Golden Oldies: MAP Action 2 (management by walking around)
by Miki SaxonPoking through 13+ years of posts I find information that’s as useful now as when it was written.
Golden Oldies is a collection of the most relevant and timeless posts during that time.
80 years ago Dave Packard commented that good management was “marked by personal involvement, good listening skills and the recognition that “everyone in an organization wants to do a good job.” That belief developed into a management technique called MWBA and it’s just as powerful now as it was then — if not more so. 13 years ago I wrote a four-part series about it. The second post talks about why to do it, the third about uncovering problems and the fourth about using MWBA to crosscheck what you hear.
And yes, you do have time.
Author John le Carré, of Bond fame, said it best.
“A desk is a dangerous place from which to view the world.”
Read other Golden Oldies here.
Remember Management By Walking Around (MWBA)? It’s an oldie, but a goodie.
Great managers work to spend at least 25% (or more) of their time wandering around chatting and building trust with their people.
Don’t have time? Maybe that’s because you never really thought abut the benefits. Getting to know your people this way helps you to
-
- spot high-potential workers;
- raise your trust quotient with employees;
- improve retention;
- attract talent;
- discover molehills before they’re mountains, and, most importantly, it’s the best, if not only, way to
- know what’s really going on.
To work it must be the norm—that means it needs to be done constantly, not just when there’s a problem.
Consistent, casual visits make people feel comfortable and encourages them to chat—saying what they are thinking without editing it. To pass on information, rumors, and the like without wondering or worrying that it will boomerang and hurt them.
While wandering, you’ll hear enough to validate or repudiate what you heard from somewhere else. It lets you protect your sources—which means they’ll continue to pass on information—and it helps you avoid acting on erroneous information.
The higher you rise in the organization the more important this intelligence becomes. One of the greatest dangers for any manager is getting isolated and hearing only a sanitized or slanted version of what’s going on within the group, department or company. This is especially true for the CEO and senior staff.
Bottom-line—get off your duff, out of your office, wander around, say hi, listen, be a sponge and soak it all up.
Invest the time—that’s what managers do—and it will pay off handsomely!
Does it still work? Absolutely. Read about how it went from strictly a management tool to also offering personal growth and stress reduction.
A note for managers in love with tech. MBWA can’t be done digitally; it’s an in-person, face-to-face technique that works.
It takes far less time than recruiting new people.
And it’s free.
Image credit: LYCS Architecture on Unsplash