Developmental Delegation: How To Kindle The Inner Fire
If you manage others, one of your most important roles will be
to develop the resources that you have under you and that
includes the people themselves. Here is a 6-step guide to how to
develop people through delegation.
1. Kindle The Inner Spirit. The first step in developing others
is the belief that everyone in the team is capable of growth and
development. We demonstrate that belief by being genuinely
interested in what they are doing and helping them discover ways
in which they can build on their strengths. In this way,
developmental opportunities open up almost by themselves. "In
everyone's life, at some time, our inner fire goes out. It is
then burst into flames by an encounter with another human being.
We should all be thankful for those people who re-kindle the
inner spirit." (Albert Schweitzer)
2. Get To Know Your Team's Strengths. The biggest disasters in
people management arise when we fail to recognize the natural
abilities of our team. It's what happened to Rabbit when he went
to school.
When Rabbit first went to school, he was delighted with what the
instructor told him. "Rabbit, you have fine legs. You hop well,
spring well and jump well. With some guidance, you can be an
excellent jumper." Rabbit loved every minute of the Hopping
class and excelled. Then the Head Teacher said: "But Rabbit, you
don't swim well or climb trees at all well. You must stop the
Jumping class and concentrate on swimming and tree climbing."
So, Rabbit left the Jumping class that he loved and went to the
Swimming class and Tree climbing class that he hated. After a
while, miserable and dispirited, he begged his parents to take
him out of school. "If only I'd been allowed to stay in
Jumping," he thought. (Donald Clifton and Paula Nelson)
Moral of the story: Develop what people are already good at and
you'll help them excel.
3. Find Jobs That Match Your Needs and People's Needs. The art
of delegating lies in finding a match between the potential of
the individual and the needs of the business. When you find that
match, you hit on a win-win situation: you gain and the
individual gains. By contrast, when you delegate jobs that don't
need to be done, or to people who don't have any real interest
in them, or can't do them, or don't want to do them, you simply
de-motivate and frustrate. As a result, people become convinced
they're inadequate and lacking in any real talent. "Don't try
and teach a pig to sing. It wastes your time and annoys the
pig." (Donald Clifton and Paula Nelson)
4. Agree A Delegation Plan. When you decide to delegate a job to
someone in order to develop their strengths, it is important to
create a delegation contract so that you both know what is
expected of each other. This contract can include anything you
want but useful areas for agreement include: time scales; levels
of freedom; levels of authority; constraints; methods of
working; worries; how others are affected. You are unlikely to
be able to do this without sitting down with the delegatee to
agree the contract and then having regular chats as things
progress.
5. Let Them Go. Unless your delegation contract stipulates a
very tight amount of control by you, you must let the person get
on with things without unnecessary interference. OK, that may
sound risky. And it is. After all, the delegatee may foul up.
Well, that's a risk you have to be prepared to take, since this
may be the only way they're going to learn. But unless you let
them go, they won't be able to stretch their wings and fly.
Delegation is an act of faith on the part of both you and your
delegatee. "Giving people self-confidence is by far the most
important thing I can do. Because then they will act." (Jack
Welch, CEO of General Electric)
6. Keep Your Eyes On. Working out how near or far you need to be
in a delegating relationship is the true art of managing others.
Too close and you don't give people enough freedom to take risks
and learn; too far and they lose hope. One rule is to take your
hands off but keep your eyes on. This relationship is similar to
parents teaching their children to swim. At the start, they
stand right next to them with their hands under their tummies.
They never let go. Then gradually as the children begin to gain
in confidence and skill, they move back. First they let one hand
go. Imperceptibly. Then the other hand. Then they take a step
back. Then another. And eventually they move out of reach to the
side of the pool. In the end they leave the children alone and
get out of the pool. But all the time and even now, they never
take their eyes off them.
Developmental delegation is by far the most important of all the
acts of delegation. It is delegation with a purpose. It grows
the one resource that is free and unlimited, your own staff.
When it works, you increase all your assets at a stroke and both
you and your delegatee are the richer for it.