The Tacky Manager
John knows tacky!
Written in 1991, The Tacky Manager has become a classic to many.
It shows up on desks of unexpecting managers who do not
realize how they are perceived by their associates.
The Tacky Manager
can play a role in bridging the gap between employees (associates)
and management.
Organizational changes carried out without proper consideration
of human values and without clear explanations to employees can
turn employee loyalty and confidence to uncertainty, antagonism,
and fear about the future. Success requires cooperating to achieve
corporate/staff goals.
Winning back the loyalty and commitment of employees and gaining
their cooperation is the greatest challenge facing management
today.
The key is a basic change in management attitudes. Management
must see communication not as a bothersome chore, but as a fundamental
means of helping to release the creative genius of associates
that have been bottled up in organizations by authoritarian management
styles. An effective beginning to greater success is referring
to employees as associates rather than subordinates, sharing
information, and scheduling The Tacky
Manager Seminar.
Order your copy of The Tacky Managertoday for only $9.95 plus shipping and handling.
Deming's Fourteen Points
Modified by THE TACKY MANAGER!
1. Subordinates do not need to know or understand
the purpose of your business. It is important to frequently
remind them about whose business it is.
2. Management must accept the responsibility
for decisions.You didn't get this position by not being
smart. You will need to hire others for extra hands to get
your work done, but remember they do not care about anything
but the money.
3. Inspection means it will not go out until
it is right. If you have enough inspectors you can catch
employees messing up and ship products that are good enough.
4. Continue to look for vendors willing to bid
on materials and take the lowest bid. Treating vendors
like expendable suppliers will keep them sharp and you will save
money.
5. If it's not broken, don't fix it. If there
were better ways of doing things you would be doing them. If
things get tight you can always save money by laying people off.
6. Throw new employees into their work immediately.
The better ones will figure it out.
7. Institute tight control through the use of
power and intimidation.
8. Use fear as a motivator. People who are
afraid of losing their jobs will pay careful attention
and not make mistakes. Managers can do the innovating.
9. Keep departments separate. Institute
competition for your limited resources between departments. Only
management needs to have the big picture.
10. Use slogans, exhortations, and set targets of zero
defects. Don't spend time training.
11. Establish quotas on the factory floor as well as
marketing. Use management by numbers and numerical goals
to control your subordinates. Remember: Where there's
a whip there's a way.
12. Maintain control with annual reviews. Stress
numbers rather than system improvement and emphasize good enough.
13. Education is an expense. Certainly, any self-improvement
training is not the
organization's concern.
14. If something must change, it is the business of
management - the thinkers.
15. If you are ever tempted to allow your subordinates
to participate in decision making - ask yourself this question,
"If they are so smart, why aren't they the boss"?
John's response to tacky management...
Contrary to the tacky manager's methods, John explains that
"Management's job is to facilitate change in its attitudes
and actions--a tough assignment! Since changing established patterns
of human behavior is not easy. Leading an empowered
workforce begins with giving up the trappings of the tacky manager."
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