When someone on your team comes to you with a problem and you agree, consciously or otherwise, to do something about it, the monkey is now off their back and on yours. How can managers avoid these “upward-leaping” monkeys? This session, inspired by the book “The One Minute Manager Meets the Monkey,” will provide insights into effective delegation, with an emphasis on how managers, team leaders, and project managers – pretty much anyone who finds themselves in a managing role – can meet their own priorities, give back other people’s monkeys, and help people learn to solve their own problems.
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Effective delegation and monkey management
1. Effective Delegation
a.k.a., Managing the Monkeys
inYour Workplace
Presented by:
Steve Urquhart
Orange County Clerk of Courts
It’s a jungle
out there!
2. If your last status meeting looked
anything like this …
3. … or if you can relate to this:
How is it possible that I
am working overtime and
still running out of time,
every day, while my team
goes home right on time
as if they don’t have
enough to do?
7. No matter how much I do …
Why is it that I’ve increased my efficiency,
but now I have more to do?
Wherever I go, hallway, elevator, parking
lot … even the restroom … my team
needs something from me!
I’m working overtime on things my team
needs from me before they can proceed
with their assigned tasks …
You need to be asking yourself …
8. Who’s got the monkey?
William Oncken, Jr.
… the tale of an
overburdened manager who
allows his employees to
delegate upward.
10. What is a monkey?
Monkeys are issues/actions that people
bring to you to solve.
The “monkey on your back” metaphor
describes issues, and the ownership of
issues.
Issues may be problems, tasks or other
items at work that you need to resolve.
They can come from just about anywhere,
without warning … and you have to
manage them!
15. Six rules for managing monkeys
1. Monkeys should be fed or shot
2. Every monkey should have an assigned
feeding time and a degree of initiative
3. The monkey population should be kept
“manage-able” …
4. Monkeys should be fed by appointment
only
5. Monkey feeding appointments may be
rescheduled …
6. Monkeys shall be fed face to face …
16. “Case Study”
WHAT DOYOU NEED,
NEW GUY? I’M BUSY …
MEET “NEW GUY” …
HE JUST STARTED HERE
… AND HIS BOSS, THE
PROGRAM MANAGER
BOSS?
17. “Case Study”
I’M HAVING PROBLEMS
WITH THIS SPEC, CAN
YOUTAKE A LOOK AT IT?
KINDA BUSY RIGHT
NOW, LET ME GET
BACKTOYOU LATER
THURSDAY AFTERNOON, ABOUT 5:45 PM
18. “Case Study”
HEY, HAVEYOU HAD A
CHANCETO LOOK OVER
THAT SPECYET?
UM, NO. I’LL REVIEW IT
THISWEEKENDAND
GET BACKTOYOU
FRIDAY MORNING, ABOUT 9:30 AM
19. “Case Study”
WHAT’STHE STATUS OF
THAT SPEC I GAVEYOU
TO LOOK AT LASTWEEK?
MONDAY MORNING, ABOUT 11:00 AM
KINDA BUSY RIGHT
NOW, LET ME GET
20. Do you ever find yourself asking
Who’s actually in
charge around
this place?
21. New mantra:
At no time while I am helping you will your
problem become my problem.The instant
your problem becomes mine, you will no
longer have a problem. I cannot help someone
who hasn't got a problem.
You may ask my help at any appointed time,
and we will make a joint determination of
what the next move will be and who will
make it.
22. Some common symptoms of
ineffective monkey management …
You’re tempted to change your LinkedIn
headline to Firefighter because you spend
your day in “management by crisis” mode.
At the end of the work day, you’ve crossed
nothing off on your To-Do list but you’ve
hardly had a minute to spare.
Your briefcase, cell phone, or planner has to
be surgically removed from your hand.
You find yourself heading straight for the
produce section of your local supermarket
because of a craving for bananas!
23. Monkeys should be fed or shot
No one likes a starving monkey.They tend
to be very disagreeable and squeal and
raise a ruckus. Monkeys must be fed
periodically.
The problem (the monkey) must be dealt
with between the manager and the
employee with the problem on a regular
basis. If the monkey can be shot (the
problem solved quickly), then feeding
times are not necessary.
24. Every monkey should have an
assigned feeding time …
After a feeding session, the manager
should select an appropriate time for the
next feeding and should have a number of
action steps for the employee to take.
25. … and a degree of initiative
5. Act on their own; routine reporting
4. Act, but advise at once
3. Recommend, then take resulting action
2. Ask what to do
1. Wait until told
Levels 1 and 2 are
the biggest sources
of monkeys!
26. The monkey population should be
kept “manage-able” …
It should take 15 minutes (or less) to feed
a monkey
Managers should keep the list of
problems that are in various stages of
solution at a manageable number.
27. Monkeys should be fed by
appointment only
Allowing employees to bring problems to
you on their timetable increases the
chances that the monkey will move from
the employee to the manager.
By setting specific times for addressing
the problem, managers empower
employees to make interim decisions
about the problem, and still report back.
28. Monkey feeding appointments may
be rescheduled …
Either party, the manager or the team
member (subordinate), may reschedule a
feeding appointment for any reason, but it
must be scheduled to a specific time to
avoid losing track of the monkey.
29. Monkeys shall be fed face to face …
Holding feeding sessions via e-mail or
memo transfers the monkey to the
manager.
An employee can “pass the monkey” to
the manager by simply requesting a
response.
Feedings that take place in person or on
the phone require the monkey to remain
with the employee unless the manager
takes an affirmative step to take it.
(or by telephone, but not in writing)
30. Rules that apply for all monkeys
1. Define the monkey: It must be fully
described.That is, the next move must be
known.
2. Assign the monkey: It must be fully owned.
Whose monkey is it?
3. “Insure” the monkey: It must be insured,
based on risk.What if you give an important
project to someone who is not ready? How can
you balance the personal growth of your people
with acceptable risk to your own reputation and
career.
4. Put the monkey on a schedule: It must be
placed on a care and feeding schedule.When,
where, and how do you follow up?
31. Some typical reasons not to
delegate? (a.k.a., excuses)
"Delegating would mean giving up power
and control."
"Delegating makes me nonessential."
"Delegating is not worth the time -- I can
do the job myself faster and better."
"I can't count on my team to handle this."
32. The Four Cs of getting comfortable
with delegating
Confidence. Be convinced that this person can
do it. If not, use insurance policy: recommend,
then act; or work with them not for them.
Clarify expectations and be reasonably sure your
team members know what is to be done.Verify
understanding by having them
Be Certain the person has sufficient resources--
time, information, money, people, assistance, and
authority--to do the work.
Don’t turn over Control until your are confident
that the cost and timing and quantity and quality
of the project will be acceptable. Have them get
back to you with their work plan.
33. Delegation vs. abdication …
There are a few things that you should not
delegate:
Performance feedback
Disciplinary actions
Politically sensitive tasks
Confrontations arising from interpersonal
conflict
34. In Brief: Oncken’s Rules of
Monkey Management
1. Descriptions: The next moves are
specified.
2. Owners: The monkey is assigned to a
person.
3. Insurance: The risk is covered.
4. Care & Feeding: The time and place
for check-up/follow-up is specified.