The Top Challenge Facing Managers Today: Placing as much value on people as we do technology
Jun 29th 2009 · by Roxanne Allaire
“We must learn to balance the material wonders of technology with the spiritual demands of our human race.” ~ John Naisbitt
Management over the last few years has changed dramatically. The impact of downsizing, M&As and advanced technology take huge tolls on our human capital. And although technology improves effectiveness, efficiency and success, we cannot allow it to hoard our focus altogether.
Contemporary managers must be proficient in interpersonal skills and human development – applying their people knowledge to catch up with their technical knowledge. As technology improves, change accelerates, and people increasingly need talented managers who can help lead them through this business environment toward improved results.
Today’s workforce demands more from their managers and company.
The reality is that people desire fulfillment, recognition and appreciation for their achievements at work (as in life). We want to feel valued and like we are having an impact. We need to know and understand we are appreciated and respected. When we do, we perform at our best and generate results – first for ourselves, and then for our manager and company. Being consumed by technology and change, managers are at risk of forgetting these basic human truths!
Managers need to make for an environment where motivation and inspiration prosper! Here are a few suggestions for managers to apply “people knowledge” and create a prosperous environment alongside technology:
Champion a corporate or team culture.
A strong culture creates a sense of pride, identity and belonging. Because most people desire to achieve and accomplish, a company culture fosters positive attitudes and personal performance. If your company doesn’t have a culture, consider creating a “team culture” for you and your reports to uphold. Together with your team, identify your core values and your purpose for why you come to work everyday. This is a great opportunity to demonstrate your leadership to the company and genuinely lead your team.
Understand, support, and discuss your people’s personal and professional goals.
Try as we may to keep our business and personal life separate, we will fail time and again. Having a job is very personal! Furthermore, we bring our ‘person’ to work with us everyday. To ignore our personal goals, needs, and desires at work (or pretend to) is absolutely ridiculous. It works the other way around as well. If we are unhappy at work, we harbor those feelings and carry them home with us to our friends and families. Life, in general, does not feel so good. As human beings our performance at home and at work are lack-luster.
Here is yet another opportunity for effective managers to apply their people knowledge. Show your people you care about all of their goals as they pertain to their personal and business life. This will show that you care about them as a person – with unique skills and abilities- and that you value what they uniquely offer the company. Discuss their progress and learn how you can be of service for helping them achieve their goals.
Provide random, non-monetary rewards for performance
Think about a system you would enjoy implementing to ensure you regularily recognize someone on your team. Be as creative as you like, but simply scheduling a phone call one day per month to recognize one of the people you mange and directly tell them what you valued most about their performance that month will prove a highly effective people strategy. It will also improve the habit of doing so, and you will do it more often. Why stop?
There’s nothing like the performance of a happy employee. If managers don’t have people knowledge or show personal leadership to apply it, they simply aren’t going to be effective at getting results for the company. They are not managers at all.
Technology aside, don’t forget the people!
What mechanisms have you put into place to apply people knowledge for improved results in your company?
2 Responses to “The Top Challenge Facing Managers Today: Placing as much value on people as we do technology”
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Roxanne Allaire is a Strategic Life-Business Coach and President at Roxx Consulting Service Inc. She helps high technology-focused professionals face growing business complexity head on by helping them improve their effectiveness as CEOs, Managers, Sales Specialsits, individuals, and as leaders! Roxanne can be reached directly at Roxx Consulting Service at 866.455.5552.










I’m re-reading Steven M. R. Covey’s “The Speed of Trust” and he says a lot of the same things. But he starts with the manager him/herself (four cores of trust) and works out from there. Slapping a fresh coat of “people skills” on the same old motivations and attitudes isn’t going to cut it.
The only thing worse than only caring about yourself and the bottom line is only caring about yourself and the bottom line and PRETENDING to care about your resources (oops, people) in order to advance yourself and the bottom line.
To all points addressed, agreed. The reciprocal to this piece is the need for employees / workers / team members to endeavor to develop their personal professional skills. For too long we have indulged a deterioration in personal professional skills. The ability to self-manage, properly allocate time, dress and generally groom appropriately, develop platform skills, drastically improve writing skills, etc. These are all skills that employees are obliged to develop on their own because these are THEIR skills which they can market, if not with their current employer then with the next.