PERSONAL DEVELOPMENT

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Nine essential people management skills to thrive as a manager

10 Mar 2021

After a certain period of time within a field, you undoubtedly have the experience and technical skills to get the job done. While these skills are incredibly important to your professional development, to take the next step and become a great people manager, an entirely different set of skills must be developed too.

These additional, yet equally important, set of skills are known as ‘people management skills’, and must be honed through experience and practice.

Perkbox highlights nine essential management skills.

1. Trust
As in any relationship, trust is important, and the manager/employee relationship is no different. It is vital that managers show their employees that they trust them and this can be displayed in a number of ways.

One source of frustration for many employees is micro-management. Obviously, with years of experience behind you, you might be able to spot ways of working that could be improved for efficiency, before others see them. But by constantly watching over your teams, it could lead to you losing track of the bigger picture and annoying team members in the process.

Instead, try assigning a job, outlining the expected outcomes, allowing time for any questions and making it known that you’re there to help should there be any more questions.

As a manager, when you show your employees that you trust them, they will take ownership of their own work and only look to you for advice when they need it. Not only will this make processes more efficient for you, they will also be able to work without any interference. This helps your team to grow and be more confident within themselves – developing your employees as people and within their careers.

2. Good communication
Good communication skills are vital to being a great manager and they can be the difference between trust or uncertainty within times of change.

Communication skills encompass almost every management task; great leaders need to be able to present ideas and visions to inspire others, highlight the importance of tasks, discuss next steps with staff and get on with those around them.

By honing these skills, your employees will have greater clarity over their tasks and better transparency of the business. This, in turn, leads to greater efficiency and can also lead to higher staff retention rates.

3. Ability to motivate

Employees need to know how their individual efforts help the company in its overall goals and direction. Employees will take pride and be engaged in their work if they are aware how their efforts create an impact, regardless of how big or small their contributions are.

We all know not every task at work is thrilling – everyone has tasks they look forward to and are motivated towards, and those they dread and will put off until the last acceptable moment. These dreaded tasks are where people management skills come in.

When it comes to those less exciting tasks, you need to create reasoning or an argument as to why something needs to be done in a certain way and why it’s important – for both the individual’s and the business’s goals. To successfully create this reasoning, you should work off the emotions of your employees and what matters to them. By identifying individuals' talents, abilities, and strengths, you will find what makes your team tick.

Now use your findings as a reason to act – for example, if your employee is motivated by career development, you could frame a new project as a stepping stone for this.

4. Patience
Managing a team can be hard work at times and you might often feel like nothing is going in the right direction. While this might get frustrating, it’s vital as a manager that you maintain patience.

Although some may be born more patient than others, it’s a skill that you can develop. When a difficult situation arises or mistakes happen, keep a level head, control your emotions and act in a calm manner. Try taking a deep breath and take a couple of seconds before you respond.

By maintaining your cool, you won’t react in a way that could break trust and damage relationships. The ability to respond in an appropriate way and not fuelled by emotions will be perceived as a strong asset by others and your employees will feel comfortable to share problems with you.

5. Ability to give credit where credit is due
At some point during your working life, it’s likely that you will have been in the position where someone above you has taken credit for a task that you worked hard on and cared about. Frustrating, isn’t it? Not only does this lead to bad feelings, it also lessens the chance of you putting in that same effort again.

As a manager, knowing when and how to attribute credit and give praise to the right people is vital. It helps to build motivation and trust between you and your employees. Make sure that you know what your employees are working on, how they are spending their time and keep track of their results. When you are aware of the individual efforts of your teams, you can easily show that you see and appreciate this and give the right credit.

Recognition for hard work can be given within regular one-to-ones or by using a recognition tool. Employing a recognition tool ensures that your recognition and appreciation is seen throughout the company and allows you to celebrate the people who are putting in great work on a wider scale.

6. Problem-solving skills
What would a workplace be if problems didn’t ever arise? Problem-solving is a key part of a manager’s job. Whether it’s being able to schedule when your employees work or finding out why your annual staff turnover rate is higher this year – there are always problems to be solved.

A great manager works to identify and overcome various problems before they become bigger issues and, to do this, you need outstanding attention to detail. By spotting problems before they come to a head and identifying the root of the problem you take the pressure off your employees and those above you.

7. Accountability
At the end of the day, when you are the manager, everything comes down to you. This means you’re not just responsible for your work, you’re responsible for the work of your employees too.

Good managers hold themselves accountable when things go wrong and take little credit when things go right. When employees see their managers taking accountability for their actions, they appreciate the act and return it. When both employees and managers are taking accountability for their actions, processes run more smoothly and work is completed efficiently. Moreover, if employees know that their manager has their back, they don’t want to let them down.

8. Positivity
Attitudes are contagious and it’s up to managers to ensure that it’s a positive attitude and not a negative one spreading through the workplace.

As a manager, you need to make sure that team morale is high. Try to reduce stress and keep things fun at work through friendly competitions, such as offering an incentive for reaching a milestone or setting challenges amongst teams. You can host and reward these through recognition software to ensure that the whole team gets involved.

9. Honesty
Your employees want to grow, so you need to give them the feedback that allows them to improve. But the only way that feedback can lead to real growth, is if it is honest. This means being truthful, at both the good times, and the bad.

When giving feedback, try to understand what happened and why it happened in that way. You can then give honest, helpful feedback without being critical or negative. Not only will this show honesty and trust to your employees, it also assists with development without bringing down morale.

It’s important to remember that when you are honest with your employees, they will return the gesture – allowing you to work better together as a team.

Perkbox offers a platform to keep employees motivated and inspired.