want to get ahead so expect no loyalty.

BUREAUCRATS
hate change so document everything.

PROPELLERHEADS
love gadgets so become an expert.

FOGEYS
want respect so recruit them as mentors.

WHIPPERSNAPPERS
are insecure so be enthusiastic!

SOCIAL DIRECTORS
love consensus but may explode.

DICTATORS
make fast decisions but cause disasters.

SALES STARS
would rather be selling so let them sell.

HATCHET MEN
execute layoffs so leave now.

LOST LAMBS
need your help but may get dependent.

HEROES
are rare so enjoy them while it lasts.

BOOK: Business Without the Bullsh*t: 49 Secrets and Shortcuts You Need to Know
10.7Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Witch’s Daughter by Paula Brackston
Casimir's Journey by Lisa Manifold
Nocturnes by Kendall Grey
Opposing Forces by Anderson, Juliet
The Dragon's Lair by Elizabeth Haydon
Death in Vineyard Waters by Philip Craig
Ashes of the Fall by Nicholas Erik