Your current job is the one youβve dreamt of for a really long time. The benefits are great, and it pays pretty well. Yet lately, youβve noticed that youβre losing motivation and drive to go to work. You love the job, yesβbut you feel that something doesnβt sit well with your work setup and youβve grown uncomfortable working. There are many causes of why demotivation happens at work, but the most prevalent root of employee dissatisfaction is poor management. To help you see the broader view, weβve written a guide on how to differentiate a good boss from a bad boss.
Ask an employee what makes someone a bad boss and the discussion will be heated. Anger, humiliation, and disappointment will surely come to light. Whatβs difficult is that sometimes, bosses are uncertain whether or not theyβre the ones causing these emotions.Β
Good Bosses vs. Bad Bosses
What Good Bosses Do:
- Avoid gaslighting employees
- Donβt just lead, but also mentor.
- Practice constructive criticism and keep tabs on how employees feel
- Know the boundaries of work and personal life
- See opportunities when challenges and instabilities arise
- Manage plans properly, adhering to the right schedule
- Honest and attuned to the employeesβ emotional needs
- Lead by collaboration, not authority
- Recognize high-performing team members; and
- Inspire low-performing workers to do better by providing intensive, regular training.
Itβs too easy to spot good bosses, right? The real problem actually lies in conquering your demotivation by spotting the signs of bad leadership and proactively working on it. Hereβs a gist of what bad leadership looks like:
What Bad Bosses Do:
- Impose self-interest on the teamβs plans because they have the βupper handβ
- Press rules and systems without consulting members
- Roll out fresh, exciting projects only to favored employees
- Leave low-performing team members with supporting works
- Treat employees like working machines devoid of emotion and fatigue
- Micromanage tasks already assigned to workers, breeding an atmosphere of distrust
- Practice preferential treatment or βfavoritismβ
- Manage inconsistentlyβno objective or goals in leadership
- Ignore membersβ achievement and own it instead
- Shift blame to lower-rank employees to cover own mistakes
- Exercise passive leadership, opposite to micromanagement
Bad leadership affects productivity greatly. Everyone gets tired and restless from working too much. Top it with bad management and it will open a plethora of stress and shortcomings.Β
If youβre a manager, admit that first and foremost, your employees are peopleβnot machines. So, whether you think about it or not, they have lives of their own. Hereβs a fact: employees donβt have to put up with bad bosses just because their jobs pay well. So, to lead effectively, get an insight into who your employees are as people. Who knows, this may help you manage them well.Β
Further, as a leader, you must take accountability in ensuring everyone has a strong drive to achieve the companyβs goals. Letting ineffective management affect your employeesβ performances is a mistake you will definitely regret later. But, as the saying goes, itβs never too late to start again. Benefit your company by working positively with others; it will help nurture your personal growth, too.
Photo by Marl Clevenger on Unsplash