Article

Overcoming The Fear Of Delegation

Topic: LeadershipFeaturing Scott CiborowskiPublished February 18, 2013

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Ask most successful leaders to pinpoint an event that was pivotal to their career success, and they are likely to say,' it was the time my manager gave me a project that felt way beyond my ability'. Over and over again, leaders attribute their own career success to someone who trusted them enough to delegate a career-changing project. For business leaders, there are few responsibilities more important than developing people. Yet, many managers struggle with delegation - resulting in a team that is often disengaged and under productive. Why is that? There is no one easy answer. Delegation, like many issues in business, is full of complexity. Certain business cultures create environments that make people believe it too risky to delegate. Some people are working with teams that may not have the necessary skills to succeed at a delegated project. Then, there are just some personality types that are hardwired to avoid delegation. "The good news is that delegation is a skill set that can be learned and mastered," says David Finley, a Senior Consultant at TrainSmart. Finley is an expert in the DiSC Assessment - a personality tool that gauges things like work habits, management potential, conflict resolution, and leadership style including one's strengths and weaknesses when it comes to delegation. According to Finley, there are definitely some styles that have a natural bias against delegation. Often they believe that no one else can do the job the way it needs to be done, or they are convinced no one else can do in a timely manner. Some personality types prefer to take all the credit for good work done by the team. "These personality types," says Finley," fool themselves into thinking it’s easier to do the job themselves." Finley stresses the first step in learning how to improve your delegation skills is to understand your own behavior in normal, slightly stressful and major stressful situations. "Your behavior changes depending on the stress level. Once you have a handle on your own behavior you can begin taking advantage of tools to help delegate to team members," Finley explained. Once you have a handle on your own strengths and weaknesses when it comes to delegating, it's important to extend trust to team workers because trust is what drives delegation. Too often, says Finley, these personality types will find one or two people that they trust and then rely on that exclusive group for all projects. One way to extend trust to other people is to complete a delegation checklist DELEGATION CHECKLIST 1. Is this a task that can be delegated to someone else? 2. List all the people who have the skills to do the task 3. If there are multiple candidates, create a PMI Chart to help with the decision. 4. Does the task provide an opportunity to grow and develop another person's skills? 5. Do you have enough time to provide the necessary support to answer questions and establish reviews for key project milestones? 6. Remember, you can either tell someone what to do, or how to do it, but never both.

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