Most of us don’t want to go to work and be known for doing a poor job. Too often, new supervisors were great technical performers inexperienced in how to lead others. Once they’re in the job, they discover that their success is measured by how well others perform under their direction.
That’s when many panic and make a mess of things by:
- Micromanaging
- Holing up in their offices
- Giving orders and shunning feedback
- Withholding information
- Clinging to confidants
Start small.
The best thing that can happen to a new supervisor is being assigned responsibility for a small group.
It can be as small as one (although smart companies stay away from one-on-one or even two-on-one reporting). Three employees, in my view, would be the perfect start.
Why is that? Because it requires the new supervisor to deal with a triangle. (No love triangles, please.) Three employees promise enough work style, personality, and performance challenges to deal with like:
- Balancing work load
- Dealing with attitude differences
- Engaging them as a team
- Communicating clearly and effectively
- Implementing policies and procedures fairly
- Addressing unwanted behaviors
- Setting boundaries
- Evaluating and rewarding performance
Lead like it’s big.
Small work groups can make a big difference no matter the size of the company.
That means you need to supervise three as though they were thirty. This isn’t a club you’re in charge of; it’s a business unit representing a significant investment in salary and benefits. The group is expected to contribute output that directly or indirectly impacts profitability.
So take charge of the expectations management has of your group. Approach your three professionally, so they see themselves as significant and you as their means to success.
Effective small group supervisors do exactly what successful corporate executives do. They lead.
As soon as you become the supervisor, assemble your group and communicate:
- What the group is there to do (what business you are all in together)
- Your style of supervision (meeting frequency, information needs, hot buttons)
- Direction for the next year plus perspectives about the future
- SMART performance goals for the group (Then set up meetings to establish their individual performance goals for the year.)
- The kind of operating culture you desire (teamwork, cross-training, informal and formal communication, integrity, general conduct)
(By the way, you can also get supervisor-like experience by being a team leader too.)
Positioning yourself for more
Great supervisors get great results. When your small group produces more and better work with you at the helm, you will be noticed and so will your employees.
Great supervisors are a rarity. Employees who have them sing their praises. They want you to succeed because when you do, they do too.
Employees know that the buck stops with you and you’ll need to make decisions along the way that they won’t like. They’ll respect you for that even though they might gripe.
By learning to lead in a small group situation, you position yourself for roles with broader scope, more employees, and a position on the organizational pyramid that will make you and your early employee team very proud.