What defines a "great manager" in your respective professional careers?
What defines a "great manager" in your respective professional careers?
Not my manger (thankfully), but I worked near people whose manger did this. I’d be working when suddenly I’d hear the guy yelling and screaming at some employee who did something wrong. Even if the guy did something incorrect, the proper managerial response is never screaming at them in a public location.
The manger is still working for my company, but I’m not near his employees anymore. I’m not sure if age mellowed him out or if he still screams at his employees.
I’m in IT also and agree. On the other hand, you don’t want a manager who manages too much. I had a manager who would try to micromanage every aspect of a project. He would constantly stop by with suggestions about how to improve the projects I was working on. It would have been fine if he had good insights, but his ideas never worked out.
He would also come to me and declare that my top priority is now some weird project that he thought up which had no buy in from anyone else. (These would quickly die after launch or fizzle out when he got another great idea.)
I recently lost a manager to cancer. He was the best boss I ever had.
He was a guy whom you could go into his office and talk about anything. He’s give you advice on retirement (lol, I know), personal life advice, kick your ass into gear (if you wanted that.)
He listened, and it didn’t matter if it was about work or life. He was on your side and even if you were wrong, he’d tell you why in a meaningful way that wasn’t mean or pushy.
It’s almost hard to even explain in words, but he was a great boss.
Miss you t-dawg.
This reminded me of my manager from a couple years ago. They too had cancer, and decided that they’d become a workaholic rather than take the time off that they needed. It also meant they expected everyone they worked with, to work just as hard. With just as many long hours as them.
It was a living nightmare, and ended very poorly.
Don’t yell or be abusive. And yknow generally not a dick…
Big plus if they’re not toxic af, and kinda understand shiz I deal with being audhd. Like I’d love not to need special shiz but I do. But also fights for us to have better wages. Shiz most bosses don’t do in one way or another lol
One of my best managers did just that. He would tell me what my priorities were and then get out of my way, shielding me from any upper level politics as much as he could.
Sometimes the politics would seep through despite his best efforts, but he’d minimize it as much as humanely possible.
that made you feel comfortable working there and providing solutions for the organization as a whole?
LOL this has never happened to me.
Recently lost a manager. Actually, his boss got removed as well. It was like having two Christmases in two weeks. Now our shop and department operate much smoother and happier.
My manager never should have been hired. When I was informed they got the job I thought it was a joke. But I tried to help get the guy on his feet and make him a success, but he just didn’t have the brainpan for the job. It was beyond obvious. By the end, he was having constant outbursts, telling everyone to eat his dick, getting successive suspensions, blatantly lying to HR when there was irrefutable evidence against his statements.
When he put his two weeks in, he told some people that he might not leave. I told him I was making it my mission to ensure that he doesn’t not walk out that door. Thankfully, he left. But, both he and his girlfriend have reapplied to an entry level position that has opened up do to someone (the person who should have been hired in the first place but because our director wanted a person he could push around in place) being promoted into his position. He was never a good worker in the first place, and his girlfriend was even worse.
Who leaves me alone.
I once had a manager, we had regular scheduled 1-on-1s (about every month). He always asked this first: is there anything you want to talk about or do you want me to talk about [corporate-related] things? I always said: No, thanks. Then we hang up. This went on for 2 years. “Sometimes we still don’t talk to this day.”
Best boss I’ve ever had.