The True Cost Of Poor Management In Your Company

I have previously talked about the link between poor management and employee disengagement.
I have also talked about the worryingly widespread extent of employee disengagement, and its objective costs. I also mentioned that “the wrong managers” are a key contributor to disengagement levels in many businesses. And the consequences of poor management from those individuals can be measured in millions of dollars.


The Staggering Costs Of Management Gone Bad

In 2004, The Future Foundation surveyed more than 700 executives in seven countries worldwide to get a sense of the real cost of poor management. The results of that survey were sobering:

  • US executives were each wasting an average of an hour every day – that’s 34 days (or nearly seven full weeks) per year – cleaning up after poor performers.
  • 68% of the mistakes that employees made were never noticed by their managers.
  • In the US alone, it was costing companies $105 billion every single year to correct problems that bad management and hiring practices created.

And the costs don’t stop there. The problem with tolerating poor performance from your managers is that it pushes away your high performing employees. Not only does that contribute to brain drain in your company – it also costs a lot to replace them.

Back in 2011, the US Department of Labor estimated that the average cost of replacing an employee in the private industry was $13,996. Other experts estimate that figure to be closer to 50% of the salary of the employee you’re losing.


And remember, those figures are historical, so you’d need to adjust them for inflation to get today’s equivalent. In other words, managers who perform poorly do more than just make the employees who report to them miserable. They can also have a catastrophic effect on your business’s bottom line.

What Can You Do To Reduce Your Company’s Management-Related Losses?

Senior Communications Specialist Tatiana Beale says that the first step to avoiding the losses associated with poor management is hiring the right people in the first place.

This doesn’t mean those people need to arrive with all the skills required to be a good manager. It does, however, mean they need to understand that engagement is necessary for business success. They also need to understand how to connect with their employees on an individual level – to see employees as people, rather than robots.

Beyond this, one of the most essential attributes for a good manager is the willingness be a lifelong learner. If someone lacks a skill, you can help them to learn it – but if they have the wrong attitude, no amount of training will help them (or the people who work for them!).

The Most Important Skills Your Managers Need To Excel In

  • Effective delegation: this ensures they get the best possible results from their team by assigning the right tasks to the right people in the right way.
  • Giving feedback: this helps to keep team members motivated and engaged, and ensures that any necessary performance corrections are made.
  • Mentoring and being mentored: this helps managers to continue to develop their own skills, and ensures that they contribute to developing the skills of their team.
  • Authentic leadership: this helps managers to become great leaders – understanding the strengths and needs of their team members, and helping them to act with integrity at all times.

Ensure Your Company’s Managers Have The Skills They Need

My new book How to Make Yourself Promotable provides managers with a step-by-step framework for developing each of the essential skills I’ve mentioned above.

Or, if you’d like to offer your company’s managers more hands-on training, MetaMind offers targeted leadership training and workshops.



Edited by Nedda Chaplin 

 


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Mette Johansson

For two decades, Mette held various leadership positions within the field of Corporate Communications in multinational companies. In 2013, she decided to make a pivotal change to her life, quit her safe job in the corporate world and founded two separate businesses – in the area of investment consultancy as well as in corporate training. The values that link the two businesses are supporting growth – growth in personal development and growth in wealth.

Mette has lived, studied and worked in 11 different countries and feels very much at home in Singapore’s multicultural society.

As a business coach, she is passionate about helping others succeed in their chosen careers. She believes that the key to success is focusing on small changes that lead to big results. She is a strong believer in and walks the talk about continuous learning and the self-improvement process.

As the author of the book “How to Make Yourself Promotable”, she talks about working on the basics to make that promotion you’re yearning for happen faster. It’s targeted especially for people who have already settled into their jobs and know they want more in corporate life.

In addition to training professionals, Mette dedicates part of her time and profits to charity. She is deeply involved in providing young generations in lesser-developed countries the soft skills needed to succeed in life as well as education.

Today, Mette Johansson invites corporations and individuals alike to proliferate Authentic Leadership with the 7-step process to “Unmask The Leader Within™”. This 7-step journey has the power to transform entire organisations, unleashing true leadership potential through value-based management, embracing visions, values and purposes, and promoting human leadership principles.

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