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Why Is Delegation

So Difficult?

Eli Broad is quoted as saying

The inability to delegate is

one of the biggest problems

I see with managers at all

levels.” I see that as well.

There are two major reasons

why managers avoid delegation:

they don’t want to lose control

and

they believe no one can

do the task as well as they

can

. Do you relate to either of

these?

I recently had a phone

conversation with a client who

hadbothof these issues. He runs

a printing and mailing operation

that is in a lot of chaos. We were

discussing how he delegates to

his employees and he shared

this recent example.

“The two people in the

production area decided to

organize the inventory. We

needed this to be done, he said,

but they weren’t doing it the way

I thought they should. I was on

them every day to do it better;

to do it my way, not their way.

They were slow; they didn’t have

a process to follow, and in fact,

it seemed like they didn’t know

what they were doing.”

I asked him how they reacted

to his input and he said it built

resistance in them. I shared

with him the steps to delegate

properly,

1)

have an agreed upon

deadline,

2)

have an agreed upon

reporting

system

on

progress, and

3)

have agreed upon results.

When I asked if he had used

this process – well, you know

the answer, right? No, he didn’t,

which left his employees feeling

micromanaged and belittled.

I suggested he put aside his

belief that no one could do it

By Michael Kaplan

SOAR TO SUCCESS

/

N

ovember

2016

/

Business Acceleration Strategies