By Kai Rambow
At the end of conducting a communication  and management program, a  young military leader wanted some strategies on how to deal with one of  his superiors. Apparently this particular superior officer loved saying,  "Well I had to deal with bad superiors. That's how you'll have to earn  your rank too. This is the military. You'll just have to suck it up."
While  this happened in the military, I've heard similar comments in business  as well. In each instance, it reflects the first failures of leadership.
Failure   #1 - "I had bad managers, so should you."
Everywhere  people are looking for good leaders. Unfortunately they are hard to  find. Really good managers and leaders learn from bad ones as to what  not to do.
The notion that one learns from bad experience is often  over rated. The reality is most people who have a bad boss just hate  going to work and are not as productive as they could be. Bad management  and bad leadership simply gets in the way of getting work done.
If  you have any doubt about this, I have yet to meet a parent who would  want their children to experience their trials and tribulations growing  up. Most parents want their children to have a good experience growing  up. Most managers should want their subordinates to have a good,  productive day at work.
Failure #2 - "I'm lazy."
The  only way someone becomes a good manager or leader is to work on it.  There is an old expression, "If you're green, you're growing. If you're  ripe, you're rotting." True professionals, regardless of their chosen  profession, are constantly learning and growing. The only reason someone  doesn't is he or she is lazy.
Developing one's skills and  abilities as manager requires work. Not bothering to do anything is the  easy, the lazy way out. Anyone can do nothing.
Lazy managers cost  organizations money. Professional speaker Darren Jacklin's mantra has  been for years, "People don't quit their jobs, they quit their  managers." A company's best employees are usually the ones to quit  first.
Failure #3 - "I'm a manager. Hear me roar."
There  are, unfortunately, too many managers who are in love with themselves.  They assume because they were hired or promoted into a position, they  must be right. The assumption is that the title makes one a leader.
Whenever   I hear someone say, "I'm a great manager," I always ask, "How do you  know?" The usual response is, "I just know." When I mention I could do a  really quick 360 degree assessment, "Oh no, that's not necessary," is  the answer.
A 360 degree assessment is a tool which  rates one's  skills and abilities. The same tool is then filled in by those who  report to or work with you. Differences between your perception of  yourself and others perception of you emerge.
Competent and  skilled managers actually look forward to these kinds of reports as an  opportunity to become better.
Being Informed is the  Beginning
If you're frustrated by your immediate  boss,  understanding their motivations or lack of motivation, can be helpful in  dealing with them. These are some of the basic failures of leadership  and management.
Now you'll be able to much more easily  identify  what is happening in your workplace or even in your everyday shopping  experiences. Observe, learn, and of course, if you're a manager use  those experiences to become a better manager and leader.
 
 
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