How to Deal with Managers Who Pile It On

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Managers who fail to prioritize and focus your workload are abdicating a

responsibility they have to you. Still, partnering with your manager

will reduce your workload. Complaining will not.



The following is adapted from my book, The Simplicity Survival Handbook.

Follow up interviews have shown that people who have followed the four

steps below have a success rate of 80%, and better, in dealing with

managers who pass on too much.







Before you talk with your boss about managing your workload:

Do your homework. Know exactly which work is extraneous, how many

goals are too many, and where you think your efforts need to be

focused. Some guidelines for doing your homework, and figuring out

what’s extraneous and what’s important:

• Nobody can focus on more that three to five goals at a time.

Of the umpteen goals your manager just announced, which three do

you believe will add the most value to the company, your customers,

your team, and you?

• All work requires tools, support, training, and resources. Itemize

your entire workload. Which projects are so under-supported that

they are doomed to fail? Which projects lack true sponsorship and

commitment from key players in the organization?



By answering those two questions, you’ve identified your extraneous

workload.



Research tip: Ask for copies of whatever communication, reports,

presentations your manager presents to his bosses. Even if he hasn’t

focused your to-do’s to a critical few, the odds are that his few

priorities are in those reports! And his few need to be your few.







When you meet with your manager, acknowledge the pressures s/he must

be under. A spoonful of sugar helps the medicine go down. Be empathetic

to how important all the goals must be, and how all the work must

get done at some point.







Ask: “Can we talk about which three things should be my top focus

for the next few [days, weeks or months]?” You can succeed!

The secret…

• Pick a short timeframe, and…

• Do not ask your manager to rethink goals or workload that have

been handed down to him/her



Something like… “Hey boss, I know we’re supposed to get these 4,321

things done within the next few months, and I’d never question the

wisdom of this list (…ahem…), but I’ve got some suggestions

for which three should be my priority for the next few weeks.

Of course, (…ahem…), I’ll keep the other 4,318 moving forward

while I focus on these three.”



Or, even better

“These are the three things I’d recommend we focus on first. Make sense?

(Of course, your Pass-On-Too-Much manager will want to up your

three things to five or ten or twenty. On to Step 4…)







Keep shortening the timeframe (from months to weeks to, possibly,

days) until, as partners, you both agree: “These three.”



Don’t challenge the length of the entire list or your manager’s

inability to prioritize. Instead, just keep narrowing the timeframe…

“Boss, thanks for helping me see that there’s only 347 things that

have to get done this month. Now, can we talk about which to-do’s

need to be checked off by this Friday? …Only 47? Great!

Now, which three of those should I focus on first?”



Or, even better

“Based on our long-term objective, I think these three things need

to be done first, as a foundation for everything else. Make sense?”



Most people avoid dealing with their manager’s inability to get

focused because they don’t know how to confront the problem

without confronting the person. By continually narrowing the

timeframe, you can get your manager to prioritize without going

toe-to-toe. It’s an indirect approach that some have called the

Nibble Method: taking small steps to get priorities set.



The upside is that you avoid confrontation. The downside: you’ll

have to continually go back for another nibble of focus. That’s

why some prefer a more direct method…



“Hey boss, I can’t do 47 things this week. I really need you to

help me prioritize this list.” …If that works for you, go for it!



Both approaches yield the same thing — less work, greater focus.

The only difference is where you spend your energy.


The post How to Deal with Managers Who Pile It On appeared first on Simpler Work.

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Published on June 15, 2016 11:37
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