{"id":3895,"date":"1973-06-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1973-06-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/june-1973-vol-54-no-managers-are-made\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T00:35:38","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T00:35:38","slug":"june-1973-vol-54-no-managers-are-made","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/june-1973-vol-54-no-managers-are-made\/","title":{"rendered":"June 1973 &#8211; VOL. 54, No. &#8211; Managers are Made"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">If it depended solely upon heredity                     to produce managers the business world would be running a                     lot of &#8220;Career opportunities&#8221; advertisements. A person may                     be born with a bossy disposition, but many other qualities                     must be added by study and work.<\/p>\n<p> Managers are made. They acquire a substantial background                     of knowledge in school; they learn the techniques and absorb                     the atmosphere in business college; perhaps they go on to                     take a management course in university; and then they reach                     for the bottom rung on the ladder and keep on learning step                     by step.<\/p>\n<p>Here is the manager&#8217;s job: within the framework of the policy                     of his firm, and within the limits of his budget, to get the                     work of his department or branch done in gear with the work                     of other sections of the business so as to produce goods or                     services profitably.<\/p>\n<p>The managerial functions are basically the same no matter                     what the line of business is. The principles governing management                     apply in a small office or in a big factory; only the volume                     of the work differs. The commodities made by a firm may be                     radically different from those made by the last company where                     a man was manager, but that is not material: it is his management                     skill that is his essential quality.<\/p>\n<p>Some advisers say that a person should study what was done                     by the people in <em>Who&#8217;s Who <\/em>to further their careers.                     That is good advice so long as it is applied to the spirit,                     the enterprise, and the courage that are needed; but the carrying                     of imitation of methods and procedures into practice is a                     delicate operation.<\/p>\n<p>Izaak Walton tells in his <em>Compleat Angler <\/em>about the                     preacher who borrowed a sermon that had gained great commendation                     for the man who composed and preached it. The borrower preached                     it word for word, but his effort brought him only adverse                     criticism. He had the words, but not the technique of saying                     them so as to reach the minds and move the spirits of the                     people. A manager, similarly, has to be himself, expressing                     his own talent, and not a copier of other men&#8217;s successes.<\/p>\n<p>Thus, a manager makes himself according to a plan that includes                     not only the techniques of administration but all the special                     gifts he has. He may, for example, be a specialist in a narrow                     field, or he may be an integrator of specialists who brings                     the broad field of their activities into productive channels.<\/p>\n<p>There are many qualities contributing to the efficiency                     of a manager, some of them not measurable on graphs and charts.                     A few may be mentioned because they seem to be of universal                     application: a strong feeling of responsibility, moral courage,                     the will to push things through against odds, good judgment,                     quick thought leading to effective action, thoroughness in                     everything he does, zeal for his company and enterprise in                     his search for betterment.<\/p>\n<p>The manager is not principally concerned with things, but                     with people. He may be rated by the quantity and quality of                     goods his office or factory sends through the shipping door,                     but it is people ( his workers ( who get the goods to the                     door.<\/p>\n<p>Every manager needs to keep a sharp watch on the performance                     of his people. He must develop some of the attributes of King                     Argus, who had a hundred eyes of which only two were allowed                     to be asleep at the same time.<\/p>\n<h3>Pin-point your objective<\/h3>\n<p>Training for management is not a once-in-a-lifetime affair.                     Knowledge becomes obsolete quickly. One must be constantly                     in quest of new data and viewpoints.<\/p>\n<p>The thing to do is to check at periodic intervals the ability,                     knowledge, or attitude in which you detect weakness, and then                     apply yourself to bettering it. Improvement of managerial                     skill will not be fast if you start at the &#8220;A&#8221; page of the                     encyclopedia determined to work steadily through to the last                     of the &#8220;Z&#8221; pages. Your problem may be under &#8220;C&#8221; for communication,                     or &#8220;L&#8221; for leadership.<\/p>\n<p>Personal fulfillment is the theme underlying all your search                     for betterment. Work satisfaction is an individual thing.                     Bertrand Russell expressed the opinion: &#8220;The most intelligent                     young people in Western countries tend to have that kind of                     unhappiness that comes of finding no adequate employment for                     their best talents.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Your job and you are unique. Many people may be listed in                     the census as doing the same kind of work as you, but you                     are successful according to the measure in which you put the                     stamp of your spirit and personality and talent on what you                     do.<\/p>\n<p>Having a managerial position requires you to set goals not                     only for yourself but for your department. These need to be                     constantly revised to meet new circumstances and new standards.                     You need a feed-back system to keep you alert to the need                     for these changes, and a continuing inflow of knowledge to                     prepare you to cope with them.<\/p>\n<p>Much of a manager&#8217;s work consists in plodding. What the                     public mistakes for intuitive brilliance is the result of                     thorough, painstaking research.<\/p>\n<p>This provides the sinews of leadership. To inspire collaboration                     from a position of strength based on knowledge is more effective,                     and more pleasant, than to dictate from a position of weakness.<\/p>\n<p>When you are in charge, take charge. Let there be no doubt                     about your determination to do the job for which you are responsible.                     Seeking co-operation does not mean that you will tolerate                     wilful disobedience of your instructions. But set a fine example.                     Thackeray tells us in his <em>Book of Snobs <\/em>about the man                     whose only good action in his life was the involuntary one                     of giving an example to be avoided.<\/p>\n<p>Without doubt, gaining effective co-operation is one of                     the essential tasks faced by a manager. He must do patient,                     pedestrian work to learn and apply the principles of earning                     participation in turning out a high class product. This requires                     that he give the team a definite mutual objective.<\/p>\n<p>Team-work is not fairly represented by the picture of a                     crew of workers under discipline and direction. It is achieved                     through voluntary effort pooled in a common cause. Eric Shipton,                     leader of the 1937 Mount Everest expedition, said: &#8220;You cannot                     argue an expedition into running smoothly, nor avoid a competitive                     feeling by appealing for the &#8216;team spirit&#8217;.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Ideas and problems<\/h3>\n<p>While training others you will continue to increase your                     own knowledge.<\/p>\n<p>Having picked up some new ideas, mix them with your old                     ideas and move them around. This is an excellent way to keep                     out of a mental rut. Some day when there is nothing pressing                     to handle, look around your office and your work-room in search                     of something that might be improved. Have a pad of paper handy                     on which to make notes. Choose one of your thoughts and treat                     it as a problem. What do you know about it? What solutions                     have been tried and why did they fail to solve the problem?                     Then write down all the ideas that come to mind about other                     ways of approaching the problem. Evaluate them, throwing some                     out as being impracticable, but writing down the facts upon                     which you base your judgment. Set others aside as being possible                     except for this or that stated reason. They may be useful                     to combine with new ideas later on. Those that are left are                     worth your consideration&#8230; and you have had an exercise in                     creative power.<\/p>\n<p>Ideas that are to be used in management must stand logical                     analysis. Theories based upon inadequate or untested data                     will not work, and they cause a great deal of upset when a                     manager imposes them on workers.<\/p>\n<p>Learning to manage the facts is as important as learning                     to manage a business. Bring them into some sort of order in                     your mind. Pursue your solution by asking questions designed                     to test the strengths and weaknesses of various facts. When                     you get to the heart of things you may find that the problem                     does not centre where you thought it did and must be redefined.<\/p>\n<h3>Positive thinking<\/h3>\n<p>The manager who is determined to make his job creative needs                     to take always a positive approach to situations and challenges.                     Negative attitudes are disastrous to the person seeking to                     improve his management ability.<\/p>\n<p>The person who has a label ready for everything and automatically                     files suggestions under it is also handicapping himself. He                     has ceased to bother to observe. He has not learned that to                     follow &#8220;precedents&#8221; slavishly is a beggarly way to live. It                     eliminates the thinking and invention and expansion that mark                     the person who is living fully.<\/p>\n<p>Some people rest easy because ten years ago they took stock                     and decided that they would accept the fact of change in their                     environment and techniques and adapt themselves to it. But                     the changes have brought changes in the laws governing change.                     A reassessment is needed, because change today is faster,                     more radical and affects wider areas.<\/p>\n<p>All change, of course, cannot be labelled &#8220;progress&#8221;. One                     must discriminate. Progress is simply defined: it is change                     from worse to better. A manager is a person who presses forward                     on the road of improvement. He is not a direction sign, planted                     immovably in one place. He needs to show that he is capable                     of leading the way to the place to which he is directing others.<\/p>\n<p>Some persons may feel sorry for the manager who is constantly                     alert and active because he is &#8220;under pressure&#8221;, but what                     does that mean? Simply that he has a lot of things to get                     done by a certain date. The solution is to start managing                     time. List the things that have to be done. Eliminate what                     you can by delegating the jobs to others. Remove all items                     that do not promise a return in keeping with the effort they                     will consume. Set priorities for the remaining items. Schedule                     them. Do them.<\/p>\n<p>A plan is needed, particularly by the person who is contemplating                     doing new things. It is easier to step over hitherto tabooed                     boundaries with a plan based on observation and study than                     into unmapped territory.<\/p>\n<p>Another sort of plan is the personal plan. A manager will                     find that if he prepares operating instructions for himself                     it will clear his mind, eliminate irrelevancies, and focus                     attention where it is needed. Some of the points to be covered                     are: the nature of his work and his functions: responsibilities                     to his senior, to his co-workers, and to the public he serves.<\/p>\n<p>This survey will place the manager on the solid ground of                     knowing where he stands in his working environment. Then he                     will analyse his load of responsibility within this network.<\/p>\n<p>The aspiring manager will find it useful to have a date                     file as well as a job schedule. He will dictate or write notes                     to himself as reminders to check projects for their progress.                     His secretary will put these in dated folders and will give                     him the current notes every morning.<\/p>\n<h3>The big task<\/h3>\n<p>In a world of accelerating change the mechanics of business                     may change month by month, but the principles of management                     remain.<\/p>\n<p>Every manager must be a decision-maker, a planner, an organizer,                     and a person who gets things done. He needs to be a man of                     vision, to see opportunities for the promotion of business.                     He must exercise control over production, and be acquainted                     with the policy of his firm, its programme and its possibilities.                     He is accountable for results in all these areas.<\/p>\n<p>Towering high above all other qualities in importance is                     his relationship with people. No person, however gifted or                     powerful, can attain or maintain a top position in business                     or politics without the concurrence of other people&#8217;s endeavours.                     When Cicero said this two thousand years ago he was laying                     down a primary principle for today&#8217;s manager.<\/p>\n<p>To have influence with people rather than to exert power                     over them is the happiest way for a manager to discharge his                     duties. He has empathy, the skill not only to see what is                     on the surface of another person&#8217;s action, good or bad, but                     to feel what is behind it, its cause and its purpose.<\/p>\n<p>Human relations with workers requires that the manager pay                     attention to their suggestions and complaints.<\/p>\n<p>When a worker approaches you with a complaint, a request,                     or an idea, treat the occasion as an important one ( as, indeed,                     it is to him. Do not allow distractions; tell your secretary                     to take telephone calls, and close your door. When a worker                     has a grievance it is what is in his mind that is important,                     so listen attentively and sympathetically. The grievance may                     be trivial or unjustified, but his thinking about it irritates                     him and affects his work adversely, so it must be dealt with.<\/p>\n<p>Even the routine of issuing orders is worthy of attention.                     There are many ways of giving instructions, but one of them                     is the best way in any given situation. In a well-functioning                     factory or office no substitute has been found for making                     the workers feel part and parcel of the firm. They will accomplish                     more than they would under a work order dictatorially given.<\/p>\n<h3>Someone special<\/h3>\n<p>The manager needs to know and allow for the foibles and                     frailties and imperfections of other people while being careful                     to avoid developing weaknesses in his own life. He will study                     to give his workers the same sense of dignity in their work                     as he has in his.<\/p>\n<p>What does a worker want? A chance to use his skills, to                     be creative, and to learn new things. It is not the duty of                     a manager to make over individuals on his staff, but to give                     every person the chance to develop according to his capacity                     and his interest.<\/p>\n<p>An article by Agis Salpukas in the <em>New York Times <\/em>suggested                     that corporate executives and union leaders are debating whether                     a new work force has emerged that will increasingly demand                     jobs that will fulfil creative needs as well as provide food                     and shelter.<\/p>\n<p>The manager will take notice of this trend, and will try                     to provide his worker with these four satisfactions: (1) A                     feeling of self-esteem, by expressing appreciation of work                     well done; (2)A chance to develop, by encouraging him to use                     his strongest abilities and talents; (3)The stimulation of                     new experiences, by giving him a different task once in a                     while; (4) A sensation of freedom, by giving him an opportunity                     to make his own decisions.<\/p>\n<p>Wise managers do not concentrate upon the present so as                     to exclude consideration of the potential future value of                     a worker. This is something additional to his immediate, observable                     role ( a bonus, as it were. He must be trained to work intelligently                     and competently at his present job, but also groomed for fitness                     to take on larger responsibilities.<\/p>\n<p>Counselling by a manager is on a higher level than giving                     instructions or advice. It is directed toward increasing the                     self-responsibility of the worker, thus making him a better                     and more trustworthy worker.<\/p>\n<p>The manager may call a conference of workers to discuss                     some matter that affects them and the good of the firm. He                     does so in the expectation that his people will discuss the                     subject intelligently and develop worth-while ideas. He will                     stimulate people&#8217;s thinking along new lines, and ask questions                     that spark discovery and elicit creative suggestions. An idea                     arrived at through a conference of workers is likely to receive                     more enthusiastic support than one imposed by an order.<\/p>\n<h3>Communication<\/h3>\n<p>People will work enthusiastically for a manager who knows                     and tells them where he and they are headed. This breeds the                     inspiration and solidarity of a common general idea.<\/p>\n<p>Every work crew is entitled to a clear-cut definite understanding                     of what is expected of it, what part each person is to play,                     and how the total effort fits in with the product of other                     crews. This seems to be so elementary a requirement that mention                     of it appears superfluous, but it is surprising to look around                     and see how many efforts have failed or have been botched                     by ignoring it.<\/p>\n<p>Silence on matters that affect workers ( and nearly every                     change in policy and personnel is of importance to them (                     is a sure way to alienate them. They should not be left to                     get the knowledge out of their newspapers or by the grape-vine,                     but, being partners in the firm, they should be told in advance                     or at least at the same time in a memo or a posted notice.<\/p>\n<p>If there are moral and business reasons for communicating                     information, there are equally important reasons to speak                     intelligibly. Hazy expression and woolly explanation should                     be rigorously excluded from reports and memos.<\/p>\n<h3>Knowledge and intelligence<\/h3>\n<p>Superiority in a job rests on a solid base of knowledge.                     He would be a foolish person who trusted to luck for his advancement,                     but there is no harm in believing, as did Louis Pasteur: &#8220;Fortune                     favours the prepared mind&#8221;.<\/p>\n<p>The manager needs not only experience, which is knowledge                     of individual cases and events, but science, which is knowledge                     of universal principles.<\/p>\n<p>Knowledge of the wider sort is obtained by observing and                     filing mentally what items of information are not immediately                     usable. It is necessary, of course, to use discrimination                     in amassing data. A mind full of unassessed and unordered                     material is unlikely to lend itself to anything more than                     a conceited parade of knowledge.<\/p>\n<p>Intelligence puts knowledge to work. It consists in a seizing                     of relations, in perceiving objects and events that matter                     and sensing their connections. There may be things of importance                     that only people possessing a certain intelligence can understand,                     so do not expect the same degree of intelligence in everyone:                     after all, where then would be your eminence?<\/p>\n<p>Estimates of a situation depend to a great extent upon the                     width, length and acuteness of your observation of similar                     situations, but not all of past experience is useful in parallel                     circumstances today. You need to isolate the part of the experience                     that is applicable. Knowledge gained in doing a job twenty                     years ago must give place to new ways in the light of changed                     conditions, the improvement in tools, and the advancement                     in systems of work.<\/p>\n<p>The energy to do excellent managerial work requires purpose                     plus physical vigour and mental poise and dedication. A manager                     may have become so enamoured of his job that only the severest                     fatigue will drive him away from it, but work is subject to                     the law of increasing disutility: the quality decreases. Nevertheless,                     it will be fatal to one&#8217;s aspirations to be misled by platform                     and television speeches which promise greater ease, more leisure                     and a bigger pay packet. These, say the orators, are not to                     be obtained by honest hard work, but by legislation or some                     easy-to-take stimulating concoction.<\/p>\n<h3>Seek emotional stability<\/h3>\n<p>Lionel Pugh, head coach of the Canadian track and field                     team, discussing Canada&#8217;s showing at the 1972 Summer Olympics,                     said, as reported by George Hanson in the Montreal Star: &#8220;We                     have kids here who think they are tourists. They want to go                     off shopping or sightseeing. I&#8217;ve had a top athlete tell me                     on the day of an event that the mood just wasn&#8217;t there.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>It is unwise to allow temperament to rule one. It can become                     an affliction. A person, and particularly one in authority,                     who is subject to moods, and gives way to them so as to cause                     disorder around him or to let the side down, is a trouble                     maker.<\/p>\n<p>To keep your balance, vary not only the things you do but                     the way you do them. Move from one task to another. Ruskin                     said: &#8220;If you cannot leave your picture at any moment &#8211;                     cannot turn from it and go on with another while the colour                     is drying &#8211; cannot work at any part of it you choose with                     equal contentment &#8211; you have not a firm enough grasp of                     it.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Emotional stability is needed. This means that you keep                     cool under stress, that you handle workers and customers in                     a calm, confident and winning way. Stability can be undermined                     by self-analysis carried to extremes, though it is often necessary                     to look within ourselves for the cause of an error.<\/p>\n<p>There are, as is true in all nature, limitations to be observed.                     One must not exceed his authority, or criticize more than                     is necessary, or be more aggressive than the situation requires.                     On the positive side, one must distribute praise effectively                     when it is deserved without being fulsome, give goodwill to                     workers without discrimination or partiality, make plans firm                     but not rigid, and deal with situations vigorously without                     being dictatorial.<\/p>\n<p>The law of restriction is a good one to follow. Anything                     more than is necessary is too much. When taking a photograph                     you look through the viewfinder to see not only what to include                     in your picture, but, even more important, what to leave out.<\/p>\n<p>When one guides his life by some of the fundamental principles                     of management, it becomes filled with programmed activities.                     Nothing can rob a man of the happiness he enjoys in managing                     an important piece of work effectively. He has become an individual,                     not merely a function.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[53],"class_list":["post-3895","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-53"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>June 1973 - VOL. 54, No. - Managers are Made - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/june-1973-vol-54-no-managers-are-made\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"June 1973 - VOL. 54, No. - Managers are Made - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"If it depended solely upon heredity to produce managers the business world would be running a lot of &#8220;Career opportunities&#8221; advertisements. 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A person may be born with a bossy disposition, but many other qualities must be added by study and work. Managers are made. 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