Tag: got their backs

  • Do You Have Their Backs? Or Just Your Own?

    One of the chapters in Good Boss, Bad Boss is called "Serve as a Human Shield" and it argues — and shows how — the best bosses protect their people from idiots and idiocy of every stripe, from overly nosy executives and visitors, to moronic procedures, to meetings that run too long or never should have been held in the first place, and a host of other intrusions, distractions, and needless sources of friction that make it harder to do their work and to sustain good mental health.   I have a Harvard Business Review article coming out in fall that digs into this question, and today, at HBR.org, I posted the 5th point on my list of 12 Things Good Bosses Believe.  It is called: Do You Have Their Backs?  Or Just Your Own?  Here is a taste:

    Robert Townsend might be the poster child for the kind of boss that
    provides tangible cover to his team. He tends to be known at this point
    for having written the most outrageous management book ever published, Up
    the Organization
    . It's a collection of 150 or so ruminations
    on business life that are delightful, irreverent, and sometimes
    politically incorrect — all penned in an era before blogs were invented
    and such things were called short essays. But Townsend gleaned his
    insights from his succession of management jobs, notably as CEO of Avis
    Rent-a-car, where he was a widely loved wildman. In contrast to the
    usual hollow rhetoric, he never left any doubt that the people of his
    organizations came first, and that his job as a boss was to serve as
    defender and warrior on their behalf. Once, for example, he fought off a
    request from a powerful Avis board member, National Broadcasting
    Company founder David Sarnoff (aka
    "The General"), that would have been a time sink for his staff. Sarnoff
    couldn't believe there was no accurate tally of all the cars that Avis
    owned, and demanded that one be produced — a task that would have taken
    weeks. In that kind of situation, any of us can imagine rolling our
    eyes, but in a choose-your-battles world, how many of us would have
    refused? Townsend did, because he knew his people had more important
    work to do. "If I don't need it to run the company," he told Sarnoff,
    "you sure as hell don't need that information as an outside director."

    Even more telling, for me, was the time Townsend was stopped in the
    hall by his own boss. This was earlier in his career, at American
    Express, and the firm's Chairman wanted to express his pleasure with a
    "good bond swap" by Townsend's group. Again, how would most people use
    that face time? In Townsend's case, it wasn't to take credit and jockey
    for his next promotion. He replied that he didn't even know about the
    swap, and complained colorfully about how hard it was to get resources
    and better pay for the undervalued people doing such magnificent work.
    He chose to cover their backs, in other words, rather than climb over
    them.

    This topic of bosses as "human shields" is one I have discussed here before a bit (see here and here), but I dig into in much more detail at HBR.org than in the past.  Let me know what you think, either here or there, as I am always interested in the means that good bosses use to shield their people so they can do good work and do it with dignity.