Hey, some people just aren’t cut out to sit in the corner office. And maybe it’s not your fault.
How do you to tell whether you’re one of those who are better off in the pack than leading it? Trisha Scudder, executive coach and founder of the Executive Coaching Group, explains in Forbes:
You can’t draw the line between personal and professional. Let’s say employee Suzie (a) comes to you and tells you her father is gravely ill and (b) later repeatedly drops the ball on big accounts, causing the clients to leave. Would your sympathy for Suzie’s problems with her father stand in the way of firing her? Strike one.
You still want to hang out with the gang — at all costs. You now supervise some of your work buddies, and you’re faced with a making a move that will have a negative impact on some of them. Do you hesitate because you know the decision will deprive you of their friendship? Strike two.
You love workplace chit-chat and gossip. Employee A stops you in the hallway and says, “Hey, did you hear about how Johnnie got disciplined for faking an expense report?” You answer: “No, what happened?” Strike three. You’re out.
Combine that information with a study out of Australia concluding that “management types” are born, not made. In other words, people who make it as managers generally have specific personality traits that were formed at an early age. For instance, successful managers in the study tended to be “less agreeable.”
How to tell if you're too nice to be a boss
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