The manager good at building and the one good at destroying

The Manager Who Builds: The Architect of Growth

Key Characteristics:

  • Visionary Thinking: They plan from a timeline that is beyond a quarter and does not end with the quarter’s profits. They consequently develop plans for growth in a health way.
  • Empowerment: A builder is able to let his/her team do the work, accept titles and responsibilities and take ownership of things. They are not micromanagers.
  • Collaboration: A cross functional approach and the ability to bring down walls between departments are two aspects that they are very good at.
  • Mentorship: Builders create people. They develop their workforce to keep pace with the growth of the organization.
  • Patient with a Purpose: They are aggressive in their pursuit of goals, but they are cognizant of the fact that the return on effort invested is on the long-term and so they pace themselves for gradual advancement and not quick gains.
  • Focus on Strategic Growth: A builder manager is an active person who looks for opportunities in the market and tries to innovate and expand it.
  • Cultivate Culture: They foster an organizational culture that makes people wish to attract, deliver and think creatively. They value employee engagement and motivation as much as they do the financial performance.
  • Long Term Play: Every decision made is done so with an eye on the desire for an enduring purpose. Builders do not like to put themselves in a position where they are too far in debt or where they leap into disastrous risk-taking adventures, they prefer slow steady progress, not boom and bust.
  • Efficiency Over Everything: Destroyers in this regard, tend to aim at mast pulling from the least pushing. Efficiency is their leisure time activity.
  • Top-Down Control: Since they are detail-oriented: Extreme micromanagement, which results in crushing of creativity and autonomy.
  • Short-Term Gains: So, everybody is looking for high temp improvements, and does not pay attention to what will happen after a year or two. These are one made and focused on the next quarter. Sustainability would be some else problem. Most likely, the problem of the next manager.
  • High Pressure, Low Morale: Destroyer managers not only do well in stressful situations; they tend to create stressful situations. Results may be achieved, but in return – tired and burnt-out employees leave the workplace.
  • Risk-Taking: They do not shy away from any deviations which are sometimes radical and unnecessary to the level of shaking some structures.
  • Slash and Burn: Their strategy instead focuses on quick return on investment rather than employee talent development. Their toolkit includes, among others, downsizing, reorganizing or divesting low performing business units.
  • Culture of Fear: They exert control through where deadlines or KPIs that cannot be achieved are established. This may achieve adherence but very few if any, encourage creativity or dedication.
  • Ruthless Prioritization: Their decisions are made purely for the financial bottom line, cutting out anything that is not enhancing revenues or creating value in some way.

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