Alex Cavoulacos in The Muse asked this salient questions regarding to delegation. How much should be delegated to others? How much training or hands-on attention do people need? How can you ensure a great final product?
To answer these questions (and more!), I’ve compiled what I
consider to be the 10 commandments of delegation: the rules that will ensure
success every time. Whether you’re an expert executive or a novice manager, keep
them in mind the next time you hand off an assignment.
1. Be Patient
The first time you delegate any task, it is almost certainly
going to take longer than doing it yourself. That’s normal. Over time, it will
get easier.
2. Don’t Over-Delegate
Delegation is not shifting work you should be doing to
someone else’s plate—it’s getting those tasks you shouldn't be doing off of
yours. It's important to know the difference.
3. Pick the Right People
Make sure the person you’re delegating to is qualified to do
the task. Better yet, try to delegate tasks that will make use of your team
members’ best skills and strengths. Then...
4. Explain Why You’re Delegating
When you select people to delegate to, tell them why you
chose them specifically, and how you hope to see this help them grow. Help them
see each delegated task as an opportunity to take on more responsibilities or
grow new skills.
5. Be Specific
Be specific with your asks, including why a task needs to be
done, the deadlines, and the expected results. Vague instructions beget vaguely
terrible output.
6. Provide Training
Delegation doesn’t just mean handing off a task—make sure
your team members have the resources they need to do the job. A good training
rule of thumb is “I do, we do, you do” (i.e., watch me do this, then let’s do
it together, now you try).
7. Touch Base
Throughout the course of the project or task, always
schedule time to touch base. The more complex the task, the more often you may
need to touch base.
8. But Don’t Micromanage
Once you’ve delegated, trained, and set up a schedule for
touching base, back away from the project. To succeed (and to help your
employee succeed), you have to let go.
9. Offer Feedback
Any time you delegate something, provide feedback on the end
result (both positive and constructive). It’s an extra step, but making sure
you’re getting exactly what you need—and helping others get better over
time—will only help you in the long run.
10. Say Thanks
Hey, your employee is saving you time and providing value.
Say thanks!
Tell us what you think! Are there any rules we’re missing?
1 Comments
Educative post, pls keep it coming
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