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Listening - The Critical Ingredient In Employee Development
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| Guest post by: Martin Haworth |
Article Overview: There are many tactics managers adopt when they are interacting with their teams. On a one-to-one basis, nothing is more important than the capacity to take the time to listen effectively...
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Free Download - Special Secrets to Micro-Managing Employee Performance By Martin Haworth |
Listening - The Critical Ingredient In Employee Development
Getting to know your people well is one of the most important activities for anyone in a management or supervisory position. Armed with good knowledge about your people, you can make effective and often rapid progress.
Taking the time to spend with them, as often as you can and as one-to-one as you can is the first step, but what do you do with that important time?
Whilst many might say that spending the time telling them about your ideas and plans for the future; the way you want them to work for you and what your expectations are would be right, there is one activity that is much more important.
Taking the time to listen to them, closely where possible, is an incredibly important behavior for any manager to demonstrate, as often as they can.
So, why does listening matter as a tool to develop your people? Well, listening is the vital tool that will make you stand out as a great manager.
It has its twists and turns that you need to practice and that will enhance it as a productive skill for you as you evolve, because listening to others creates a partnership that is much more equal than the old command and control management structures.
Within that equality, you are able to leverage the perspectives, skills and talents that cumulatively, your people will bring to your team.
This is so much more than just you.
By listening carefully, you build your relationship and you help them develop. Your people learn that they themselves are powerful contributors and that you value them.
They learn as they speak as they see you listen, because it gives them the time and confidence to process thoughts and ideas as they go.
This works for many people in itself, whilst to be fair, some prefer to consider matters for themselves in their own time, yet with the time you've given them and that free space to air their thoughts, they will have a head start when they start to think through issues for themselves.
Listening shows them that you take them seriously and that their contribution makes a difference.
Whilst this might seem pretty much a given, you will be amazed at how many employees feel that they don't matter and that 'nobody ever listens'.
Even though you think you might have it right, there's always scope to expand and learn yourself - as you listen.
Article Tags: coaching, employee development, listening skills, management development
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About the Author: Martin Haworth RSS for Martin's articles - Visit Martin's website (c) 2010 Martin Haworth is a business and management coach and trainer. He is the author of Super Successful Manager!, an easy to use, step-by-step weekly development program for managers of EVERY skill level and a leadership and management trainer and coach at Coach Train Learn! Click here to visit Martin's website Receiving Thanks and Praise The View from the Other Side Stakeholder Management Skills Lobbying Key Influencers Effectively 10 Ways Easy for Managers to Empower Performance Expectations 5 Tips and 5 Questions Management Relationship Building Your Easy To Do Secret |
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