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What's the Big Idea? With Ron Davis Molding Tomorrow's Leaders
Finding Good Managers In the years that I’ve been in the
alarm industry, I have seen two phenomena One of the most difficult things for management is allowing their replacements to study the industry. Have your new management go to trade shows, conventions, association meetings and educational forums. Let your people get involved. If you’re doing the job right, they will come back better informed and better able to handle the day-to-day decisions inherent in leadership roles. Supervising Your Managers Finally, how do you manage your future leadership? Well, it’s kind of a trick question because you don’t really manage them. Do you guide them? Of course. Help them set goals? Absolutely. Let them find their own way? Most definitely. It seems a lot of the old-fashioned
managers feel the best way to manage
a new replacement is to have that
replacement watch what their superior
does, says and thinks, and then
replicate him or her. If that’s what
happens, it couldn’t be more detrimental
to the growth of the business.
While a new manager may pick up a
lot of the right things from a superior,
he or she will, in all likelihood, pick
up many of the things that are done
incorrectly, too. There needs to be a
fresh eye to promote the growth of
the business. If the goals are set and established,
agreed upon by all parties and implemented— in other words, you manage
by objectives and you set benchmarks
for the accomplishments of those objectives — by definition you are a good
manager, trainer and executive. Replacing yourself is not the most
important function in running a business;
frankly, it’s the only function. No
one doubts that someone who has
built a business from scratch can’t
continue to manage it. The trick is
finding quality people who can take
the dream and build it into a newer,
bigger and hopefully better dream —
one that your replacement has in
mind for your company.
Mel Mahler, president of
Nashville, Tenn.-based
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Davis Group 5894 Partridge Lane
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© 2012 Davis Mergers & Acquisitions Group Inc. |