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Jan. 10th, 2006 03:58 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
[Poll #649524]
I set question #1 up as a forced choice because I suspected that, otherwise, everyone's answer would be "it depends." I'd be delighted to entertain further discussion of what it depends on, and why, in the comments section - but I also wanted people's gut reaction if they were forced to choose one or the other.
I set question #1 up as a forced choice because I suspected that, otherwise, everyone's answer would be "it depends." I'd be delighted to entertain further discussion of what it depends on, and why, in the comments section - but I also wanted people's gut reaction if they were forced to choose one or the other.
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Date: 2006-01-10 09:15 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-01-10 09:38 pm (UTC)It really depends on whether it's something that everyone hates, or something exclusive to that particular supervisor. For example, I *HATE* photocopying. I loathe it to the extent that I would rather clean a bathroom that hasn't been cleaned in a year than do photocopying. I'm actually not exaggerating. I can stand roughly 2 minutes of photocopying if there's a sheet feeder. Otherwise, no way. The ozone and dust from the copier makes me feel wheezy and nauseous, I worry about getting paper cuts (and often do get them), I can't space out and just let the thing go if I have to keep turning pages - everything about it is obnoxious and horrible to me. Most people do not feel this way about photocopying - in fact, some people I know actively enjoy it. So if I was their supervisor, asking them to do the job I loathe and they like would be a good thing.
Assuming, though, that the job is something equally hated by everyone involved in the process, then I would absolutely pick option 1: the good supervisor should not farm out a hated job on subordinates. If everyone hates the job together, the only way to get through it is if everyone works as a team to get rid of it as quickly as possible. The supervisor should be in the metaphorical trench digging along with everyone else, not sitting in a deckchair shouting advice down to the workers.
Does that help?
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Date: 2006-01-10 09:16 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-01-10 09:16 pm (UTC)When you're supervising others, there are a lot of jobs that you shouldn't do for reasons that have nothing to do with the inherent qualities of the task itself, and everything to do with your other responsibilities, the need to delegate, the need to maintain some kind of authority, and so on.
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Date: 2006-01-10 09:41 pm (UTC)Exactly what I was going to say. Also, ideally a supervisor knows how to do all the subordinates' tasks, and can jump in and help when necessary... but sometimes you hire an expert to do an expert's job. A supervisor does not need to be able to type 120 wpm in order to supervise a transcriptionist who does.
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Date: 2006-01-10 09:18 pm (UTC)In an emergency situation, I have far, far more respect for a supervisor who leaps into the trenches and pitches in than I do for a supervisor who stands on the viewing platform shouting "Dig faster! Dig harder! Go team go!"
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Date: 2006-01-10 10:24 pm (UTC)I used to feel this way. But my current boss did rise through the ranks - from the job that would become mine - and his inability to let go has been a thorn in my side for more than a decade. He still expects me to do things the way he used to do them, even though my own methods work perfectly well - and even though the job and the technology used to perform it no longer bear much resemblance to the job he was doing in my place.
Frankly, I've been happier working for managers who were professional managers, had great people and organizational skills - and little or no on-the-ground experience in the jobs of the people they're managing.
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Date: 2006-01-10 09:21 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-01-10 09:23 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2006-01-10 09:24 pm (UTC)Before I supervised a staff of 5, I was one of them. After I became manager, I made sure to learn everyone else's job. If part of a job was horrid, I would help them find a way to make it bearable. A happy staff does better work.
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Date: 2006-01-10 09:55 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-01-10 09:25 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-01-10 09:31 pm (UTC)However, part of a supervisor's job is to assign tasks, and one of the perks is being able to assign them in the way you prefer. As long as you're not assigning tasks in an unfair way (i.e. giving all the crappy stuff to one person because you don't like them), it's not unreasonable to pass off the ones you dislike.
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Date: 2006-01-10 09:31 pm (UTC)...except that really, delegation in the workplace isn't primarily about having someone else do the stuff you hate; it's about having someone else do stuff because you have other important projects that you really need to do yourself. I don't mind at all standing by the copier and babysitting it through 500 copies of an order form. But it makes more sense to have the work-study do it so that I can spend time on more specialized tasks that I really can't delegate.
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Date: 2006-01-10 09:57 pm (UTC)I've never particularly minded a supervisor invoking RHIP as long as they're upfront and fair about it. "We all hate doing this, and as the boss, I get to delegate it. Are you willing to take on this task for the time being? Or would you and Fred take turns doing it to minimize suffering? Or (if there's significant turnover) should we have each new person do the job for X months?"
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Date: 2006-01-10 09:32 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-01-10 09:34 pm (UTC)You CAN do whatever you want, but I don't think a good supervisor does that. It creates resentment and stifles the growth of employees.
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Date: 2006-01-10 09:35 pm (UTC)Special cases
Date: 2006-01-10 09:41 pm (UTC)That said, I think in most cases, a boss/manager should know how to do most things their team does, and be willing to do so sometimes.
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Date: 2006-01-10 09:42 pm (UTC)I've rarely has problems with a supervisor asking me to do something. But I have had problems with one who didn't seem to understand that the trade off for having more flexible hours, the ability to deligate tasks, and a higher paycheque, is that she also earned a lot more responsibilty.
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Date: 2006-01-10 09:45 pm (UTC)That said, I don't see anything *wrong* with delegating work that I don't enjoy or that I'm not good at to someone who enjoys it more or is better at it than I am. In other cases, there may be work that I as a supervisor am perfectly willing and able to do, but it's better for the organization if that work is delegated. (e.g. It's not the best thing for the organization for a librarian earning $50,000/year to spend time affixing labels to books when there's a technician earning $25,000/year who can do the labels and the librarian has a whole shelf full of books awaiting cataloging.) Mostly, it comes down to what the priority of the task is and who can do it most effectively in the context of what the organization needs.
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Date: 2006-01-10 09:46 pm (UTC)FWIW: i've never been a supervisor.
n,
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Date: 2006-01-10 09:48 pm (UTC)I think it's important the supervisor be willing to do things (or willing to learn how to help with them.) for all sorts of reasons, starting with "Who will make urgent choices if Supervisee is out sick?" and continuing with "It generally leads to better work environments long term."
That said, it is also perfectly reasonable to delegate the bits you don't like, as long as a) either everyone shares the horribleness if all parties concerned consider it horrible and something that just has to be done or b) you hate it, but the person you're delegating it to is okay with it (maybe not their favorite task, but at least neutral about it.)
My boss, who I adore, is very good at this. He is also good at delegating to me, pretty exclusively, the things he does not like to do that I really actively enjoy. This makes me a lot more willing to do the bits I'm not so fond of.
He's also willing to chip in with whatever other stuff, when needed, although there are bits where it's much simpler just to wait until I'm back or able to look at it (when we leave it.)
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Date: 2006-01-10 09:49 pm (UTC)willing to do and like to do are different, however.
also, i think that a manager ought to be able to back their team up, should a team member get run over by a bus, however, willing to do and able to do are also different.
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Date: 2006-01-10 09:50 pm (UTC)2. Currently both. Have been both for most of the last 37 years, including all those years in uniform.
3. See list of professional military education in 1 above.
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Date: 2006-01-10 09:52 pm (UTC)My personal bit of monkey work at my old job was slapping labels on brochures, so that every piece that left our building had our name on it. Boring brain-dead work. But we had (unpaid) interns who thought they were above such things; OTOH, my boss (who had a PhD and made twice what I did) would frequently help me.
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Date: 2006-01-10 11:08 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2006-01-10 09:58 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-01-10 10:11 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2006-01-10 10:09 pm (UTC)And then, there are all the border cases. What if you're unwilling to work on Hanukkah, but your subordinate isn't Jewish and totally doesn't care? What if you're unwilling to make phone calls because of a strange phobia about phone calls, but your subordinate is totally okay with phones?
So yes, I think it depends.
Also, does, "Willing to do," mean, "Willing to do if there were nobody else available to do it but it had to be done"?
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Date: 2006-01-10 10:11 pm (UTC)However, I do think that supervisors should generally be *able* to do their subordinates' work. The store supervisor who can't work a cash register, the librarian who can't check out a book -- that's annoying and in a way undermines their authority. I think supervisors can manage people better when they know what it's like to do the job, and I always respect somebody who's willing to get their hands dirty.
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Date: 2006-01-10 10:31 pm (UTC)Unwillingness to touch a task because you don't like it, though, ecch.
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Date: 2006-01-10 10:20 pm (UTC)I do believe that supervisors should be *willing* (and preferably able) to do 'most everything, but I also know that their own jobs have an entirely different set of demands that may make them unable to do a given thing at a given time. In which case I see nothing wrong with the supervisor delegating what zie least likes doing and focusing on the things that (a) zie must do and (b) zie prefers to do.
In an ideal workplace, this would be an occasional thing, and when the supervisor had more time/fewer demands zie would pitch in and do the scutwork right alongside everyone else.
Hm. I'm suddenly reminded that I do not work in an ideal workplace...
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Date: 2006-01-10 10:33 pm (UTC)Hard scientists always hire research assistants and techs and even post-docs to do the ickier parts of their experiments. In my field, too, it's well known that when you're a graduate student you do your time doing your own and other people's transcription (a task that takes a lot of training but very little brainpower, and it's dull, dull, dull), for example, and then when you're a faculty member, you get to foist that off on other people presuming you're good enough that someone gives you the money to hire them.
I don't know--do we have it entirely wrong? I'm confused.
-J
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Date: 2006-01-11 08:32 pm (UTC)Culture plays a large part in how such things are seen. In my later comments I say I'm not really allowed to pitch on on certain types of work.
So my passing that off isn't seen as wrong (and if I'm someplace where I'm low on the totem pole, or outside of garrison, things are different).
And the folks I work with all understand that, so there isn't any real friction.
TK