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Many new managers think their job is to âprotect the teamâ. In fact, they see that as their primary function.
This is a mistake. Iâve interviewed hundreds of managers in my career. Usually, when people talk about protecting the team, it is a sign of inexperience. It is a common trap for new managers.
Why do new managers focus on being a âshit shieldâ?
If youâre a new manager, you may be stepping out of an individual contributor role. This makes you biased towards your old needs. And you are unaware of the new skills you may need to master.
You may hear phrases like, âyou can be a shit shield, or a shit funnelâ. The virtuous answer to that phrase is to say, of course, Iâll be a shit shield. It sounds like an honorable thing to do. And it seems like it will make your team successful.
Also, most people find their first exposure to management politics to be painful. My first thought was, âoh my god, has this been going on all the time?â Itâs easy to come to the conclusion that protecting your team from that mess is desirable. You may see that as a large part of your role.
Sometimes it is necessary
There is some value in shielding your team. In some organizations, it may even be necessary. Dysfunction is common! Youâll find it everywhere you go.
So why isnât positioning yourself as a shit shield a good idea?
Protection sets up an adversarial relationship
When youâre focused on protecting your team, youâre setting up the rest of the organization to be your enemy. Youâre setting up an adversarial relationship when that may not be necessary.
This can prevent you from being effective. Sometimes, the solutions to your teamâs problems will come from collaboration. Sometimes, the solution requires structural changes. People wonât see you as a person to engage with that type of work if they see you being defensive all the time.
This can leak into how your team behaves. The team can begin to see the world as âus versus themâ. I often see these teams look down on sales or support.
Adversarial relationships tend to propagate dysfunction. Look for better options.
Youâre focusing on a local maximum, not a global maximum
An organization composed of self-protecting teams isnât an effective organization. They are all focused on their own needs, but there isnât an ability to fix problems that are larger than the team level.
For example, you may run into a problem where support is sending you too many tickets. Instead of focusing on your teamâs needs, itâs preferable to look at the larger picture. Work together with the support person, and identify what is better for both of you. You might ask these questions:
- Why are there so many tickets?
- Are we creating features that arenât supportable?
- Are the tickets created by support because theyâre not trained on new features?
- Is our documentation poor?
This meeting will result in better outcomes. A âshielderâ would take a different approach:
- Tell the support leader to send less tickets.
- Or tell the support leader youâre not going to work on many of those tickets.
This is inadequate, and results in more dysfunction.
You shouldnât compromise on your teamâs needs, but see it within a larger ecosystem. This raises your effectiveness as a leader, because youâre solving larger macro-problems, rather than just the issues within your team.
You need many management tools, not one
Protecting a team is one of many tools you need in your management toolkit.
For example, letâs say there is some conflict over the product strategy. You could try to shield the team from the messy conversations. Or you could take the approach of an interpreter: explain the situation to them so they understand what is going on.
Having the âinterpreterâ management tool makes you more flexible. This is an approach that improves empathy and context for your team. That context will help even if youâre not available, because the rest of the company will make more sense to the team.
Youâll find that using the âmany tools to applyâ as a manager is a way better mental model than the âshit shieldâ approach. You can be an interpreter, a systemâs thinker, a collaborator, or a shield.
Managing âdistributed humansâ
Being a manager is working within a distributed system of humans. The more capable you become, the larger the portion of that system youâll be able to affect. Acting as a shit shield is confining your vision to just one node of that system. That will limit your growth and potential as a manager.
So donât be a shit shield, or a shit funnel. Instead, focus on interpreting. Focus on solving the problems around your team. Focus on delivery. And focus on making things better for your team, and the people around you.
This post (with additional images) can be shared at https://www.rubick.com/shit-shield/
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Thank you
Image by Thomas Anderson from Pixabay
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