Bad Boss, Great Boss
By Tom Spears
()
About this ebook
Most people realize they should avoid that bad boss everyone is talking about, but fewer realize that the ones people aren’t discussing could be worse. Bad bosses seem to be hidden around every corner and stashed in every niche. And they come in more varieties than Baskin-Robbins ice cream.
Bad Boss, Great Boss tries to make sense of a plethora of problematic supervisors -- from the Gentleman to the Screamer and everywhere in between. Inside this book's pages you’ll learn about the ten types of extreme bosses that ultimately fail in their jobs. You'll also learn the keys to identifying such dysfunctional leaders and some tips for surviving in their organizations.
But Bad Boss, Great Boss doesn't stop there. In the second half of the book, you can explore what it takes for a supervisor to go from “good” to truly "great.” Modeled on one particular supervisor's stellar skills and behaviors, this portion of the book helps the reader learn what it takes to be a great boss. By the time the book is finished, the reader should have an appreciation of why a "great" boss is such a rarity.
Whether you’re an employee searching for that once in a career "great boss," a victim trying to decide if it is worth it to hang in there with a "bad boss," or a leader hoping to improve your people management skills, Bad Boss, Great Boss can help.
Tom Spears
Tom Spears earned a Bachelors of Science degree in Engineering from Purdue University, and a Masters in Business Administration from Harvard University. He spent twenty-seven years working for four U.S. based public Corporations. During fifteen of those years he held a title of President or Group President. Tom retired from his last Group President position in 2010 to pursue his interest in writing fiction. He still consults occasionally, having expertise in manufacturing, engineering, pricing, strategy and corporate politics. Tom lives with his wife and six children in Ashland, Nebraska.
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Bad Boss, Great Boss - Tom Spears
Introduction – What this Book Is, and What It Is Not
If you’re reading this book in the hopes of learning how to propel yourself up the corporate ladder, you should probably put it down now. This is not a manual describing how you might politic and maneuver in the ruthless and sharp-elbowed space of middle and upper management. Nor will it instruct you in the ways of endearing yourself to those occupying management seats above yours. Both sets of skills are necessary for a successful climb through the management ranks, but they are not the subject of this work.
In fact, this book provides little to no advice on advancing your career, taking on peers and winning, or sucking up to senior management. For insight into these items, you can see my previously published book, Navigating Corporate Politics.
If you are perusing these words with the hopes of becoming the best possible supervisor you can be – particularly in the eyes of your subordinates – then you’re in the right place. Succinctly put, my objective is to help you become the best possible business leader, a skill that in some ways is at times at cross purposes with career success.
A bit about your author…
So why listen to me? I’m not Jack Welch. I haven’t made more money than Warren Buffett, and I don’t write with the talent of Stephen King.
While I have never been the CEO of a massive public corporation, I have had the privilege of working for some amazingly skilled and horribly flawed bosses. I’ve had bosses that literally refused to provide any direct feedback. I’ve had bosses that tossed subordinate after subordinate under the bus to protect themselves. And I’ve had bosses that inspired me and earned my undying loyalty. Those experiences and my own educational and vocational background provide a perspective that I believe can be extremely helpful to new managers and seasoned veterans alike.
Over the last 35 years, I have been a serious student of the art and science of management. During that time, I matured from an ambitious young pup with excessive drive and almost no filter to a seasoned General Manager, who was generally liked and respected by my subordinates.
My career began with a decade working in the trenches at a components division of General Motors where I progressed through a series of engineering and low-level supervisory positions. During those years, I had the opportunity to manage peers indirectly (an experience everyone should have at some time in their career), progressed through a series of bosses both good and bad (on of my best and one of my worst both came during this time at GM), and supervised an unruly group of unionized shop-floor employees.
I also had the opportunity to study at the West Point of Capitalism
(Harvard Business School) while on a GM Fellowship. This experience made me much more aware of the strengths and pitfalls that we, as individuals with our own personal perspectives and experiences, bring to the management task.
A subsequent half-decade was spent at Emerson Electric, arguably one of the greatest manufacturing conglomerates in the world. There I progressed from Analyst to Manager to Vice President, ultimately ending my time at the company as the President of a smallish (200-person) division. During that time, I worked for my greatest boss – you’ll find much of the wisdom he imparted to me during those years reflected in these pages.
Emerson taught me many things, including the fact that my personality was incompatible with the company’s prevailing culture – one of provocation, constant challenge, and strict management by the numbers.
It was a time when my skills grew substantially – along with my sense of discomfort.
Next, I joined Valmont Industries, a manufacturing company located in Nebraska. While at Valmont, my career progressed from Division President to Group President. Shortly before my decade plus with Valmont came to an abrupt end (my termination as the company carved a path through the first year of the Great Recession
), I spent a short time as the heir apparent to the CEO.
It was at Valmont where much of what I learned at Emerson and GM was put into practice. Even though I’d had great teachers earlier in my career, there was still a fair amount of trial and error needed before I really understood how to manage. I suspect taking similar risks and making similar errors is something that students of this book will still likely find unavoidable. As the old saying goes: Some things just have to be learned firsthand.
Stick with it long enough, and you will realize that management is an experiential as well as an intellectual endeavor, and there is only so much that can be learned without direct immersion in the process.
While at Valmont, I was blessed with strong teams of subordinates that achieved great results for the company. And although I can’t claim that they always got along with one another, I was generally considered by them to be the kind of boss I will describe as good
in the forthcoming pages.
My final public company experience came as a Division President for Lindsay Corporation, another Nebraska manufacturer. While my stay there was short (less than a year), I was able to add a few more Bad Boss, Great Boss
experiences to my portfolio.
Following Lindsay, I simultaneously began a career as a writer (hey, if you enjoy fiction and are reading this book, check out my corporate thriller novels at www.tomspears.com) and as an entrepreneur.
As of this writing, I have nine published books and share ownership in two small companies where I operate more like a board member than a day-to-day manager. Even with a career’s worth of managerial experience under my belt, I still find myself picking up the occasional pointer – both good and bad. I can’t envision the day where I will end my education on the subjects of business and management.
What the book is not
Bad Boss, Great Boss
is not an exhaustive treatment of the subject of properly managing subordinates. It isn’t a treatise on leadership, although leadership (or lack thereof) is certainly an important underlying element of many of the characteristics and behaviors I describe.
This book is also not a rigorously researched academic work. It is, by its nature, anecdotal. There are no studies to back up my conclusions. As you proceed through my observations and recommendations, bear in mind that another person might draw different inferences from the same experiences. You are, by definition, getting my take on things.
What the book aspires to be
Over my career, I’ve worked for numerous bosses, been a boss myself, and have been an earnest student of leadership. I’ve also had the opportunity to assess and critique many other bosses as a third-party observer, the result of being involved in more than two dozen acquisitions throughout my career.
This work has been stimulated by the observation that some of the bosses I’ve known are hated and despised by their subordinates while others (alas, a minority) are loved and revered. Parenthetically, I must also note that success or failure with subordinates appears to be only loosely tied to career success for the manager.
In this context, I’ve often found myself asking what behaviors did the Bad Bosses
exhibit that induced such strong negative reactions? What characteristics did the good bosses
have that drew subordinates in and bound them tightly to their leader? After a career’s worth of observation, certain patterns emerged, ones that might not be obvious to a person with less of a penchant for managerial critique or to a person with less experience.
This book is the summation of those observations and conclusions.
How the material is organized
The book is broken into two parts reflecting the two extremes of supervisory capability – Bad Bosses and great bosses. Each part is introduced by a short chapter summarizing a variety of characteristics that can drive the perceptions of a boss to be identified as either bad
or great.
Subsequent chapters go into greater detail about each of these characteristics and provide examples of how I encountered them in the real world.
The Bad Boss
portion of the book focuses specifically on a set of behaviors that are present in many bosses to a limited degree, but which, when taken to the extreme, are toxic. Bad-Boss types are characterized by such extreme behavior, and the underlying causes and drivers of that behavior are explored. While you are not likely to see such stark examples in real life (people are much more complicated than these simple abstractions), once you are aware of an extreme management type, you should be better able to spot the attendant behaviors in flesh-and-blood managers.
An interesting point about Bad-Boss
behaviors – it only takes one of these extreme management characteristics to slot an otherwise Good Boss
firmly in the Bad
category. If you aspire to be a Good Boss
or even a Great Boss,
you’ll have to take care to avoid all of these extreme behaviors.
In contrast to the large variety of failure modes explored in the Bad Boss
portion of the book, the Great Boss
section focuses on the leadership characteristics of essentially one person (with a few minor contributions from several other bosses I’ve encountered throughout my career). That one person, M.A. Bud
Keyes IV, a recently deceased senior manager at Emerson Electric, was the best boss I encountered in my career by a wide margin.
Keyes represented the pinnacle of managerial skill (at least in my opinion), and it was under his tutelage that my own skills as a manager grew and matured. In addition to his senior role at Emerson, Keyes’ work history included time spent as CEO of Bailey Controls and as a group executive at McDermott International.
Unlike Bad Boss,
which presents a collection of singular, extreme characteristics that must be avoided at all costs, Great Boss
enumerates a variety of behaviors any one of which, if consistently exhibited by a manager, will improve his or her leadership performance in the eyes of subordinates.
A Great Boss
would, of necessity, need to possess many if not all of these abilities.
A word about gender references
I mentioned earlier that all of my bosses have been men. In a world, however, where women increasingly fill managerial roles up and down the organizational ladder, it seemed foolish to me to refer to every boss in every discussion as he.
As a result, I’ve intermixed he
and she
references in the text by using them indiscriminately in alternating chapters. Other than representing an attempt to show gender balance, this has NOT been done in an attempt to identify any particular characteristic as male or female. I did, however, maintain the male gender pronouns throughout the second half of the book, when referring to my Great Boss.
Furthermore, I acknowledge that to the degree men and women manage differently in a broader sense, I could be missing some characteristics (both good and bad) that would be much more frequently reflected in female managers. If such characteristics exist, that is. My best guess, and, mind you, it is only a guess, is that the variations of technique, skill, style, and effectiveness (or lack thereof) within managers in either sex, is substantially broader than any specific differences between them.
You, as the reader, can make your own call on such matters.
How to use this book
I’ve envisioned Bad Boss, Great Boss
as a tool managers can use both to recognize and correct pitfalls and to explore and acquire new skills that enhance their leadership abilities. While I would recommend a cover-to-cover reading, any individual topic could easily be explored by locating the desired area of focus in the chapter headings and reading that subject by itself.
The book should also prove to be useful for an employee in the process of searching for a new job. Boss shopping
is a prudent practice for any prospective employee exploring new opportunities. As the old saying goes, employees join companies but leave bosses
is, in my experience, largely correct. Bad Boss, Great Boss
provides plenty of characteristics to search for, and a similar list of others to avoid.
One bit of additional advice to the prospective job searcher – get independent input on your prospective new boss! The entire interview process puts both interviewer and interviewee on their best behavior
– meaning that plenty of faking is present on both sides of the table. Many times the boss a prospective employee thought she was getting is a far cry from the dysfunctional lunatic to whom she actually end up reporting. Managers are often quite good a