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In praise of micromanagement

2013-10-05 04:00:12

Sydney Finkelstein

What do Steve Jobs, Mickey Drexler, and Jeff Bezos all have in common?

They are all builders of giant brands, from Apple to J Crew, to Amazon? Yes,

but there s something else you might not realise they have in common, and it is

directly related to their success each is (or was) an unmitigated,

unapologetic, micromanager!

What gives? How could the bane of many of our performance reviews actually be a

good thing? I can t tell you how many leadership experts have listed

micromanagement as Public Enemy No. 1. But, when strategically applied, it can

be a powerful tool not only to get things done, but to develop talent as well.

Why would you micromanage anyway? Here s a bad answer: because you don t trust

anyone else to do his or her job as well as you could. A better answer: because

you are so passionate about what you are doing that you are always striving to

make it better. The best answer: because you have a vision for what your

business should look like and you are prepared to back up that vision with

action.

The modern executive is taught in business schools and in many jobs that to

manage people effectively is to delegate, and then get out of the way. I teach

our masters of business administration students at Dartmouth s Tuck School of

Business much the same thing, except for one caveat: Delegating is only step

one. It s not delegate and forget; it must be delegate and be intimately

involved with what happens next.

You don t want to, and can t, do everyone else s job for them. But why would

you walk away, as so many managers do? When you have deep passion for your

business, your job, you also have a responsibility to be involved with how your

vision is executed. You will likely step on some toes along the way and you may

go too far on occasion, but which is worse: occasionally butting in on a

subordinate s work to make a point, or not providing real-time feedback to help

that subordinate grow and excel?

The dichotomy between delegation and micromanagement is false and misleading.

It s not one or the other, it s both! And if that doesn t sound so easy to do,

well, welcome to the big leagues of leadership.

Being able to handle, and indeed thrive, by doing two opposing things at once

is a hallmark of great leaders. Such ambidextrous leaders intensely execute

today s game plan while sowing the seeds for what comes next. They are deeply

analytical at the same time as they are looking for creative solutions to

business challenges. And they are hands-on delegators. It s a paradox only for

the tired and the timid.

And now the fine print.

Micromanagers must be selective. You can t delve into the details of

everything, and in fact superstar micromanagers don t. Mickey Drexler might

interview every single corporate hire and more at the $2.2 billion J Crew,

but he lets other leaders manage the IT function. Steve Jobs was intimately

involved with each product the company designed, and was even famously involved

in designing the glass stairs at the Apple stores. But financial and

operational issues were delegated to second-in-command and current Apple chief

executive officer Tim Cook.

Even Jeff Immelt, CEO of blue-chip industrial conglomerate General Electric, is

a selective micromanager. For him, intimately knowing the top 500 executives in

the company, what their performance and potential looks like and what they need

to develop further, are always at the top of his agenda. That s not a bad role

model for any manager, at any level, come to think of it.

One key: micromanagers must be experts. What could be worse than a manager

immersed in the details who really doesn t know his stuff? Sam Walton spent

most of his time flying in his little airplane to visit stores, deepening his

knowledge as he went. When he had something to say, there was deep credibility

behind it.

There is a natural limit to when micromanagement makes sense. Once a job, or a

company, becomes too complex or too big, it becomes that much harder to gain

the visibility and time you need to stay expert. This is a real danger zone for

would-be micromanagers. You just don t have enough time in the day, or energy

in the belly, to keep up at the pace that is necessary. Either you embrace the

principle of selective micromanagement, or you go down trying to do what cannot

be done.

Finally, it takes a strong, trusted team to be a micromanager. Could Steve Jobs

have spent weeks with the iPhone design team if there was no one else to mind

the store? If not for Tim Cook, perhaps the legend of Steve Jobs would not have

turned out quite so well.

The good news is that the best micromanagers are often the best talent

developers. Their attention to detail, their intimate knowledge of the business

and their deep involvement in what s going on actually enables more, not less,

delegation. Their position in the centre of the work creates an opportunity for

micromanagers to challenge subordinates with big assignments precisely because

they are informed. Delegating big does not carry the same degree of risk that

it might for the typical manager.

And so, the final paradox of the micromanager is this: micromanagers actually

help other people get better at what they do.