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Qualities of a GOOD supervisor

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Qualities of a GOOD supervisor Self-confidence, no ego problem Show confidence in staff Give credit to staff Admit mistakes do not become defensive and explain ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Qualities of a GOOD supervisor


1
Qualities of a GOOD supervisor
  • Self-confidence, no ego problem
  • Show confidence in staff
  • Give credit to staff
  • Admit mistakes do not become defensive and
    explain away mistakes
  • Admit you dont know everything
  • Ask staff to find out, but offer assistance
  • Personnel matters YOU find out

2
Good supervisor (contd)
  • Apologize to staff if apology is warranted
  • Put things in perspective big picture
  • Openness open to suggestions
  • Openness keep office door open, unless
  • Good organization multiple tasks, projects
  • Positive attitude, language use challenge not
    problem

3
Good supervisor (contd)
  • Be caring and appreciative of staff efforts do
    not say You are paid to do the work
  • Supportive attention to individual needs,
    family concerns let staff take breaks before
    you, unless situation requires otherwise
  • Praise in public, reprimand in private
  • Be fair treat all equally
  • Share information (do not use information as
    power)

4
Good supervisor (contd)
  • Suggest, do not command
  • Explain necessary, mandated changes
  • Be a risk taker (keep management informed) in new
    ways of doing things
  • Be consistent to extent possible document your
    decisions
  • Give breathing room to staff accept some
    variations in outcome

5
Good supervisor (contd)
  • Deal with problem employee promptly so that
    others do not think s/he is getting away with it
  • Do not micromanage trust employees
  • Use modes of communication verbal (personal),
    written (policies and procedures), but all should
    be discussed verbally in meeting

6
Supervisor ultimately ...
  • Work gets done without constant supervision
  • Upside-down pyramid supervisor supports staff
    who get the work done on daily basis (effective
    work process is in place)
  • Supervisor is no longer needed

7
New supervisor promoted within
  • Boss to former co-workers
  • Do not act like boss all of a sudden
  • Ease into supervisory role
  • Talk to staff individually, as a group
  • You need them more than they need you

8
New supervisor hired from outside
  • Learn culture of the organization
  • Learn about informal groups, personal dynamics
  • Get to know your boss, peers, your staff
  • Get history of unit procedures from staff
  • Get history of institutional procedures from boss
    and peers

9
Giesecke (2001) suggests
  • Stage One (3-6 months)
  • Time of learning and assessment
  • Learn about units responsibilities, services
  • Learn about budgets, resources available to you
  • Learn how organization itself functions
  • Know members of unit strengths, weaknesses
  • No major changes fix obvious problems
  • Address well-understood concerns

10
Giesecke suggests (contd)
  • Stage Two (4-11 months)
  • In-depth learning about the unit
  • Feel more part of the organization
  • Stage Three (11-18 months)
  • Introduce major new ideas and efforts
  • Implementation over long time

11
Giesecke suggests (contd)
  • Stage Four (18-24 months)
  • Consolidate changes you introduced
  • Bring stability to the unit
  • New procedures are routines by now

12
As a new supervisor
  • Meet with your supervisor to find out
  • His/her objectives for your unit
  • Units objectives in organizational context
  • Expectations, special projects
  • How he/she communicates with you, staff
  • Meetings for you to attend
  • Reports, statistics expected

13
Meet with your boss (contd)
  • Budget cycle, your role in budget preparation
  • Processing equipment/purchase requests
  • Evaluation process yours, your staffs
  • Whether s/he talked to your staff prior to your
    appointment about what to expect from you

14
As a new supervisor (contd)
  • Meet with your staff to find out
  • Each persons responsibilities
  • His/her perception of top priorities
  • His/her concerns you should know about
  • His/her expectations from you
  • Workload reasonable?
  • Areas of interest to pursue?

15
Meet with your staff (contd)
  • Position description up-to-date?
  • Equipment needs, skills updates
  • Resources s/he is responsible for
  • Concerns about other units
  • Recommend any changes?
  • Anything else?

16
As a new supervisor (contd)
  • Get to know peers
  • Responsibilities of their units
  • Interactions between their units and yours
  • Their concerns about your unit
  • Strengths/weaknesses of your unit
  • How do they want units to interact?
  • Interaction with your boss

17
Remember as a supervisor
  • Nothing that we do is a matter of life and death
  • Dont take yourself too seriously
  • Dont think you are so important as to be
    irreplaceable
  • Relax and trust your staff
  • You need them more than they need you

18
Management styles
  • Bureaucratic emphasis on rules, regulations
    go by the book
  • Autocratic arbitrary keep subordinate
    dependent on manager for instructions
  • Democratic we approach team concept
    leaders of the pack requires well-trained
    staff
  • Spectator free-reign manager is facilitator
    requires highly skilled expert staff

19
Concepts
  • Authority right to give orders/instructions to
    others and use organizational resources
  • Power ability to influence others to do what
    you want them to do (without coercion)
  • Responsibility obligation to carry out all
    duties to the best of ones ability
  • Accountability having to answer to someone for
    your actions or failure to act

20
Source of power
  • Position ( authority of position) power to
    instruct, punish and reward
  • Personality traits and character e.g.,
    friendly, easy to talk to, explains things well,
    not uptight
  • Expertise credential, training/education S/he
    knows what s/he is talking about
  • Connection with others in organization inside
    knowledge information about whats going on

21
Terminology
  • Supervisor (a type of manager) of people, of
    work process
  • Manager focus on results of work processes may
    oversee multiple work processes
  • Leader focus on the big picture
  • One may play all three roles

22
Motivation Abraham Maslow
  • Maslow (1908-1970)
  • A Theory of Motivation, Psychological Review
    (1943)
  • Motivation and Personality (1954)

23
Hierarchy of needs (Maslow)
  • Physiological hunger, thirst, shelter, etc.
  • Safety security, protection from harm
  • Love (belongingness, social needs) affection,
    belonging, acceptance, friendship
  • Esteem internal (self-respect, achievement)
    external (status, recognition, attention)
  • Self-actualization cultivate ones potentials

24
Hierarchy of needs in workplace
  • Physiological adequate pay (living wage),
    rest periods
  • Safety safe working conditions, union
    protection, free of harassment, ergonomics
  • Social interaction with coworkers social
    activities in workplace
  • Esteem status, merit awards, opportunities for
    advancement

25
Hierarchy (contd)
  • Self-actualization needs
  • participation in strategic planning
  • involvement in planning your work
  • freedom to make decisions affecting your work
  • opportunities for growth and development
  • creative work to perform
  • satisfaction of job well done

26
Motivation to remember
  • Motivational speaker does not motivate a person
  • Words do not motivate a person
  • Reward and punishment not effective tools
  • Its how ones expectations are met in workplace
    that determines ones motivation (Is this place
    worth my effort?)
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