Getting Along With Your Boss
No matter how you earn a living, one occupational skill you
would do well to cultivate is the knack for getting along with
the boss; that dispenser of raises and promotions is probably
the key person in your working life. In most facilities, it's
your boss's opinion of you that determines your future in the
company. A staff person in constant conflict with his/her
supervisor, even if he or she is a virtuoso performer on the job
can find his/her prospects considerably dimmed.
Short of marrying his or her daughter, what can you do to get
into the boss's good graces and stay there? Fortunately, most
bosses aren't monsters, so they respond to efforts to improve
relationships with their staff members.
Here are some suggestions for making yourself more valuable to
the man or woman you work for, based upon the observations of
managers and job counselors.
Help him or her to do his/her job. You can accomplish this by
doing your job as best you can - an important piece of advice.
It is probably the most frequently forgotten; keep in mind how
your job ties in with your boss's. He or she is responsible for
seeing that a certain set of tasks is accomplished, be it
writing insurance policies, directives, memorandums, health care
policies, assembling machine parts or selling dresses. Your job
is to tend to some detail of his or her task. The better you
hold up your end, the easier his or her job is, which is bound
to make him or her look more kindly on you and your endeavors.
Get to know his/her standards. Your performance is judged by
him/her. By noting your boss's reactions to different ways
things are done, you learn what is especially important to him
or her. For example, a secretary who prides herself on her
shorthand and typing speed may be surprised to find herself
passed up for a promotion if she ignores her boss's frequent
complaints about her spelling errors and likewise a supervisor
of nursing or nursing assistant whose supervisors have to remind
him/her to turn reports in on time, may not be considered for
promotion or for a new job within the facility. If you were a
boss, would you promote someone who has to be hounded again and
again about the same old mistakes or shortcomings? Keep him or
her informed. When the boss gives you an assignment, especially
a long-term one, he/she will want to be kept informed about how
you're coming along. You can keep him/her up-to-date with short
memos now and then, and by mentioning your progress during
informal conversations with him or her. If it's a complicated
report, better put it in writing. It is especially important if
you work with relatively little supervision to let your
supervisors know, periodically, what you're doing. Tell him/her
about any ideas you may get for streamlining the way you do your
job, (not the way he/she does his or hers) only if you've
carefully thought them through and can explain them clearly.
Don't take too much of his/her time. Spare the boss the details
of your weekend camping trip unless he or she expresses a
definite interest. There is a time and place for swapping
stories, and if your boss wants to pass some time that way, he
or she will take the initiative.
Be careful also about bending his/her ear every time a minor
problem comes up within the facility or office. True, he or she
is there to help solve problems, but you can often find the
answers without bothering him/her. You want the boss to notice
you for the problems you solve, not the ones you toss in his/her
lap.
Be reliable. Get to work on time, finish your assignments when
you are supposed to, show the boss that when he or she needs
something done in hurry, you are the one who will give it that
extra effort needed. If he/she knows he/she can depend on you,
he/she will, and that's a real feather in your cap.
Be enthusiastic about your work. One of the most difficult
problems the boss faces is motivating a worker who sees his or
her job as little more than a necessary evil in the pursuit of a
paycheck. Bosses know they can't teach enthusiasm, and they
can't buy it no matter how high the wage is, but they place much
value on it. If your enthusiasm is genuine, it will show. Do you
take pride in your work? Are you willing to come early and stay
late when necessary? Are you optimistic about the future of the
company you work for? Do you tackle assignments cheerfully,
without trying to think up reasons why they just can't be done?
If your answers to these questions are completely negative,
maybe you are in the wrong job.
Learn to take criticism. Inability to accept constructive
criticism or advice from supervisors and co-workers alike is a
serious handicap. If you do a slow burn every time the boss
points out your mistakes, he/she is bound to feel uncomfortable
about it, and is likely to resent your attitude. After all,
guiding and correcting your work is part of his/her job. Listen
to what he or she tells you, apply his/her suggestions to what
you are doing. Temperamental workers, no matter how brilliant,
are something most bosses would rather do without.
Don't play office politics. Few things can destroy morale faster
than the presence of gossipers and other thoughtless workers who
start or pass along uncomplimentary and embarrassing stories
about fellow workers. Ignore rumors and tend to your business.
Don't take sides in disputes between other workers, or you may
end up a part of the gossip yourself. Resist the temptation to
grumble about minor inconveniences caused by management
decisions; if you have a legitimate complaint take it to your
boss privately. He or she will appreciate hearing it from you
before he/she hears it via the grapevine.
Don't compete with the boss. Everybody wants to get ahead on the
job, of course, but if you aim to do it by demonstrating to
everybody else that you know more about the business than your
boss does, watch out. In the first place, you probably don't,
and in the second place, you'll find that no one, including your
boss's boss, appreciates a worker who constantly goes over
his/her supervisor's head or tries to show him or her up. If you
buck your boss at every turn, downgrade his confidence and
generally make his/her life miserable, be prepared to lose when
the showdown comes.
Remember bosses are human too. Chances are your boss isn't the
world's foremost authority in his or her field, so don't expect
him or her to be. He/she will make mistakes occasionally. He/she
may be abrupt or grouchy from time to time just as you are, and
when he/she really applies the heat, it's often because his/her
boss or some other authority is putting the heat or pressure on
him or her. You'll probably never find the perfect boss, just as
he or she will never find the perfect employee, but in general,
you've probably got the nearest perfect boss you've ever had in
your life, and he/she undoubtedly has the most perfect employee
as well. Your ability to get along with the person you report to
can enhance your prospects at every step on the job ladder.
Fee free to use this article in its entirety provided you
include the following notice. Copyright 2001, Lighthouse CCUNIV
Publications, Ltd., Lakeville, Massachusetts, USA (except as
otherwise indicated). Lighthouse Continuing Care University is a
servicemark Lighthouse CCUNIV Publications, Ltd.
http://www.ccuniv.org